Sunday, October 31, 2021

Associated Press 2021 Week 10 Football Bowl Subdivision Top 25 Poll Includes Two Big 12 Teams, One Big 12 Traitor


The 2021 Associated Press Week 10 Football Bowl Subdivision Top 25 Poll includes two Big 12 teams, Oklahoma State (#11) and Baylor (#14), and one Big 12 traitor, Oklahoma (#4). 

Oklahoma has 1,413 points. Oklahoma State has 915 points. Baylor has 833 points.

Big 12 team Iowa State is listed among "others receiving votes." Iowa State is 35th (nine points).

Access the preseason poll: here  

This season marks the 86th edition of the AP rankings.

The Associated Press began its college football poll on October 19, 1936. It is the longest-running poll of those that award national titles at the end of the season. The preseason poll was started in 1950. A panel of 60 sports writers and broadcasters from around the country votes on the poll weekly. The AP Top 25 is determined by a simple points system based on how each voter ranks the teams. A team receives 25 points for each first- place vote, 24 for second place and so on through to the 25th team, which receives one point. The rankings are set by listing the point totals from highest to lowest. 

Here is the 2021 Week 10 AP College Football Top 25 poll (first-place votes in parenthesis): 

  1. Georgia, 8-0 (64) (1575) 
  2. Cincinnati, 8-0 (1455)
  3.  Alabama, 7-1 (1413) 
  4. Oklahoma, 9-0 (1382) 
  5. Michigan State, 8-0 (1340) 
  6. Ohio State, 7-1 (1296) 
  7. Oregon, 7-1 (1233) 
  8. Notre Dame, 7-1 (1067) 
  9. Michigan, 7-1 (1048)
  10.  Wake Forest, 8-0 (1025) 
  11. Oklahoma State, 7-1 (915) 
  12. Auburn, 6-2 (853) 
  13. Texas A&M, 6-2 (847) 
  14. Baylor, 7-1 (833) 
  15. Ole Miss, 6-2 (678) 
  16. UTSA, 8-0 (460) 
  17. BYU, 7-2 (450) 
  18. Kentucky, 6-2 (4o9)
  19.  Iowa, 6-2 (342)
  20.  Houston, 7-1 (338) 
  21. Coastal Carolina, 7-1 (237) 
  22. Penn State, 5-3 (182) 
  23. SMU, 7-1 (176) 
  24. Louisiana, 7-1 (161) 
  25. Fresno State, 7-2 (151)

Others receiving votes: Pittsburgh 117, NC State 104, Wisconsin 91, Mississippi State 79, Arkansas 72, Minnesota 51, San Diego State 50, Appalachian State 23, Utah 11, Iowa State 9, Nevada 2.

 

 

 

Amway Coaches 2021 Week 10 Football Bowl Subdivision Top 25 Poll Includes Two Big 12 Teams, One Big 12 Traitor

 

Below is the Amway Coaches 2021 Week 10 Football Bowl Subdivision Top 25 Poll, which includes in the top 25  two Big 12 teams, Oklahoma State (#11) and Baylor (#13), and one Big 12 traitor Oklahoma (#4).

Oklahoma has 1,423 points. Oklahoma State has 922 points. Baylor has 815 points.

Big 12 team Iowa State is listed among "others receiving votes." Iowa State (four points) is #38.

The 2021 Amway Coaches Poll is conducted weekly throughout the regular collegiate football season using a panel of head coaches at FBS schools. The panel is chosen by random draw, conference by conference plus independents, from a pool of coaches who have indicated to the American Football Coaches Association their willingness to participate. Each coach submits a Top 25 with a first-place vote worth 25 points, second place 24, and so on down to one point for 25th.

Access the poll online: here  

  1. Georgia, 8-0 (64) (1600)
  2. Cincinnati, 8-0 (1460)
  3. Alabama, 7-1 (1453)
  4. Oklahoma, 9-0 (1423)
  5. Ohio State, 7-1 (1336)
  6. Michigan State, 8-0 (1325)
  7. Oregon, 7-1 (1198)
  8. Notre Dame, 7-1 (1095)
  9. Wake Forest, 8-0 (1051)
  10. Michigan, 7-1 (1050)
  11. Oklahoma State, 7-1 (922)
  12. Texas A&M, 6-2 (910)
  13. Baylor, 7-1 (815)
  14. Auburn, 6-2 (802)
  15. Ole Miss, 6-2 (680)
  16. Iowa, 6-2 (512)
  17. Kentucky, 6-2 (497)
  18. UTSA, 8-0 (401)
  19. Houston, 7-1 (349)
  20. BYU, 7-2 (310)
  21. Coastal Carolina, 7-1 (301)
  22. NC State, 6-2 (265)
  23. Penn State, 5-3 (215)
  24. SMU, 7-1 (192)
  25. Pittsburgh, 6-2 (162)


Others receiving votes:
Louisiana 156, Fresno State 73, San Diego State 65, Arkansas 65, Minnesota 29, Wisconsin 26, Mississippi State 20, Appalachian State 10, Utah 10, Air Force 9, Liberty 4, Clemson 4, Iowa State 4, Arizona State 1.

 

 

 

TCU and Head Football Coach Gary Patterson Part Ways; Jerry Kill Named Interim Head Coach

Then TCU head football coach Gary Patterson (left) talks with Kansas State head football coach Chris Klieman prior to the Kansas State-TCU football game in Manhattan, Kansas, this past Saturday, October 30. It would be the last time Patterson coached the Horned Frogs. Kansas State defeated TCU, 31-12.                                             Photo by Tom C. "Midnite" Burke


The Gary Patterson era is over at TCU. 

TCU and Patterson agreed to part ways on Sunday, October 31, a day after the Horned Frogs suffered a 31-12 loss to Kansas State in Manhattan, Kansas.

Jerry Kill, Patterson's best friend who has been an offensive analyst on the TCU staff for the past two years, has been named the interim head coach. Kill was the University of Minnesota’s head coach from 2011-15.

TCU Athletic Director Jeremiah Donati will conduct a national search for Patterson’s replacement. 

“The story of Gary Patterson and the rise in the fortunes of the TCU football program over the last 20 years is clearly one of the most remarkable in the history of college football,” Donati said in a statement. “We are grateful to Gary and (his wife) Kelsey Patterson and appreciate everything they have meant to TCU and the Fort Worth community. Under his leadership, TCU has become a nationally recognized brand name in football and in collegiate athletics. “Chancellor [Victor] Boschini and I met with Coach Patterson today (Sunday, October 31) and mutually agreed that the time has come for a new voice and leadership in our football program. We asked him to continue on as our head coach for the remainder of the season, and take on a different role in 2022, but he believed it was in the team’s and TCU’s best interests to begin the transition immediately. 

“We respect Coach Patterson’s perspective and will move forward in that direction. Coach Patterson will assist TCU in the transition to take place.”  

TCU reportedly owes an $18-million buyout for Patterson and his staff. 

Patterson came to TCU in 1998 as the defensive coordinator for head coach Dennis Franchione, whom TCU hired away from the University of New Mexico. When Franchione was hired as Alabama's head football coach in 2000, Patterson was named TCU's head football coach.

Over his time as head coach, Patterson became TCU's winningest head football coach. He finished with a record of 181-79.

In college football, Patterson was the country's second-longest tenured coach, behind Iowa’s Kirk Ferentz. 

Highlights of the Gary Patterson-era at TCU include:

  • TCU is one of seven programs nationally to finish with an Associated Press Top-10 final ranking in at least three of the last seven seasons (2014, 2015, 2017). The others are Alabama, Clemson, Georgia, Ohio State, Oklahoma and Penn State. 
  • Over the last 13 years, the Frogs own six AP top-10 finishes, twice as many as Texas and two more than USC and Washington combined.
  • During Patterson’s tenure, TCU earned 20 bowl trips. TCU was 13-6 in bowl games played under Patterson (the 2020 Texas Bowl was canceled).
  • After the 2010 regular season, the Horned Frogs received the first Rose Bowl invitation offered to a team from a non-automatic-qualifying conference during the Bowl Championship Series (BCS) era. The Horned Frogs won the 2011 Rose Bowl, 21–19, over Wisconsin. The win climaxed an undefeated and untied season that earned TCU a No. 2 national ranking.
  • Patterson’s 181 victories were the most by an active head coach nationally at his current school. His winning percentage ranks fourth among active FBS coaches (minimum 10 years).
  • Patterson was tied for second nationally among active FBS head coaches in most AP Top-10 finishes with six (2008, 2009, 2010, 2014, 2015, 2017). He also was second among active head coaches in most top-25 finishes with 11.
  • Under Patterson, TCU won six conference championships, in three different leagues -- Conference USA (2002), the Mountain West (2005, 2009, 2010, 2011) and the Big 12 Conference (2014). Patterson was named Coach of the Year in each of those conferences.
  • The Horned Frogs won at least 10 games in 11 seasons under Patterson. Prior to his arrival on campus in 1998, TCU had four 10-win seasons in its history.
  • During his TCU tenure, including three seasons as defensive coordinator (1998-00), Patterson has seen TCU earn 20 bowl trips. TCU is 13-6 in bowl games with Patterson on its coaching staff and 11-6 with him as head coach. Before the Patterson era, the Horned Frogs had only four bowl wins in their history. 
  • Under Patterson, the Frogs went 7-3 against the University of Texas since joining the Big 12 Conference in 2012, including 4-2 in Fort Worth and 3-1 in Austin.
  •  In 2020, Patterson and TCU beat Texas for the sixth time in seven seasons. 
  • Gary Patterson was 7-4 against Texas as the Horned Frogs’ head coach. Since 1996, he ranked No. 1 in the nation among all head coaches past and present (minimum five games) in career winning percentage against Texas.
  • In 2012, TCU upset Mack Brown and No. 18 Texas, 20-13, in the first Thanksgiving night game in Austin following the demise of the Lone Star showdown with the Texas A&M Aggies, who had bolted for the Southeastern Conference.