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The 2020 college football season will look different than we could have ever imagined thanks to the coronavirus pandemic, but that hasn’t stopped the Associated Press from continuing to rank the field.
Following another busy weekend, the AP Top 25 Poll for Week 13 was released.
For the fourth consecutive week, the Alabama Crimson Tide sit in the No. 1 spot as the unanimous top team in the country.
Sitting in the No. 2 spot is the Notre Dame Fighting Irish, while the Ohio State Buckeyes, Clemson Tigers, and Texas A&M Aggies round out the top five.
Where does your favorite team stand entering the upcoming week in the eyes of the Associated Press voters?
The Week 13 AP Top 25 poll can be seen below.
Alabama has now been ranked for 209 consecutive AP Top 25 polls. Watch to find out where that stands in history.
Full poll >> https://t.co/7dTTUiSC1j
More coverage >> https://t.co/2qlqr09CPm pic.twitter.com/1lSGXtSktg
— AP Top 25 (@AP_Top25) November 30, 2020
- Alabama
- Notre Dame
- Ohio State
- Clemson
- Texas A&M
- Florida
- Cincinnati
- BYU
- Miami
- Indiana
- Georgia
- Iowa State
- Oklahoma
- Coastal Carolina
- Marshall
- Northwestern
- USC
- Wisconsin
- Oklahoma State
- Louisiana-Lafayette
- Oregon
- Tulsa
- Washington
- Iowa
- Liberty
Others receiving votes: North Carolina 65, Buffalo 56, Texas 39, Auburn 25, Colorado 21, North Carolina State 11, Boise State 8, San Jose State 8, SMU 8, Oregon State 1, UCF 1
The Associated Press rankings carry more weight than polls like the Coaches Poll and FWAA Poll, as they are part of the deciding factor on which teams reach the College Football Playoff. The Coaches Poll, which is not part of the College Football Playoff selection committee’s formula to determine the four teams that will compete for the College Football Playoff National Championship, is voted on by 65 FBS head coaches.
Longtime college football writers who vote in the Associated Press Top 25 Poll include Ben Jones, Bill Landis, Brett McMurphy, Brian Howell, Rece Davis, Rob Long, Robert Gagliardi, Steve Layman, Steve Virgen, Tom Murphy, and Tony Parks.
The Associated Press began its college football poll on Oct. 19, 1936, and it is now 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 62 sports writers and broadcasters from around the country votes on the poll weekly.