Vols Retain Spot Atop National Polls
Courtesy / UT Athletics

Vols Retain Spot Atop National Polls

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – For the second consecutive week, the University of Tennessee is the top-ranked men’s basketball team in the country.

Tennessee (10-0) is once again No. 1 in both the Associated Press Top 25 Poll and the USA TODAY Coaches Poll, as revealed Monday afternoon.

This is the seventh time, across three different seasons, the Volunteers place first in the AP Poll. They took the top position once in 2007-08 and four times in 2018-19, in addition to their two such nods this year.

Seven of Tennessee’s nine all-time weeks in the AP top three, including six of its seven No. 1 placements, are during the tenure of 10th-year head coach Rick Barnes. The Volunteers, one of seven teams to earn the top spot in at least two of the last seven seasons, are 24-4 all-time while ranked in the AP top three (20-2 under Barnes), including 9-1 while ranked first (7-1 under Barnes).

This is the 66th week in a row Tennessee is listed in the AP Poll, a streak spanning four campaigns and dating to the 2021-22 preseason release. The tally is 29 weeks greater than the program’s prior top mark and is the third-longest active figure in the nation, trailing only Houston (92) and Kansas (71). No other school is at even 50-plus, with the next closest SEC team, Kentucky (28), placing eighth nationally and 38 weeks behind the Volunteers.

Tennessee is among the top 15 teams in the AP Poll for the 40th time in the past 43 editions, dating to Nov. 28, 2022. This is the 62nd AP top-10 spot for the Volunteers under Barnes’ leadership, including their 30th in the top five, with the latter mark 13 above the program’s full total (17) before his 2015 hire. In addition, the program now has over thrice as many top-two rankings (seven) as it had before his arrival (two).

Barnes has steered the Volunteers to an AP top-five ranking in each of the past four years, a streak only Kansas can equal. He has also coached Tennessee to an AP top-six ranking in each of the last five years, a ledger matched only by Alabama, Houston and Kansas.

Tennessee won both its games last week, claiming a pair of non-home victories over Power Five foes. First, it knocked off Miami, 75-62, Tuesday in the Jimmy V Classic at Madison Square Garden in New York behind a game-best 22 points from fifth-year guard Chaz Lanier. It then registered a 66-64 road triumph Saturday at Illinois on a buzzer-beating layup by senior guard Jordan Gainey, who also led all scorers with a season-high 23 points.

The Volunteers collected 1,537 of a possible 1,550 points in the AP Poll balloting, a minor seven-point week-over-week drop, as well as notched 50 of 52 first-place votes. In the Coaches Poll, Tennessee claimed 765 of a possible 775 points, a slight five-point decrease from last week, and earned 22 of 31 first-place votes.

Tennessee paces a group of nine SEC teams in the top 25 of at least one poll, with five in the top seven of each. It is featured alongside second-ranked Auburn, fourth-ranked Kentucky, No. 6/7 Alabama, No. 7/6 Florida, No. 12/11 Texas A&M, No. 14/15 Oklahoma and No. 17/16 Ole Miss in both polls, while Mississippi State is No. 25 in the Coaches Poll. The Bulldogs lead the receiving votes category of the AP Poll, with Arkansas and Missouri in the next two spots—both are also in that section of the Coaches Poll—plus Georgia and Texas also listed.

One of five remaining unbeaten teams in the country, Tennessee also places second overall in both the NCAA NET rankings and KenPom rankings.

The Volunteers open a four-game homestand Tuesday at 7 p.m. against Western Carolina, live on SEC Network+ from Food City Center.

To keep up with the University of Tennessee men’s basketball team on social media, follow @Vol_Hoops on Instagram and X/Twitter, as well as /tennesseebasketball on Facebook.

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Vols Retain Spot Atop National Polls
Courtesy / UT Athletics

Vols Retain Spot Atop National Polls

KNOXVILLE, Tenn. – For the second consecutive week, the University of Tennessee is the top-ranked men’s basketball team in the country.

Tennessee (10-0) is once again No. 1 in both the Associated Press Top 25 Poll and the USA TODAY Coaches Poll, as revealed Monday afternoon.

This is the seventh time, across three different seasons, the Volunteers place first in the AP Poll. They took the top position once in 2007-08 and four times in 2018-19, in addition to their two such nods this year.

Seven of Tennessee’s nine all-time weeks in the AP top three, including six of its seven No. 1 placements, are during the tenure of 10th-year head coach Rick Barnes. The Volunteers, one of seven teams to earn the top spot in at least two of the last seven seasons, are 24-4 all-time while ranked in the AP top three (20-2 under Barnes), including 9-1 while ranked first (7-1 under Barnes).

This is the 66th week in a row Tennessee is listed in the AP Poll, a streak spanning four campaigns and dating to the 2021-22 preseason release. The tally is 29 weeks greater than the program’s prior top mark and is the third-longest active figure in the nation, trailing only Houston (92) and Kansas (71). No other school is at even 50-plus, with the next closest SEC team, Kentucky (28), placing eighth nationally and 38 weeks behind the Volunteers.

Tennessee is among the top 15 teams in the AP Poll for the 40th time in the past 43 editions, dating to Nov. 28, 2022. This is the 62nd AP top-10 spot for the Volunteers under Barnes’ leadership, including their 30th in the top five, with the latter mark 13 above the program’s full total (17) before his 2015 hire. In addition, the program now has over thrice as many top-two rankings (seven) as it had before his arrival (two).

Barnes has steered the Volunteers to an AP top-five ranking in each of the past four years, a streak only Kansas can equal. He has also coached Tennessee to an AP top-six ranking in each of the last five years, a ledger matched only by Alabama, Houston and Kansas.

Tennessee won both its games last week, claiming a pair of non-home victories over Power Five foes. First, it knocked off Miami, 75-62, Tuesday in the Jimmy V Classic at Madison Square Garden in New York behind a game-best 22 points from fifth-year guard Chaz Lanier. It then registered a 66-64 road triumph Saturday at Illinois on a buzzer-beating layup by senior guard Jordan Gainey, who also led all scorers with a season-high 23 points.

The Volunteers collected 1,537 of a possible 1,550 points in the AP Poll balloting, a minor seven-point week-over-week drop, as well as notched 50 of 52 first-place votes. In the Coaches Poll, Tennessee claimed 765 of a possible 775 points, a slight five-point decrease from last week, and earned 22 of 31 first-place votes.

Tennessee paces a group of nine SEC teams in the top 25 of at least one poll, with five in the top seven of each. It is featured alongside second-ranked Auburn, fourth-ranked Kentucky, No. 6/7 Alabama, No. 7/6 Florida, No. 12/11 Texas A&M, No. 14/15 Oklahoma and No. 17/16 Ole Miss in both polls, while Mississippi State is No. 25 in the Coaches Poll. The Bulldogs lead the receiving votes category of the AP Poll, with Arkansas and Missouri in the next two spots—both are also in that section of the Coaches Poll—plus Georgia and Texas also listed.

One of five remaining unbeaten teams in the country, Tennessee also places second overall in both the NCAA NET rankings and KenPom rankings.

The Volunteers open a four-game homestand Tuesday at 7 p.m. against Western Carolina, live on SEC Network+ from Food City Center.

To keep up with the University of Tennessee men’s basketball team on social media, follow @Vol_Hoops on Instagram and X/Twitter, as well as /tennesseebasketball on Facebook.