USC Opens Up Solid Lead in latest iTwentyFive College Football Poll
The Trojans of Southern California have opened up a lead on Oklahoma in the latest iTwentyFive College Football Poll. Texas A&M jumps eight spots and Wisconsin jumps four.
(PRWEB) October 19, 2004 -- USC broke last weeks tie with Oklahoma after the big win against Arizona State. The Trojans garnered 65% of the first place votes available. The Sooners are No. 2, with Auburn and Miami following. Florida State moves up two spots to finish up the top five.
Wisconsin uses their big win against Purdue to move up four spots to N0. 6, followed by California and Utah. The SEC rounds out the top ten with Tennessee and Georgia.
Texas drops a spot despite a win against Missouri. Purdue and Michigan from the Big Ten follow with Virginia in at No. 14. The Louisville Cardinals move up two spots after losing to Miami and close out the top fifteen.
The Aggies of Texas A&M move up eight spots to No. 16 with LSU and Boise State on their heels. Arizona State slides six spaces after the USC loss, with West Virginia right behind.
The Florida Gators move up one spot and Oklahoma State slots in at No. 22. Notre Dame, Virginia Tech, and Texas Tech are new comers to the poll and the round the poll.
Missouri, Southern Miss, and Minnesota drop from the poll.
The poll can be found at www.iTwentyFive.com
The iTwentyFive poll was previously named the Internet Writers and Radio Broadcasters Poll
The iTwentyFive is comprised of voters from across the nation who are either free-lance writers, work for alternative media, or are radio broadcasters. The poll is designed to give votes to people who get to watch more than one or two games per weekend and have no systematic bias. We believe it is the most accurate of the polls when it comes to evaluating teams from the vantage point of actually watching the teams play multiple times against different opponents in varying situations. In a nutshell, the jobs that writers and coaches have actually impair their ability to evaluate all teams fairly. Our voters dont have that problem.
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