
AP Top 25: Texas No. 1 In Preseason Poll, Setting Up Top-3 Matchup vs. Ohio State
Updated
Aug. 11, 2025 12:19 p.m. ET
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When Texas and Ohio State meet in Columbus on Aug. 30 (noon ET on FOX and the FOX Sports app), it'll likely be for the No. 1 ranking in the nation.
Texas received the No. 1 ranking in the AP Top 25 college football preseason poll for the 2025 season, which was unveiled on Monday. Ohio State, meanwhile, received the No. 3 ranking, nearly giving us the first-ever Week 1 matchup between the No. 1 and No. 2 teams in the nation in the history of the AP poll. Penn State was ranked second between Texas and Ohio State.
[Related: RJ Young's Ultimate 136 college football rankings]
Texas received its No. 1 ranking after two appearances in the College Football Playoff semifinals in each of the last two years, earning 25 of the 65 first-place votes. It also received the No. 1 ranking as Arch Manning is set to take over at quarterback for the 2025 season. Manning, a redshirt sophomore, sat behind Quinn Ewers the last two seasons, but briefly played in 2024, recording 939 passing yards, two interceptions, 108 rushing yards and 13 total touchdowns.
As for Ohio State, it received the No. 3 overall ranking after winning its first national championship under head coach Ryan Day last season. Fourteen players from that team were selected in the 2025 NFL Draft, including quarterback Will Howard and wide receiver Emeka Egbuka. But the Buckeyes arguably have the two best players in college football entering 2025, with wide receiver Jeremiah Smith and safety Caleb Downs returning. Julian Sayin and Lincoln Kienholz are battling for the starting quarterback job. Ohio State got 11 first-place votes.
Penn State nearly got the No. 1 overall ranking. It earned 23 first-place votes and was only five points shy of Texas' point total. The Nittany Lions return quarterback Drew Allar, along with running backs Nicholas Singleton and Kaytron Allen, helping them receive their highest ranking a AP Top 25 preseason poll since 1997.
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Clemson, which returns quarterback Cade Klubnik and several stars on defense, earned the No. 4 ranking, receiving four first-place votes. Georgia rounds out the top five, receiving one first-place vote.
Notre Dame, Oregon (which got the final first-place vote), Alabama, LSU and Miami round out the top 10.
The SEC leads all conferences with 10 teams in the preseason Top 25, most ever by a conference and one more than a year ago. The SEC has four teams in the top 10 for the second straight year.
The Big Ten, which has won the last two national championships, has two of the top three teams in the poll for the third straight year and six in the Top 25 for the third year in a row.
Four Big 12 teams are ranked, with defending conference champion Arizona State the highest at No. 11. The Atlantic Coast Conference has three.
Poll nuggets
Texas will try to become the 12th team to start and finish No. 1 since the AP preseason poll debuted in 1950. The last team to do it was Alabama in 2017.
Notre Dame is in the preseason top 10 for the third time in four years. The Fighting Irish will have a new quarterback, CJ Carr or Kenny Minchey. The two played a combined eight snaps last season as Notre Dame went all the way to the CFP title game won by Ohio State.
With Boise State at No. 25, all 12 teams in the 2024 College Football Playoff are ranked in the preseason. The Mountain West's Broncos are the first team from a Group of Five conference to crack the preseason Top 25 since Tulane was No. 24 in 2023.
No. 16 SMU, which returns quarterback Kevin Jennings from its CFP team, is in the preseason Top 25 for the first time in 40 years. The 1985 team was No. 3 and finished 6-5 and unranked.
Here's the full top 25:
1. Texas
2. Ohio State
3. Penn State
4. Clemson
5. Georgia
6. Notre Dame
7. Oregon
8. Alabama
9. LSU
10. Miami (Fla.)
11. Arizona State
12. Illinois
13. South Carolina
14. Michigan
15. Florida
16. SMU
17. Kansas State
18. Oklahoma
19. Texas A&M
20. Indiana
21. Ole Miss
22. Iowa State
23. Texas Tech
24. Tennessee
25. Boise State
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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USA Today
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Where Oregon Ducks rank in preseason AP Top 25 since 2000
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Here are the Ducks' preseason AP rankings for every season going back to the turn of the century. 2000 — Unranked Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 5 (Week 13) Season Record: 10-2 Bowl Game Result: 35-30 Win vs. Texas in Holiday Bowl Analysis: Coming off a strong 1999 season, Oregon had high expectations at the turn of the century, and it made good on those expectations, reaching No. 5 in the rankings before beating Texas in the Holiday Bowl. 2001 — No. 7 Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 2 (Week 16, Final) Season Record: 11-1 Bowl Game Result: 38-16 Win vs. Colorado in Fiesta Bowl Analysis: This is the year that put the Ducks on the map. It was Joey Harrington's Heisman campaign season, and Oregon ultimately reached No. 2 in the nation before being snubbed for a spot in the BCS National Championship Game. It smoked Colorado in the Fiesta Bowl instead. 2002 — No. 15 Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 6 (Week 9) Season Record: 7-6 Bowl Game Result: 38-17 Loss vs. Wake Forest in Seattle Bowl Analysis: With Harrington out the door, expectations fell back to earth for the Ducks. They still played well in the middle of the season, getting to No. 6 in the rankings, but a loss in the bowl game put a damper on the season. 2003 — Unranked Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 10 (Week 5) Season Record: 8-5 Bowl Game Result: 31-30 Loss to Minnesota in Sun Bowl Analysis: The year started out with an upset over Michigan at home, which led the Ducks into the rankings quickly, but the season fell apart from there. 2004 — No. 23 Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 23 (Week 1) Season Record: 5-6 Bowl Game Result: No Bowl Analysis: It was a tough year for the Ducks in 2004. There were some expectations in the preseason when they were ranked inside the top 25. But they quickly fell out of the rankings and never sniffed them again on their way to a season with no bowl game. 2005 — Unranked Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 6 (Week 15) Season Record: 10-2 Bowl Game Result: 17-14 Loss vs. Oklahoma in Holiday Bowl Analysis: The Dennis Dixon era begins. At its best, Oregon was as good as any team in the country. It still struggled with consistency, though, culminating in a bowl game loss to Oklahoma. 2006 — No. 21 Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 11 (Week 6) Season Record: 7-6 Bowl Game Result: 38-8 Loss to BYU in Las Vegas Bowl Analysis: After a solid start under Dixon, the Ducks regressed in 2006 and struggled after a solid start to the year. In the end, they were blown out in the Las Vegas Bowl by BYU. 2007 — Unranked Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 2 (Week 12) Season Record: 9-4 Bowl Game Result: 56-21 Win over South Florida in Sun Bowl Analysis: The year that could have been. ... Oregon was arguably the best team in the nation this season. If it weren't for a Dennis Dixon torn ACL late in the year, it would have played for the national championship and likely gained a Heisman Trophy. This one still stings for most Duck fans. 2008 — No. 21 Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 10 (Week 17, Final) Season Record: 10-3 Bowl Game Result: 42-31 Win over Oklahoma State in Holiday Bowl Analysis: After losing Dennis Dixon and Jonathan Stewart, Oregon bounced back with Jeremiah Masoli and LeGarrette Blount and found great success, reaching a peak at No. 10 in the rankings late in the year. 2009 — No. 16 Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 7 (Week 10, 14, 15) Season Record: 10-3 Bowl Game Result: 26-17 Loss to Ohio State in Rose Bowl Analysis: The Ducks might have arrived in 2001 under Joey Harrington, but they finally became cool in 2009 with Chip Kelly leading the way. A place in the Rose Bowl was huge, but the loss to Ohio State was unfortunate. 2010 — No. 11 Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 1 (Weeks 8-14) Season Record: 12-1 Bowl Game Result: 22-19 Loss to Auburn in BCS National Championship Game Analysis: Oregon has arrived. For much of the year, the Ducks were No. 1 in the polls, and they made it to their first BCS National Championship Game. We don't have to talk about what happened from there. Dyer was down. 2011 — No. 3 Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 3 (Week 1) Season Record: 12-2 Bowl Game Result: 45-38 Win over Wisconsin in Rose Bowl Analysis: Coming off the championship game loss, the Ducks still had incredibly high expectations going into 2011. The stayed up in the rankings for most of the year and ended it with a Rose Bowl win over Wisconsin. 2012 — No. 5 Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 1 (Week 12) Season Record: 12-1 Bowl Game Result: 35-17 Win over Kansas State in Fiesta Bowl Analysis: Despite a quarterback change, the Ducks were still projected to be one of the top teams in the nation going into 2012. They reached No. 1 in the rankings late in the year before a loss to Stanford ended the dream of another championship appearance. The Ducks took out their frustration on Kansas State in the Fiesta Bowl. 2013 — No. 3 Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 2 (Weeks 2-11) Season Record: 11-2 Bowl Game Result: 30-7 Win over Texas in Alamo Bowl Analysis: Another strong season from Marcus Mariota had the Ducks in the conversation in 2013, and they were ranked No. 2 for much of the season. 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The Ducks finished strongly until the second half of the Alamo Bowl, in which they blew a 31-point lead and lost in triple-overtime. 2016 — No. 24 Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 24 (Week 1) Season Record: 4-8 Bowl Game Result: No Bowl Analysis: Not much to remember about the 2016 season other than it being the year that Mark Helfrich got fired. No bowl game for the Ducks, and a season largely spent outside of the rankings. 2017 — Unranked Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 24 (Week 4) Season Record: 7-6 Bowl Game Result: 38-28 Loss vs. Boise State in Las Vegas Bowl Analysis: Oregon sniffed the top 25 in 2017, cracking it once after beating Nebraska in a thriller, but this was still one of the down years for the Ducks over the last decade. 2018 — No. 24 Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 12 (Week 8) Season Record: 9-4 Bowl Game Result: 7-6 Win over Michigan State in Redbox Bowl Analysis: The Mario Cristobal era started strong, and Oregon was solid throughout the year, maintaining a respectable ranking for a team back on the rise. 2019 — No. 11 Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 5 (Final) Season Record: 12-2 Bowl Game Result: 28-27 Win over Wisconsin in Rose Bowl Analysis: Oregon was getting decent respect going into Justin Herbert's final year, and it did well to improve those expectations by reaching No. 5 in the rankings before going on to beat Wisconsin in the Rose Bowl. 2020 — No. 9 Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 9 (Week 1, 9) Season Record: 4-3 Bowl Game Result: 34-17 Loss to Iowa State in Fiesta Bowl Analysis: 2020 was a strange year, obviously, with a shortened schedule due to COVID-19. The Ducks rose to No. 9 in the rankings before winning the Pac-12 championship. They ended the wild year with a loss to Iowa State in the Fiesta Bowl. 2021 — No. 11 Highest Midseason AP Ranking: No. 3 (Weeks 4-5) Season Record: 10-4 Bowl Game Result: 47-32 Loss to Oklahoma in Alamo Bowl Analysis: The year that Oregon beat Ohio State at long last. The Ducks used that victory to get up to No. 3 in the rankings, but threw it all away shortly after with a loss to Stanford on the road. The season culminated in Mario Cristobal leaving for Miami after a loss in the Pac-12 Championship game. 2022 — No. 11 Highest Mid-Season AP Ranking: No. 6 (Week 11) Season Record: 10-3 Bowl Game Result: 28-27 Win over North Carolina in Holiday Bowl Analysis: Dan Lanning's debut with Oregon saw the Ducks ranked 11th going into the year, but they quickly fell to 25th after getting blown out by Georgia in Week 1. 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Advertisement When Texas players are at practice or in workouts: no jewelry, matching socks, shirts tucked in. Hats off during team meetings. That's Saban coming out of Sark. 'But also I think my ability to engage with people, and not that Coach Saban didn't, but, man, it was definitely like a fear factor with him,' Sarkisian said. 'And with Coach Carroll, it was more like, hug you. And I'm probably somewhere in the middle there. I try to engage with people. I try to relate to everybody in our building. My door is always open for our players and in recruiting, and I think that's allowed some of that connectivity.' Sarkisian can incorporate Saban's process while not facing the pressure that comes with following the seven-time national championship coach. As DeBoer tries to chart his own course at Alabama, the specter of Saban and the unprecedented standard he set looms over the Tide. 'In the end, we know we gotta win more games and we want those expectations, absolutely,' DeBoer told The Athletic this summer. 'That's what matters. You can come up with every excuse. It doesn't matter. No one cares, and we understand that. But as a coach myself, having been at different places, there is a process that you have to go through. And every place, it's been different challenges.' While the first season fell short of the standard at Alabama, a top-five recruiting class coming in this year and another in the making for 2026 are a good sign. Revenue sharing and NIL should continue to spread talent around college football more than when Saban was at his peak and it seemed only two or three teams in any given season could hope to compete against Alabama. Just because the Longhorns are thriving doesn't mean the Tide can't keep rolling. But right now, the program in Austin is closer to the one Saban left behind than the one in Tuscaloosa. Advertisement 'Excellence is exhausting, but it's worth it,' Sarkisian said. '(The players) see the success of their peers, and they're like, I want that, you know? The Outland trophies, the Thorpe awards, the All-Americans, the first-round picks, the draft picks, the College Football Playoffs. The on-the-cusp-of-a-national-championship. I want that. So how do I get there? It's pretty simple. The only thing I just keep looking for is, is there a complacency? Because complacency is, that'll get you. And we're fortunate. We've got no room to be complacent, because we haven't won the thing yet, you know?' Program Builders is part of a partnership with Range Rover Sport. The Athletic maintains full editorial independence. Partners have no control over or input into the reporting or editing process and do not review stories before publication. Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle