Gators hoops jumps five spots in AP Top 25 after 8-0 start

Todd Golden has secured Florida’s highest AP Top 25 ranking in more than three years as the Gators jump up to No. 13 after an 8-0 start.

Florida (8-0) climbed five spots to No. 18 in the AP Top 25 Poll after finishing off a perfect November with two wins at the ESPN Events Invitational.

The Gators defeated Wake Forest and Wichita State this week in Kissimmee in dominating fashion. Although it’s only a two-hour drive from Gainesville, the games played at the ESPN Wide World of Sports are considered neutral site games, which should help Florida come Selection Sunday.

Kansas remains the No. 1 team in the county, but the Auburn Tigers are challenging for the top spot, earning 26 of 61 first-place votes this week. Two more SEC programs, the Tennessee Volunteers and Kentucky Wildcats, are right behind the Tigers at Nos. 3 and 4, respectively. Marquette rounds out the top five after an 8-0 start of its own.

SEC Teams ranked inside the AP Top 25

Eight programs from the Southeastern Conference finished inside the top 25 following Week 3, down from nine a week ago. Besides the three top-five programs mentioned above, The Alabama Crimson Tide (No. 10), Florida Gators (No. 13), the Oklahoma Sooners (No. 21), the Texas A&M Aggies (No. 22) and the Ole Miss Rebels (No. 23) made the cut.

The Arkansas Razorbacks are just outside of the top 25 with 104 poll points — UConn is ranked No. 25 with just 123 points — followed by the Texas Longhorns (97), Mississippi State (20) and Georgia (10).

Week 4 AP Top 25 Poll

Rank Team REC PTS (1st) TREND
1 Kansas 7-0 1,499 (35)
2 Auburn 7-0 1,490 (26) +2
3 Tennessee 7-0 1,351 +4
4 Kentucky 7-0 1,267 +4
5 Marquette 8-0 1,246 +5
6 Iowa State 5-1 1,225 -1
7 Gonzaga 7-1 1,181 -4
8 Purdue 7-1 1,058 +5
9 Duke 5-2 941 +2
10 Alabama 6-2 939 -1
11 Wisconsin 8-0 903 +4
12 Oregon 8-0 806
13 Florida 8-0 782 +5
14 Cincinnati 6-0 774 +2
15 Baylor 5-2 567 +2
16 Memphis 6-1 500
17 Houston 4-3 402 -11
18 Pittsburgh 7-1 374
19 Illinois 6-1 351 +1
20 North Carolina 4-3 292 -8
21 Oklahoma 7-0 266
22 Texas A&M 6-2 207 -2
23 Ole Miss 6-1 165
24 San Diego State 4-2 143
25 UConn 5-3 123 -23

Others receiving votes:

Michigan St. 108, Arkansas 104, Texas 97, Michigan 95, Arizona St 89, Indiana 72, Drake 58, Xavier 33, Utah St. 28, Louisville 27, West Virginia 26, Clemson 25, BYU 24, Dayton 24, Texas Tech 22, Nebraska 22, Mississippi St. 20, Ohio St. 19, Maryland 13, UCLA 13, Creighton 12, Saint Mary’s 11, Georgia 10, St. John’s 7, Loyola Chicago 4, Florida St. 3, DePaul 3, UC Irvine 2, Columbia 2.

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Florida moves up in USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll after perfect November

The best start for Florida basketball since 2009 has the Gators up to No. 13 in the latest USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll.

Thanksgiving week featured a ton of college basketball, and some surprise finishes led to changes in the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll. Florida ended the month of November undefeated (8-0) and the Gators are now ranked No. 13 in the country following a convincing win at the ESPN Events Invitational (Wake Forest, Wichita State).

The Orange and Blue began the season at No. 21 in the preseason rankings, moved up to No. 19 in the Week 1 and Week 2 updates and jumped to No. 16 a week ago. Florida now trails Alabama by 14 poll points and has a sizable 51-point lead over Cincinnati.

The top five went through some dramatic changes this week. Kansas remains at No. 1 but is no longer the runaway favorite for the title of the best team in the country. Auburn earned 12 of 31 first-place votes and moved up to No. 2 as UConn plummeted out of the top 25 with a three-loss tournament.

Tennessee moved into the top three, an undefeated Marquette team is up to No. 4 and Iowa State remains at No. 5 this week.

SEC schools in the Coaches Poll top 25

Even with the Arkansas Razorbacks falling out of the top 25, the Southeastern Conference boasts eight programs — including Florida — in the top 25. Auburn (No. 2) remains the highest-ranked team in the SEC, followed Tennessee (No. 3), the Kentucky Wildcats (No. 6), Alabama (No. 12), Florida (No. 13), the Ole Miss Rebels (No. 20) and Texas A&M Aggies (No. 24).

The Texas Longhorns earned 54, making them the de facto No. 28 team in the country, and the Mississippi State Bulldogs are right behind them in a tie for No. 29 with 39 poll points this week. Arkansas is unofficially No. 31 with 28 points, and the Georgia Bulldogs are No. 46 with three points.

Coaches Poll Top 25 Week 4 rankings

Ranking Team Record Points Change
1 Kansas 7-0 760 (19)
2 Auburn 7-0 755 (12) +1
3 Tennessee 7-0 694 +3
4 Marquette 8-0 646 +7
5 Iowa State 5-1 629
6 Kentucky 7-0 628 +2
7 Purdue 7-1 535 +5
8 Gonzaga 7-1 517 -4
9 Duke 5-2 472 +1
10 Oregon 8-0 457 +27
11 Wisconsin 8-0 450 +6
12 Alabama 6-2 441 -3
13 Florida 8-0 427 +3
14 Cincinnati 6-0 376
15 Memphis 6-1 265 +20
16 Baylor 5-2 262 +2
17 Illinois 6-1 234 +12
18 Houston 4-3 221 -11
19 Pittsburgh 7-1 213 +6
20 Ole Miss 6-1 139 +4
21 Oklahoma 7-0 111
22 North Carolina 4-3 96 -9
23 Michigan 6-1 90
24 Texas A&M 6-2 86 -4
25 Michigan State 6-2 73 +15

Schools Dropped Out

No. 2 UConn; No. 15 Indiana; No. 19 Creighton; No. 21 Arkansas; No. 22 Xavier; No. 23 Arizona

Others Receiving Votes

UConn 63; San Diego State 56; Texas 54; Mississippi State 39; Arizona State 39; Drake 34; Texas Tech 32; Arkansas 28; UCLA 17; Xavier 16; BYU 16; Ohio State 15; Utah State 13; Saint Mary’s 12; Dayton 10; St. John’s 8; Nebraska 8; Indiana 8; Creighton 8; West Virginia 5; Maryland 5; Clemson 5; Georgia 3; Arizona 2; UC Irvine 1; Nevada 1

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Everything Todd Golden said after Florida’s ESPN Events Invitational win

Florida basketball head coach Todd Golden spoke to the media after his Gators won the ESPN Events Invitational on Friday.

Florida is off to its first 8-0 start since 2009, including a dominant performance at the ESPN Events Invitational on Thursday and Friday.

Head coach Todd Golden spoke to the media after the championship game, which Florida won, 88-51. He touched on the team’s hot start, key players over the past first month of the season and

“Really proud of our group. I thought we played pretty good basketball over the last two days, and (it’s) hard to win championships,” Golden opened his post-game press conference. “We’ve talked about it before. You get four opportunities. Generally, each year, you get your MTE (multiple-team events), your regular season conference championship, your conference tournament championship and NCAA championship.

“Getting one in a year is tough to do. We got our first and just really proud of the way we played. I felt like we made a jump as a team over the past couple days. Obviously, on the defensive side of the ball, we’ve shown the ability to guard, and if we can continue to grow on that side of the ball, and maintain our efficiency on the offensive end, we’re going to be tough to beat.

“Really proud of the way our guys have competed, and just being 8-0 is hard to do. We’re off to a good start.”

November assessment, early results

“Looking back at opening night, I feel like we’ve we’ve gotten a lot better since then. It’s more complete, more consistent and again — going back to the defensive side of the ball — we held Wake (Forest) to 58 last night, held a really good Wichita team to 51 today. I’m saying the same thing again, if we can continue to to do that on the defensive end, we’re going to be tough.

“We’re seeing guys like Walt(er Clayton Jr.) really guard, guys like Will (Richard) really guard, obviously Rueben (Chinyelu) has played really, really well over the last couple days. I thought he had his best game as a Gator.

“When he provides that backbone of the defense at the rim, I think they were 2-for-20 from two-point field goal range in the first half, and he was a big part of that. Just more guys are playing better, and I feel like we are slowly becoming a more complete team.”

On Rueben Chinyelu’s emergence

“He (Chinyelu) just played awesome, in all facets. He rebounded, he protected the rim, finished with great efficiency — I think he had four assists. He was just fantastic. He was plus-26 in 20 minutes. Seven-for-nine from the field. He just was great across the board.

“The way he played, along with these other guys playing well, made us really, really tough today.”

On physicality

“He played with great energy. He was really physical. His hands were really good today. He was grabbing every rebound, catching every drop off, punching every dunk. He just looked like an awesome, awesome player today, and a lot like he showed in the summer, a lot like he showed in camp.

“We knew it was going to take time for this team to come together and gel, but I feel like the way he stepped up over the last two games provided another level for us.”

On the 27-0 run for Florida against Wichita

“A 27-0 run is impressive, obviously. I think we were up three with like six minutes to go in the first half, and you look up there about four minutes in the second half, we’re up 30.

“Again, we have the capability to play really, really well. That group was super connected. They guarded. Obviously, we finished with rebounds. We didn’t give them second chances. We didn’t bail them out with fouling, and we took great care of the ball, which allowed us to prevent them from getting runouts in transition.

“We just played really, really complete basketball.”

On Walter Clayton Jr.’s scoring ability, impact

“He’s an awesome player, and he continues to get better and better. The thing I’m most proud about is his effort on the defensive end. I think he’s really started to guard consistently, over the course of the whole game, and he was great. Honestly, a couple guys could have got MVP, probably. A number of guys played really, really well, but him being our senior leader along with A-Mart and Will, he’s a guy that the younger guys follow.

“When he plays with great intent on the defensive end like he has over the course of the season, for the most part, we’re really, really good.”

On Will Richard’s growth

“He had five assists and one turnover, right? I mean that’s that’s incredible growth from where he was last year. He’s done a great job making the right play, keeping it simple and showing he’s more than just a catch-and-shoot guy. Now you can put it on the floor and make reads and make good decisions.

“Honestly, his one turnover I thought was a pretty good decision. Just the big didn’t catch it. But the thing that allows us to have this high ceiling is the unselfishness between Will, Walt and Alijah (Martin). Today, Walter, it was his turn to score. A couple games ago, it was A-Mart. Will had 14 or 16 yesterday, so as long as they continue to play with that unselfishness, we’re going to be really tough.”

On Wichita State

“They’ve played really well lately. Obviously, they haven’t lost prior to this game. The thing that they’ve been able to do to their opponents is get downhill, get to the rim, finish as well as draw fouls. So, a big emphasis for us today, which our guys executed incredibly, was defending with physicality on the perimeter and then defending with verticality at the rim.

“We talked about it at our pregame meal this morning that if we held them to under 12 free throw attempts over the course of the game, that we would be in really good shape. We would have a really good chance to win. They only had two attempts in the first half. Obviously, they got some late, which can happen, but the game was out of reach at that point.

“We kept them off the line. They’re not a great three-point shooting team. They made four early and kind of kept them in it, but once they dried out a little bit that way we were able to run away from them.”

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Takeaways from Florida’s ESPN Events Invitational Championship win

The ESPN Events Invitational Championship game wasn’t much of a contest after Florida got rolling. The Gators won by a season-high 37 points on Friday.

Florida claimed the ESPN Events Invitational Championship trophy with an 88-51 win over Wichita State on Friday.

The Shockers kept things within range for the first 15 minutes of the game, but it was all Gators from there on out. Florida closed the first half with a 16-0 run and kept things going throughout the second half. Florida led by 48 points at one point, allowing the backups to come in and get some good minutes to close out the win.

Wichita State appeared outmatched in almost every category, but Florida’s most dominant area came in the frontcourt. The starting forward duo of Alex Condon and Rueben Chinyelu dominated the paint on both sides of the court.

Walter Clayton Jr. led all scorers with 19 points, draining five three-pointers. The rest of the backcourt, Alijah Martin and Will Richard, had a quiet game, but that speaks to Florida’s ability to win in a variety of ways.

Big run, Big blowout

At its best, Florida looks like a top-10 team in the country, but the Gators have a habit of delivering Jekyll-and-Hyde performances. The 27-point run in the middle 10 (last five minutes of the first half, and the first five of the second), put this game out of reach in a hurry.

Todd Golden has talked about getting a 40-minute effort from his players several times this season, but there was no need to keep his best players on the court over the final 10 minutes of this one.

Five of the 11 makes during that period came from distance, which is a positive sign for a team that struggled beyond the arc to start the season.

Dominating weaker teams for extended minutes also means that Florida should be able to remain competitive against the SEC’s best. The Gators have played a relatively light non-conference schedule, but Wichita State came into this one ranked inside the top 75 in adjusted defensive efficiency.

While the bulk of the conference is ranked inside the top 50, Florida won’t need to put together a 27-point run to stay competitive with many of those programs.

Frontcourt dominance

Chinyelu continues to grow more comfortable in Todd Golden’s system, and the stats are reflecting that. Friday marked Chinyelu’s first double-double in the Orange and Blue, and four of his 11 rebounds came off the offensive glass. He tied a season-high with 14 points and doubled his season-high in blocks with four.

At times, Chinyelu has looked like the weakest member of Florida’s four-man frontcourt rotation, but this kind of breakout is going to keep in his starting spot.

Condon had a similarly dominant afternoon, scoring 17 points and grabbing nine rebounds. His five offensive boards and Chinyelu’s four outpaced the entire Wichita State team, which finished with seven, and the duo challenged the Shcokers’ overall rebound numbers 30-20 — Florida won the rebounding contest handily with 56 in total.

As one might expect, Florida also won the points in the paint battle, 36-22, and outscored Wichita State on second-chance attempts, 20-10.

Ball handling continues to improve

Through the season’s first four games, Florida had 56 assists to 51 turnovers, keeping the ratio marginally positive. Since then, the Gators have found their rhythm moving the ball around the court, with 70 assists to just 32 turnovers. That 2.19 ratio outpaces the current NCAA leader, Mississippi State (2.13), and has Florida approaching a top-50 ranking in that category.

It’s hard to say where that change comes from, but Walter Clayton Jr. isn’t forcing as many passes as he was to start the season. Alijah Martin picking up his scoring certainly helps, as do the big-man points, and even Will Richard is thinking pass more than shoot at times. Richard finished the game with a season-high five assists on Friday.

Turnovers are a killer in any sport, but they can lead to quick and extended runs in basketball. If the Gators can continue this trend against the SEC, they are a team to watch out for come the spring.

Next up for Florida

The Gators return to the O’Connell Center for a rematch of last year’s non-conference game against the Virginia Cavaliers on Wednesday, Dec. 4. Tipoff is slated for 7:15 p.m. ET and will be broadcast on ESPN2.

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Instant takeaways from Florida’s Thanksgiving win vs Wake Forest

Here’s a look at the instant takeaways from Florida’s Thanksgiving Day victory over the Wake Forest in the ESPN Events Invitational.

Florida basketball returned to action on Thanksgiving Day for the first of two games in the ESPN Events Invitational against the Wake Forest Demon Deacons, who fell to the Gators in Kissimmee, 75-58.

This was the toughest matchup [autotag]Todd Golden[/autotag] and Co. have faced early on in the 2024-35 campaign and it showed at times, but the Orange and Blue simply had too much for Wake to handle. A strong g performance from both the front and backcourt cemented Florida’s seventh win in as many tries.

Every win is important — even early in the season against non-conference opponents — and the Gators will look to build on their Thursday afternoon performance. Here are the takeaways from the triumphant victory that represents payback for last year’s loss.

Gators came out flat in 1st 10 minutes

Florida opened scoring on the very first possession on an Alex Condon hook shot, but Wake Forest responded with a three to take an early lead. The two teams battled back and forth a bit before the Gators went ice cold from the field, going four-and-a-half minutes without a field goal (and just one free throw) and falling behind by as many as nine points.

The de facto second period went much better, with Golden’s gang closing the first half with a 21-8 run over 10:23 to post a 32-28 halftime lead. Will Richard dropped 10 efficient points to lead all scorers while Rueben Chinyelu led the Gators with five rebounds.

Six Gators made it onto the scoreboard that half, with the team posting a rough 35.5% (11-for-31) from the field overall and 27.3% (3-for-11) from behind the arc; they were also 63.8% (7-for-11) from the charity stripe.

Florida explodes out of halftime

The Gators scored the first 10 points of the second half as they continued their surge from the second 15-minute block, running out to an early 14-point lead that provided them some padding they would need.

The Deacons were not going down without a fight, shortening the lead to six before Florida pushed things back into double-digits thanks to an outburst by Alijah Martin. Wake Forest would get back to within seven points of Florida with just over five minutes remaining but would get no closer.

A six-point-play that included the ejection of Wake Forest’s head coach with under three minutes remaining effectively put the final nail in the coffin for the Demon Deacons. After that, it was clear that the Orange and Blue would prevail.

The Gators finished the game shooting 44.4% (23-for-58) from the field overall and 31.3% (8-for-27) from three-point range, along with an 87.5% (21-for-27) mark from the free-throw line.

Florida’s backcourt trio continues to impress

The three starting guards combined for 51 points, 10 rebounds, six assists and seven steals.

Clayton led all scorers with 21 points on 6-for-18 shooting from the field which includes a 4-for-13 effort from behind the arc and a 5-for-6 performance at the free-throw line. He added three assists, three steals and two rebounds in 35 minutes played.

Martin chipped in 16 on 7-for-13 shooting and 2-for-5 from three-point range while adding a pair of rebounds, assists and steals in 26 minutes of action. Richard also contributed 14 points on 4-for-7 shooting (1-for-3 from three-point range) and five free throws made in six attempts, while playing 31 minutes.

Next up for Florida

The Gators will play in the winner’s bracket of the ESPN Events Invitational on Friday, Nov. 29 against Witchita State Shockers. Tipoff is slated for 3:30 p.m. ET and the game will be broadcast on ESPN.

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Florida basketball up to No. 18 in KenPom ratings after Week 3

Three weeks of undefeated basketball has the Florida Gators rated No. 18 in the country by KenPom.

After taking as small dip in the KenPom ratings last week, the Florida Gators are up to a season-high No. 18 after a 6-0 start to the college basketball season.

A net rating of plus-21.86 is more than a full point higher than a week ago, and the Gators have passed by several teams, including Texas A&M by fewer than three-tenths of a point.

Auburn (plus-30.35, 3rd) leads all SEC programs followed by Tennessee (plus-29.71, 5th), Alabama (plus-24.36, 10th), Kentucky (plus-22.78, 13th), Florida, Texas A&M (plus-21.57, 19th) and Mississippi State (plus 19.79, 25th).

Texas (plus-19.87, 28th) is just outside the top 25, and Arkansas (plus-17.42, 37th), Oklahoma (plus-15.27, 47th), Ole Miss (plus 15.03, 48th) and Missouri (plus-14.79, 50th) are all inside the top 50.

Many college hoops experts and oddsmakers consider Pomeroy’s ratings the gold standard in the sport, and the reputation has held for more than 20 years.

“His ratings are derived from a proprietary algorithm, with the core centered on the Pythagorean calculation for expected winning percentage, made famous by baseball statistician Bill James,” ESPN explains.

“Pomeroy’s formula is designed to be purely predictive, with an emphasis on margin of victory. He factors in offensive and defensive efficiency, tempo and even luck, but does not, however, take into consideration injuries or emotional factors.”

Breaking down the KenPom ratings

Date Nov. 12 (Week 1) Nov. 20 (Week 2) Nov. 26 (Week 3)
W-L 3-0 5-0 6-0
NetRtg +19.83 (20) +20.74 (22) +21.86 (18)
ORtg 117.2 (13) 118.1 (11) 119.5 (8)
DRtg 97.4 (49) 97.4 (51) 97.6 (49)
AdjT 73.2 (47) 71.7 (72) 70.4 (93)
Luck +.000 (117) +.000 (182) +.000 (188)
SOS Net -4.16 (237) -4.27 (239) -3.79 (252)
SOS ORtg 100.8 (265) 100.0 (293) 101.4 (303)
SOS DRtg 105.0 (198) 104.3 (167) 105.2 (164)
NCSOS Net -4.16 (237) -4.27 (239) -3.79 (252)

Since we last checked in with KenPom, Florida’s offensive rating has improved by 1.3 points (per 100 possessions) and the defense has gained 0.2 points. A three-spot jump in the offensive ratings moves the Gators inside the top 10, and a two-spot increase on defense brings Florida inside the top 50.

Florida defeated Southern Illinois behind a dominant performance from Alijah Martin (32 points, 9 rebounds and 5 assists) and a career-high scoring night from Thomas Haugh (19 points). The Gators play two games this week on Thursday and Friday as part of the ESPN Events Invitational Thanksgiving week tournament.

Florida’s adjusted tempo continues to drop, now at 70.4 after a preseason projection of 73.6. The Gators were one of the fastest-paced programs in the country a year ago but are now trending toward a dip outside of the top 100. With SEC play still ahead, the number figures to drop more.

Because Florida was expected to win all six games it’s played this year, the luck rating remains at triple zeroes. No movement is a good thing in this statistical category, given the circumstances.

Strength of Schedule according to KenPom

KenPom’s strength of schedule ratings only considers the games played, so Florida’s 252nd ranking isn’t as concerning as it may seem on paper. Golden has the group playing lesser opponents early on, and the rating climbed for the first time this year.

Still, the Gators have only faced one program inside the top 100 so far (Florida State, 60th). South Florida (146th) and Jacksonville (155th) have both climbed since playing Florida, while Grambling State (221nd) and Florida A&M (353rd) have both dipped, according to KenPom. Southern Illinois (153rd) is a middle-of-the-pack program right now, but more losses could hurt its rating.

Florida’s upcoming opponents — No. 99 Wake Forest and either No. 88 Minnesota or No. 76 Wichita State — give the Gators a chance to add two more top-100 wins to its tally.

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Florida holds steady in ESPN Basketball Power Index through Week 3

Florida basketball is undefeated through the first six games of the season, but a relatively weak non-conference slate has the Gators steady in ESPN’s BPI.

The Florida Gators men’s basketball team added a six-straight win to start the 2024-25 college basketball season, defeating Southern Illinois on Friday, and remains at No. 32 on the ESPN Basketball Power Index heading into its Thanksgiving tournament.

While the Orange and Blue didn’t move from No. 32, the Gators’ BPI is up to 13.5, further broken down as 8.5 (17th) on offense and 5.0 (65th) on defense. All three of those figures are up from our last update (12.8, 7.9 and 4.9). Florida is up six spots in the offensive rankings and moved down one on defense.

“The College Basketball Power Index (BPI) is a measure of team strength that is meant to be the best predictor of performance going forward,” ESPN explains. “BPI represents how many points above or below average a team is. Strength of Record (SOR) is a measure of team accomplishment based on how difficult a team’s W-L record is to achieve. Game predictions account for opponent strength, pace of play, site, travel distance, day’s rest and altitude, and are used to simulate the season 10,000 times to produce season projections.”

ESPN BPI Projections

ESPN now projects Florida to finish the season with a 19.6-10.4 overall record (0.5 more wins than after Week 1) and a 9-9 record in conference play (0.3 more wins) based on results to date and BPI-based projections for remaining scheduled games. The Gators only have 1.0% odds to win the conference, up 0.2% a week ago.

Florida faces the 20th-toughest schedule moving forward with many of its weakest opponents in the rearview mirror. As expected, the SEC slate will be a gauntlet.

NCAA Tournament/Resume

The undefeated start has the Gators ranked 14th overall in strength of record, which translates to a No. 4 seed if the season were to end today — both unchanged from a week ago.

Florida has only played non-conference opponents, which makes its strength of schedule very low (225th) — down from 207th. Many of these numbers will change drastically once the beefier portion of the non-conference schedule begins, and again when SEC play starts up.

ESPN gives Florida 0.1% odds of winning the NCAA Tournament and 0.6% odds of making it to the championship game. A Final Four appearance (2.0%) or Elite Eight appearance (5.7%) are both unlikely at this point, but the odds of a Sweet 16 (16.5%) and Round of 32 appearance (43.7%) continue to increase with each week.

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Gators hoops creeping back up AP Top 25 poll after Week 3

After a small dip in the AP Top 25 Poll a week ago, the Florida Gators men’s basketball team is moving back up the rankings after Week 3.

Florida (6-0) climbed three spots to No. 18 in the AP Top 25 Poll after dropping one place a week ago.

The Gators took down Florida A&M and Southern Illinois this week, continuing a perfect start to the 2024-25 college basketball season.

The top five of Kansas, UConn, Gonzaga, Auburn and Iowa State held steady, in that order, while St. John’s (previously No. 22), Rutgers (No. 24) and Illinois (No. 25) fell out of the top 25.

SEC Teams ranked inside the AP Top 25

Nine programs from the Southeastern Conference finished inside the top 25 following Week 3. The Auburn Tigers lead the conference at No. 4 and earned three first-place votes. The No. 7 Tennessee Volunteers leapfrogged  Kentucky Wildcats (No. 8) and Alabama Crimson Tide (No. 9), giving the SEC four teams inside the top 10.

Florida moved past the No. 19 Arkansas Razorbacks for firm control of the 18th spot in the rankings, and the Texas A&M Aggies (No. 20) are closing the gap behind them.

The Ole Miss Rebels and Mississippi State Bulldogs moved into the top 25 at Nos. 23 and 25, respectively, while the Texas Longhorns are just outside the ranking with 57 poll points. Georgia (11) and Vanderbilt (6) earned votes as well.

Week 3 AP Top 25 Poll

Rank Team REC PTS (1st) TREND
1 Kansas 5-0 1,536 (51)
2 UConn 4-0 1,429 (7)
3 Gonzaga 5-0 1,428 (2)
4 Auburn 4-0 1,393 (3)
5 Iowa State 3-0 1,216
6 Houston 3-1 1,125 +1
7 Tennessee 6-0 1,116 +4
8 Kentucky 5-0 1,075 +1
9 Alabama 4-1 1,065 -1
10 Marquette 6-0 1,004 +5
11 Duke 4-1 986 +1
12 North Carolina 3-1 976 -2
13 Purdue 5-1 865 -7
14 Indiana 4-0 666 +2
15 Wisconsin 7-0 641 +4
16 Cincinnati 5-0 610 +2
17 Baylor 4-2 482 -4
18 Florida 6-0 466 +3
19 Arkansas 4-1 387 +1
20 Texas A&M 4-1 318 +3
21 Creighton 4-1 198 -7
22 Xavier 5-0 191 +6
23 Ole Miss 5-0 180 +4
24 Arizona 2-2 154 -7
25 Mississippi State 5-0 86 +9

Dropped out:

No. 22 St. John’s; No. 24 Rutgers; No. 25 Illinois

Others receiving votes:

BYU 70, Pittsburgh 62, Texas 57, Ohio St. 55, Saint Mary’s 52, Illinois 50, Memphis 38, Texas Tech 31, Drake 29, Nebraska 21, Michigan St. 14, Georgia 11, St. John’s 10, Oregon 10, Penn St. 9, Utah St. 6, Vanderbilt 6, Nevada 5, UCLA 5, Arizona St 5, Maryland 4, Providence 3, Furman 2, Florida St. 1, Columbia 1.

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Florida basketball enters Thanksgiving ranked No. 16 in USA TODAY Coaches Poll

Florida basketball just keeps winning, and the Gators are now up to No. 16 in the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll.

Florida basketball’s 6-0 start to the 2024-25 season has the Gators slowly creeping up the USA TODAY Sports Coaches Poll, and the Gators are now ranked No. 16 in college hoops following convincing wins over Florida A&M and Southern Illinois.

The Orange and Blue began the season at No. 21 in the preseason rankings, moved up to No. 19 in the first update and held steady there in Week 2. Florida now trails Indiana by just two poll points and leads No. 17 Wisconsin by eight points.

The top five remains the same this week with Kansas, UConn, Auburn, Gonzaga and Iowa State leading college basketball, in that order. Illinois (previously No. 20), St. John’s (tied for No. 20) and Texas Tech (No. 24) all dropped out of the rankings, with Ole Miss, Pittsburgh and Xavier joining the top 25.

SEC schools in the Coaches Poll top 25

With the addition of the Rebels in the top 25, the Southeastern Conference boasts eight programs — including Florida — in the top 25. The Auburn Tigers (No. 3) remain the highest-ranked team in the SEC, followed the Tennessee Volunteers (No. 6), Kentucky Wildcats (No. 8), Alabama Crimson Tide (No. 9), Florida Gators (No. 16), Texas A&M Aggies (No. 20), Arkansas Razorbacks (No. 21) and Ole Miss Rebels (No. 24).

The Mississippi State Bulldogs and Texas Longhorns both earned 43 poll points this week, putting the two programs in a tie for the de facto No. 27 spot in the country. Georgia earned three points, and LSU earned one.

Coaches Poll Top 25 Week 3 rankings

Ranking Team Record Points Change
1 Kansas 5-0 767 (25)
2 UConn 4-0 717 (2)
3 Auburn 4-0 707 (3)
4 Gonzaga 5-0 689 (1)
5 Iowa State 3-0 602
6 Tennessee 6-0 587 +3
7 Houston 3-1 559 +1
8 Kentucky 5-0 539 +3
9 Alabama 4-1 527 -2
10 Duke 4-1 502
11 Marquette 6-0 499 +4
12 Purdue 5-1 429 -6
13 North Carolina 3-1 424 -1
14 Cincinnati 5-0 330 +2
15 Indiana 4-0 262 +3
16 Florida 6-0 260 +3
17 Wisconsin 7-0 252 +8
18 Baylor 4-2 244 -4
19 Creighton 4-1 167 -6
20 Texas A&M 4-1 146 +2
21 Arkansas 4-1 128 +2
22 Xavier 5-0 85 +5
23 Arizona 2-2 76 -6
24 Ole Miss 5-0 73 +4
25 Pittsburgh 6-1 6 +5

Schools Dropped Out

No. 20 Illinois; No. 20 St. John’s; No. 24 Texas Tech

Others Receiving Votes

BYU 60; Texas 43; Mississippi State 43; Illinois 42; St. John’s 40; Texas Tech 39; Ohio State 38; Saint Mary’s 33; Drake 23; Memphis 21; Nebraska 20; Oregon 8; Rutgers 7; Dayton 5; Michigan State 4; UCLA 3; Georgia 3; Nevada 2; Utah State 1; Penn State 1; Maryland 1; LSU 1

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Takeaways: Alijah Martin drops 32 as Florida basketball moves to 6-0

Alijah Martin exploded for 32 points and single-handedly cured Florida’s three-point woes in a blowout win over Southern Illinois on Friday.

Things stayed competitive for a bit between Florida and Southern Illinois, but then [autotag]Alijah Martin[/autotag] got hot and led the Gators to a 93-68 victory over the Salukis Friday night.

Martin led all scorers with 32 points and nearly posted a double-double with nine rebounds. [autotag]Thomas Haugh[/autotag] set a new career-high with 19 points, adding seven rebounds and four blocks to his tally. No other Gator finished in double figures, but Martin’s performance was more than enough to carry the team to a sixth-straight win.

Florida lost the rebound battle for the first time this season thanks to 20 offensive boards from SIU, but the Gators ended with single-digit turnovers for the second game in a row.

Once again, the Gators played worse in the second half, marking a third-straight contest with that issue; however, it was a much more dominant win than the past two games against Florida A&M and Florida State.

Career night for Alijah Martin

Martin was the sparkplug in this victory. Point totals aside, he came up big when the team needed him the most. Florida has been atrocious from three-point range all season, so Martin took things into his hands and drained eight of 13 attempts from deep.

It wasn’t the long ball that sparked the big run, though. Martin slammed a dunk home to cap off a two-possession run of explosive finishes, and the floodgates opened up from there on out.

Perhaps even more encouraging is that Martin wasn’t looking to explode in the points column. When he had a chance to tie his career high of 34 from under the rim, he made the extra pass to Haugh to give him a new career high instead. It’s that kind of unselfishness that’s going to win Florida games — of course, dropping 32 points helps too.

Martin also led the team in rebounds (9) and assists (5), so he’s a guy who can do it all for the Gators at the “3” position. Talk about a breakout performance.

Haugh makes a strong argument to start

Taking nothing away from [autotag]Rueben Chinyelu[/autotag], who starts alongside [autotag]Alex Condon[/autotag] in Florida’s frontcourt, [autotag]Thomas Haugh[/autotag] deserves to see the court more often.

He got some extra minutes with [autotag]Sam Alexis[/autotag] out against Florida A&M and led all of Florida’s big men with 25 minutes tonight. [autotag]Todd Golden[/autotag] does a great job rotating his forward in and out, but Chinyelu doesn’t have the stamina to stay out there long, forcing Haugh into starter minutes.

Perhaps it would be wise to start with Haugh on the court alongside Condon, who is one of his best friends. There’s untapped chemistry there, and Alexis and Chinyelu would remain a formidable duo off the bench. There is an element of if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it here, but it’s hard to deny the impact Haugh has made on the court over the past week.

He might be the team’s best defensive big and he routinely fights for boards that Condon isn’t always positioned for.

Great assist-to-turnover ratio

The mark of a good basketball team is the assist-to-turnover ratio, and Florida posted a season-high 25 assists while turning the ball over a season-low six times. That’s 4.67 assists per turnover, which would dwarf Utah State’s NCAA-leading 2.41 ratio coming into tonight’s games.

Florida isn’t going to play FAMU and SIU every week, but it’s a really positive sign to see the Gators clean up the turnover problems after giving the ball away 19 times to Florida State just a week ago.

Clayton (25 assists, 14 turnovers) and Martin (21 and 10) are the two main ball distributors on the roster, but Condon (12 and 5) has some court vision too. [autotag]Alex Klavzar[/autotag] could also help in that statistical category with five assists and just one turnover through three games.

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