USCCA/WICCA NCAA Cross Country Coaches Polls – November 1, 1999

NCAA Cross Country Polls

Division I

DI Men | DI Women | DII Men | DII Women | DIII Men | DIII Women

FinishLynx Women’s Cross Country Rankings

Poll released Nov. 1, 1999NE = Northeast, MA = Mid-Atlantic, SE = Southeast, GL = Great Lakes, MW = Midwest, SC = South Central, MT = Mountain, W = West, S = South.

Comments by Mike Scott, the CC guru from the Pacific Northwest (a former assistant at Washington, he has written on cross country for Northwest Runner, Track & Field News,and American Track & Field).

Rank Team (first place votes) Region Points Rank
Last
Week
1 Stanford (11) W 299 1
The Cardinal is firmly entrenched at the top of the polls following wins over Arkansas, BYU, Wisconsin, Kansas State, and Washington on Oct 2 and most of the country at Pre- NCAAs. Stanford won the NCAA team title in 1996, finished 2nd in ’97 to BYU by a mere 2 points, and placed third last year behind Villanova and BYU in the tightest team finish in NCAA history. Stanford returns a devastating 1-2 punch- -Julia Stamps (6th, 4th ’97) and Sally Glynn (5th, 20th ’97) But joining this twosome is the nation’s best recruiting class: 2-time Foot Locker champ Erin Sullivan, ’98 Foot Locker runner-up Lauren Fleshman, and ’97 Foot Locker runner-up Mariel Ettinger. Returning from their ’98 squad is US World Jr team member Caroline Annis (40th), Mary Haung (54th), Courtney Adams (137th), and Laura Turner (156th), as well as Ann Ramsey (69th ’97). Also new to the team are Cal prep standout Kathleen Brizgys and ’99s top two prep 800 runners, Lindsay Hyatt (2:06.74) and Katie Hotchkiss (2:08.22). Stanford (minus Glynn and Sullivan) beat BYU at altitude in Provo on Sept 18. Then in Palo Alto on Oct 2, Stanford won comfortably over a field that included 4 of the top 5 ranked teams. The Cardinal put 4 runners– Stamps, Fleshman, Sullivan, and Glynn–under 16:55 on their challenging course, with only Arkansas managing to stay close. Ettinger and Turner also finished under 17:35 as Stanford put seven in front of Arkansas’ fifth. Stanford ran without Stamps at Pre-NCAAs and still dominated the race with Sullivan stepping up for a surprising individual runner-up finish. The Cardinal’s Sullivan, Glynn, and Fleshman swept the top three places at the PAC-10 meet as their team easily won the loop title despite Stamps DNFing and Ettinger apparently not starting. Sullivan’s performances at Pre-NCAAs and PAC-10s make her a legit contender for the individual title in Bloomington. Stanford will advance easily through the deep West region at Portland’s Blue Lake Park.
2 Arkansas (1) SC 288 2
The Lady Razorbacks, 6th at last fall’s NCAA champs, also return two top-10 individuals and hope to join their male counterparts atop the victory stand in Bloomington. Amy Yoder (3rd, 7th ’97, 29th ’96) is the top returning individual from the ’98 NCAA meet, while Jessica Dailey (nee Koch; 10th, 39th ’97, 114th ’96) garnered 10th place last fall. Also returning from the ’98 NCAA squad is Tracy Robertson (59th, 61st ’97). Two outstanding transfers will be key to Lady’Backs’ success this season: Larissa Kleinmann from Boston U. won last year’s Northeast Regional and former Foot Locker finalist Amy Weisman (98th) comes from Nebraska, although the latter hasn’t appeared so far this fall and may redshirt. Arkansas also features redshirt frosh Kimi Welsh and newcomers Christine Wurth (18th FL) and Nicole Williams (23rd FL). Arkansas easily won the Sept 11 Jayhawk Invite (finishing 1-6 over the field) and the Sept 25 Sam Bell Invite (finishing 1-4 over that field), then fell to Stanford in Palo Alto on Oct 2. The Lady ‘Backs stayed even with Stanford through 4 runners- -Yoder, Robertson, Kleinmann, and Dailey all broke 17:00 at Stanford–but need for their 5th to close the gap to knock off the Cardinal. Arkansas turned back Wisconsin at the Oct 16 Chili Pepper Festival before sweeping the top five spots at the SEC champs; despite the sweep, the Lady ‘Backs still had a 38-second gap between their 4th and 5th runners. Arkansas should be able to jog through the South Central regional in Denton, Texas with a good chance of sweeping the top four places in the race.
3 Brigham Young MT 277 3
Patrick Shane’s BYU squad won the 1997 NCAA team title and finished second last fall just behind Villanova and ahead of Stanford in the tightest three-way battle in NCAA history. Returning for the Cougars this fall will be Sharolyn Shields (13th), Laura Heiner (31st), Elizabeth Jackson (36th, 32nd ’97, 25th ’96), Kara Ormond (57th), Tara Haynes (77th, 38th ’97), and Caisa Monahan (49th ’97). Joining this powerful lineup is NCAA 10k runner-up Tara Rohatinsky and NCAA 3k finalist Lindsey Jones, as well as frosh Sarah Ellett and Sherida Rogers. On Sept 18 Stanford narrowly upset BYU (sans Rohatinsky) in Provo as both teams finished well ahead of Georgetown. One week later at Griak, Coach Shane ran a “B” squad that fell to Arizona State. At the Oct 2 Stanford Invite, a full strength BYU finished third behind host Stanford and Arkansas. Running without Shields, BYU just edged Colorado for second at the Pre-NCAAs behind Stanford. The Cougars then perfect-scored the new Mountain West conference by sweeping the top 5 places. BYU faces Colorado at the Mountain Regional in Fort Collins.
4 Colorado MT 262 4
Seventh in ’98, the Buffs finished 3rd in ’97. CU returns Carrie Messner (66th, 30th ’97, 82nd ’95), Lindsay Arendt (119th), Leslie Higgins (122nd), Jennifer Fazioli (127th; 18th ’96 FL), Briana Stott-Messick (248th, 80th ’97), and Kara Wheeler, as well as former Foot Locker finalists Jenny Arnold (12th ’97 FL) and Jodie Hughes (27th ’96 FL). The Buffs gain frosh Tera Moody and transfers Catherine and Anna Wright from Tenn-Chattanooga. Colorado won the Sept 11 Colorado State Invite and essentially time trialed the Oct 2 Rocky Mountain Shootout before showing their had at Pre- NCAAs with a strong third, only 7 points back from BYU. CU then held off a strong challenge by Kansas State to edge them for the Big 12 title. Wheeler looks like a legitimate contender for the NCAA individual title after wins at Pre- NCAAs and Big 12 champs. The Buffs will square off against BYU in Fort Collins at the Mountain Regional.
5 Wisconsin GL 253 5
Coach Peter Tegen’s squad–5th at the ’98 championships– will be led by NCAA Indoor 5k runnerup Erica Palmer (3rd in the Great Lakes Regional, with 16:03.94 and 34:03.60 credentials). Joining Palmer will be 9:30.00 3k runner Bethany Brewster (62nd), 9:31 3k runner Erin AufderHeide (71st), 4:19.94 1500 runner Stephanie Pesch (112th), and ’98 Wisconsin prep champ Liz Reusser. The Badgers won the Sept 18 Illinois Invite, fell to Stanford, Arkansas, and BYU at the Oct 2 Stanford Invite, and again to Arkansas at the Oct 16 Chili Pepper Festival. Wisconsin swept the top three places to dominate the Big-10 champs. The Badgers should advance comfortably through the Great Lakes regional in Terre Haute, IN.
6 Georgetown MA 229 8
Fourth last year in Lawrence, the Hoyas return individual 4th-place finisher Kristen Gordon (4th, 40th ’97). Joining Gordon from their ’98 squad are Autum Fogg (23rd, 42nd ’97; 117th ’96), Kathy Linck (88th),Lorena Adams (117th, 116th ’97), Lisa Roder (182nd), and Emily Enstice (170th). Newcomers include Liz Churchville (12th FL) and Marni Kruppa (8th FL). Stanford and BYU both finished well ahead of the Hoyas at the Sept 18 BYU Challenge, then Georgetown edged James Madison at the Oct 26 GWU Invite, won the Oct 9 Paul Short Invite over Wake Forest and James Madison, and finished sixth at Pre-NCAAs. The Hoyas downed PC, Villanova, and Notre Dame at the Big East Champs. Georgetown faces Villanova again at the Mid Atlantic regional.
7 Kansas State MW 224 7
Kansas State capped off an excellent season last fall with a 13th place finish in Lawrence. K-State returns Korene Hinds (27th), Katerina Fotopoulo (83rd), Amanda Crouse (106th), Annie Wetterhus (113th), Julie Kronoshek (194th), and Kelly Andra (240th) and gained frosh Amy Mortimer (15th FL), who has won her first two meets this fall prior to facing many of the nation’s best at Stanford. Like Mortimer, K-State won both the Sept 4 Maple Leaf Invite and the Sept 18 Woody Greeno meet. The Wildcats finally met their match in Palo Alto on Oct 2 when they fell to Stanford, Arkansas, BYU, and Wisconsin. K-State then finished fifth at the Pre-NCAAs and narrowly lost to CU at the Big 12 champs. The Wildcats feature a strong top 4 runners, but drop off considerably (40+ secs at Big 12s) to their fifth. Kansas State races the Midwest regional in Champaign, IL.
8 North Carolina SE 217 6
The Tarheels finished 18th last year in Lawrence and return Trish Nervo (75th), Julie Smith (78th), Heather Tanner (96th), Kim Timberlake (142nd), Tori Irvine (160th), Rebecca Walker (209th), Stephanie Jilcot (219th), and Karen Everitt. Whitney Weber joins the Tarheels. UNC beat Wake Forest at the Sept 18 Winthrop Invite, but was then edged by Michigan State at the Oct 1 Auburn Invite. The Tarheels shocked with a unexpected fourth at Pre-NCAAs behind Stanford, BYU, and Colorado, then backed it with a win at ACCs. UNC will again face cross state rival NC State at the surprisingly competitive Southeast Regional at Furman.
9 Arizona State W 208 11
Last year, the Sun Devils made their first-ever appearance at the NCAA meet with a 23rd-place effort. With the loss of only one runner from last year’s NCAA squad, ASU looks poised for a trophy at the NCAA meet later this fall. Coach Walt Drenth returns Lisa Aguilera (131st), 9:25 3k runner Kelly MacDonald (134th), Kristin McFerron (158th), Cody Sohn (211th), Nicole Simmons (227th), Amy Maciasek (235th) from the NCAA squad, and regains the services of ’97 #1 runner Mary Duerbeck who missed the ’98 campaign due to injury. Aguilera ran quite well early, as are MacDonald and Duerbeck. Arizona State dominated its cross state Arizona and Northern Arizona in Irvine (CA) on Sept 11 then surprised with a win over an under-strength BYU team at Griak. However, ASU had an off day at Pre-NCAAs (especially Aguilera) and only finished 7th. The Sun Devils returned with a strong team performance on a warm day at the PAC-10 champs to earn runnerup honors behind the Cardinal and ahead of a strong Washington team. In Portland Arizona State will again duel with the Huskies for the second auto qualifier at the deep West regional.
10 Washington W 199 9
The Huskies notched a 9th place finish at last year’s NCAA meet, lost only one runner to graduation, and have benefited immensely from two important transfers. Returning for Washington are Anna Aoki (38th, 88th ’97), Jennifer Smith (82nd), Kara Syrdal (129th, 129th ’97), Ashley Foianini (198th), and Cami Matson, as well as Margaret Butler (98th ’97), who missed much of the ’98 campaign to injury. Joining the Dawgs are transfers Melinda Campbell (19th) from Boise State and ’97 USA Jr XC champ Jen Schindler from American River CC. Smith–the ’97 Big-12 Rookie of the year while running at Colorado–hasn’t appeared this fall and will almost certainly redshirt, while Campbell missed the Stanford Invite and finished a bit back at both Michigan and PAC-10s. Washington easily dominated the Sept 11 Emerald City Invite, then recorded an impressive performance at their own Sept 25 Sundodger Invite–running one of the fastest team times ever over the Lincoln Park course. The Huskies fell to Stanford, Arkansas, BYU, Wisconsin, and K-State at the Oct 2 Stanford Invite, where they ran without their #1 runner Campbell (putting Campbell in moves them slightly ahead of Kansas State). The Huskies chose to skip Pre-NCAAs, and won the Wolverine Interregional over Nebraska, JMU, and Montana State. Despite warm conditions that favored the southern teams in the conference, Washington ran well at the PAC-10 meet to finish third close behind Arizona State. The Huskies will contend with the Sun Devils for the second automatic qualifier out of the West region at Portland’s Blue Lake Park.
11 North Carolina State SE 174 10
The Wolfpack finished 11th in ’97 and 19th in ’98. Lindsey Rogers (41st) is their top returning NCAA finisher but World Junior XC team member Jennifer Modiszewski (224th) led the pack most of the ’98 campaign; unfortunately Modiszewski hasn’t appeared this fall and will redshirt. Joining this twosome are Katie Sabino (67th), Erin Musson (130th, 55th ’97), and Amy Beykirk (213th, 70th ’97). Rogers and Musson have also missed meets this fall with injuries but have reappeared by ACCs. The Wolfpack finished a distant 2nd to Arkansas at the Sept 25 Sam Bell Invite, then beat William & Mary, Baylor, and Nebraska at the Oct 9 National Invite. ’96 All-American Christy Nichols opened at the ACC meet with a bang — an individual title! However, that wasn’t enough as the Wolfpack fell to UNC. NC State will look for one of the auto qualifier spots at the deep Southeast regional at Furman.
12 James Madison SE 168
Heather Hanscom, Bethany Eigel, Keisha Banks, Michelle Smith, and Brett Romano lead JMU, which finished 7th at last fall’s regionals. The Dukes won the Sept 11 Cavalier Classic, finished second to Georgetown at the Sept 25 GWU Invite, third behind Georgetown and Wake Forest at the Oct 9 Paul Short Invite, and third again at the Wolverine Interregional behind Washington and Nebraska. At the Colonial Athletic Assoc champs, JMU upset William & Mary for the loop title. The Dukes will contend with William & Mary and Wake Forest for a good position in the at-large selection process.
13 William & Mary SE 157 12
W&M; returns Kathy Newberry (43rd), Dana Pascarella (56th), Emily Furia (89th), Amanda Buell (108th), Alison Mann (216th), Candice Major (231st) from their 10th place team. Buell has been out this fall with a stress fracture, but might appear at regionals. The Tribe’s finished 4th behind Stanford, BYU, and Georgetown at the Sept 18 BYU Challenge, beat Virginia at the Sept 25 Colonial Invite, and second behind NC State but ahead of Baylor and Nebraska at the Oct 9 National Invite. W&M; finished 8th at Pre-NCAAs but was then upset by James Madison at the CAA conference champs when Pascarella didn’t run. The Tribe faces an uphill battle for an auto qualifier in the competitive Southeast region, but is in an excellent position for an at large berth given their performance in Bloomington.
14 UCLA W 142 14
The Bruins made their 1st appearance at the NCAA champs in a decade last fall. Kelly Cohn (79th), Elaine Canchola (238th), and transfer Kate Vermeulen — the NCAA Indoor mile champ for West Virginia — lead the Bruins this fall. The Bruins narrowly lost to Arizona at the Sept 18 Aztec Invite, finished 6th at Griak behind Arizona State, BYU, Minnesota, Missouri, and Nebraska, then won the Oct 9 Long Beach Invite before finishing 10th at Pre-NCAAs. UCLA ran well at the PAC-10 champs and finished 4th behind Stanford, Arizona State, and Washington. At the West regional in Portland, The Bruins look to position themselves in line for one of the top at large berths likely to come the way of this highly competitive region.
15 Michigan GL 128
Despite having the individual titlist in Katie McGregor, Michigan was only able to pull off an 11th place team effort at last fall’s NCAA meet. Returning from that squad are Elizabeth Kampfe (246th, 23rd), Lisa Ouellet (68th, 97th ’97), Sarah Hamilton (146th), Katie Clifford (165th, 122nd ’97), Julie Froud (175th, 65th ’97). Katie Radkewich (2nd ’96 FL) missed the end of last season with an injury and has missed a couple recent meets again fall while Kampfe is off her form she had shown the two previous years. The Wolverines downed Michigan State on Sept 4, then won the Sept 18 Spiked Shoe Invite over Bucknell and Penn State, ran poorly at the Sept 25 Sam Bell Invite (sans Radkewich and Erin White) where they finished 5th behind Arkansas, NC State, Northwestern, and South Florida. Michigan won the Oct 8 Michigan Intercollegiates, then finished 5th at home at the Wolverine Interregional before upsetting Minnesota and Michigan State for second at the Big-10 champs behid Wisconsin. Michigan will duel with Michigan State and Notre Dame for the second auto spot at the Great Lakes regional in Terre Haute, IN.
16 Minnesota MW 118 17
The Gophers return last year’s Midwest Regional champ Rasa Michniovaite. Gopher mentor Gary Wilson’s squad finished 26th at the ’98 NCAA meet. Juniors Elaine Eggleston (191st) and NCAA 10k qualifier Corinne Nimitz (152nd) have led the Gophers early this season as the team scored a surprising third at their own Griak Invite behind Arizona State and BYU but ahead of regional foes Missouri, Nebraska, and Iowa State. The Gophers then edged Iowa State at the Oct 9 Iowa State Memorial before finishing 12th at Pre-NCAAs. At the Big-10 champs, Minnesota finished third close behind runner- up Michigan and narrowly ahead of Michigan State. Minnesota looks for the second auto spot in the Midwest region.
17 Providence NE 107 21
Providence College looked strong in their first two outings, dominating the Sept 3 New Hampshire and Sept 11 Rhode Island meets, but then fell apart at Griak garnering only 9th place. The Friars looked better at the Oct 15 New Englands, notching a win over BC. Rachel Hixson (15th, 44th ’97) returns to lead the team and is joined at the front by Dana Ostrander (212th, 82nd ’97) and Heather Cappello (154th). Francine Darroch (164th, 113th ’97) and Stephanie O’Reilly (251st, 142nd ’97) also return with NCAA experience while Canadian Emily Tallen and Ireland’s Kathryn Cassidy have run well early this fall. The Friars will race the Oct 29 Big East meet.
18 Boston University NE 98 13
Despite losing New England Regional champ Larissa Kleinmann, BU has stepped up a notch this fall. Ann Kovalsky, Lauren Matthews, and Kathryn Ireland lead the team. BU finished a strong second to Brown at the Oct 2 Iona Invite after falling to Dartmouth at the Sept 11 Dartmouth Invite, then finished 9th at Pre-NCAAs before dominating the America East Conference champs with a 1-2-3- 4 finish. The Terriers will face Providence at the Northeast regional in Boston’s Franklin Park.
19 Michigan State GL 84 18
The Spartans only finished 6th at their regional meet last fall, but burst onto the scene this fall with a win over North Carolina at the Oct 2 Auburn Invite over North Carolina, South Florida, and Georgia. Michigan State then finished 13th at Pre-NCAAs and fourth at the Big-10 champs just behind 2nd-place Michigan and 3rd-place Minnesota. Soph Ann Somerville and frosh Cindy Durocher lead Michigan State. The Spartans will face Michigan and Notre Dame for the second auto spot out of the Great Lakes region.
20 Northern Arizona MT 77 20
NAU returns All-Americans Amy Swier (47th, 10th ’97) and Emily Allison (33rd) to lead the squad, with Kendra Versendaal (132nd) also running well early. The Lumberjacks won the Sept 4 George Kyte meet, finished 3rd in Irvine on Sept 11 behind Arizona State and Arizona, 7th at Griak behind Arizona State, BYU, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, and UCLA, and 15th at Pre-NCAAs. The Lumberjacks face an evenly matched Colorado State squad on CSU’s home course for third at the Mountain Regional..
21 Missouri MW 54 24
The Tigers finished 21st last fall and return their entire squad. Missouri is led by Kim Moore (60th), Katie Meyer (92nd, 96th ’97), Anne Marie Brooks (94th), Justa Dahl (185th, 118th ’97), Sunny Gilbert (190th), Jessica Patton (221st), and Courtney Bell (232nd). They are joined by Minnesota transfer Anna Gullingsrud and Show Me state prep champ Amy Chipman. MU easily won their own Sept 10 Missouri Challenge, then finished 4th at Griak behind Arizona State, BYU, and Minnesota, fell to Notre Dame in South Bend on 10/1, and finished 18th at Pre-NCAAs with an off day by a couple of their runners. Missouri finished third at Big 12s behind Colorado and Kansas State, just edging regional foe Nebraska by 2 points. The Tigers will face Minnesota and Nebraska for the 2nd auto spot in the Midwest region.
22 Villanova MA 43
The defending champs graduated ’97 individual champ Carrie Tollefson and former NCAA 3000 titlest Kristine Jost (who chose to utilize her remaining year of eligibility at Florida). Sarah Vance Goodman (12th), Kristen Nicolini (17th), and Carmen Douma (21st, 6th ’97, 44th ’96) helped lead last year’s squad to victory, with Ann McGranahan (81st) also returning from that squad. Newcomers Liz Awtrey (21st FL) and Sheila Klick (20th FL), and Ireland’s Geraldine McCarthy are expected to score for the Wildcats. The Wildcats dominated the Sept 17 Haverford Invite and Oct 1 LaSalle Invite without Goodman appearing in the lineup, but fell to 20th at Pre-NCAAs without either Goodman or McGranahan. At the Big East champs, McGranahan and Goodman returned to help Villanova garner third behind Georgetown and Providence, but Goodman was an unimpressive 18th and Nicolini didn’t appear. With everyone in the lineup, Villanova looks like a lock for the Mid-Atlantic region’s second auto spot.
23 Nebraska MW 38 25
Nebraska tied for 23rd last fall at NCAAs. Nebraska is led by Michelle Brooks, Jaime Pauli (135th), Jeannette Zimmer (70th), and Jaime Kruger, with newcomer Kathryn Handrup already making an impact. The Huskers won the Sept 4 Bearcat Invite, finished second to K-State on Oct 18 at the Woody Greeno Invite, fifth at Griak behind ASU, BYU, and Midwest region foes Minnesota and Missouri, fourth behind NC State, William & Mary, and Baylor at the Oct 9 National Invite, and second to Washington at the Wolverine Interregional. Nebraska finished fourth behind Colorado, Kansas State, and Missouri (the latter by a mere two points) at Big 12 champs. The Huskers will face Minnesota and Missouri for the 2nd auto spot in the Midwest region..
24 Arizona W 20
With the departure of Amy Skieresz, Coach Dave Murray has some big shoes to fill from last year’s 16th-place team. He appears to have found another champion in Tara Chaplin (85th), who will be joined by Kristen Parrish (102nd, 60th ’96), Katrin Englen, and Erin Doherty. Arizona finished 7th at the Oct 2 Stanford Invite behind Stanford, Arkansas, BYU, Wisconsin, Kansas State, and Washington, then 19th at the Pre-NCAA meet. At the highly competitive PAC-10 champs, Arizona ran well in the unseasonably warm weather to finish fifth behind Stanford, Arizona State, Washington, and UCLA. They face the country’s deepest region at the West regional in Portland.
25 Oregon W 16 23
The Ducks finished 12th in Lawrence but face the nation’s toughest region again. Tara Struyk, Eri MacDonald (Hawaii prep champ), Katie Crabb, Amy Nickerson (Oregon prep champ), and Rhiannon Glenn lead the Ducks. Oregon finished 3rd behind Notre Dame and Missouri at the Oct 1 Notre Dame meet without Nickerson, then added Nickerson to their lineup and tied Colorado State for 16th at Pre-NCAAs. The Ducks faded a bit in the 90 degree weather at the PAC-10 champs and finished sixth behind Stanford, Arizona State, Washington, UCLA, and Arizona. The Ducks hope for a good finish at the deep West regional at Portland’s Blue Lake Park.
Baylor SC 15
Texas SC 16
Wake Forest SE 19
Colorado State MT 22
Notre Dame GL
Florida S
Duke SE
Boston College NE
Weber State MT
25

Other Teams Also Receiving Votes: Brown 5, Boston College 5, South Florida 3, Texas Tech 3, Texas 2, Baylor 1, Notre Dame 1.

Voting panel consists of the nine elected regional representatives and three at large members of the Women’s Intercollegiate Cross Country Coaches Association. Compiled by Jesse Rosen of Minneapolis, Minn.

DI Men | DI Women | DII Men | DII Women | DIII Men | DIII Women

MONDO Men’s Cross Country Rankings

Poll released Nov. 2, 1999.NE = Northeast, MA = Mid-Atlantic, SE = Southeast, GL = Great Lakes, MW = Midwest, SC = South Central, MT = Mountain, W = West, S = South.

                                               Rank
                                               Last
Rank  Team (first place votes)  Region Points  Week

1     Arkansas (16)                SC      400    1
2     North Carolina State         SE      380    3
3     Colorado                     MT      364    4
4     Arizona                      W       356    6
5     Stanford                     W       335    2
6     Wisconsin                    GL      323    5
7     Michigan                     GL      300    8
8     Notre Dame                   GL      290    10
9     Georgetown                   MA      248    7
10    James Madison                SE      246    11
11    Oregon                       W       234    12
12    BYU                          MT      223    13
13    Villanova                    MA      196    14
14    Northern Arizona             MT      191    16
15    Arizona State                W       188    9
16    Weber State                  MT      148    17
17    William & Mary               SE      131    19
18    Portland                     W       124    20
19    Minnesota                    MW      103    24
20    Providence                   NE      92     25=
21    Princeton                    MA      75     18
22    Tennessee                    S       67     23
23    Utah                         MT      54     15
24    Dartmouth                    NE      49     21
25    Southern Mississippi         S       17     --
--    Brown                        NE             22
--    South Florida                S              25=

Also receiving votes: Air Force 16, South Florida 14, Central Michigan 10, Duke 10, Alabama 5, Oklahoma State 4, Cal Poly San Luis Obispo 2, Brown 1, Butler 1, Iona College 1.

Sponsored by MONDO. Voters in the poll are active members of the United States Cross Country Coaches Association. Compiled by Don Kopriva, P.O. Box 3040, Lisle, Ill. 60532.

Analyses of some of the teams listed above are available from Ryan Grote.

Division II

DI Men | DI Women | DII Men | DII Women | DIII Men | DIII Women

Women’s Cross Country Rankings

Poll released Nov. 1, 1999E = East, GL = Great Lakes, NC = North Central, SC = South Central, W = West, SE = Southeast.

                                       Rank
                                       Last
Rank  Team                   Region    Week

1     Adams State                  SC      1
2     Western State                SC      2
3     Edinboro                     E       4
4     UC-Davis                     W       3
5     Shippensburg                 E       5
6     Grand Valley State           GL      6
7     North Dakota State           NC      7
8     Nebraska - Omaha             NC      8
9     Harding                      SC      9
10    South Dakota                 NC      11
11    Southern Indiana             GL      12
12    Seattle Pacific              W       22
13    North Dakota                 NC      13
14    UW-Parkside                  GL      14
15    Central Washington           W       10
16    East Stroudsburg             E       --
17    Florida Southern             SE      18
18    Northern Colorado            NC      15
19    UC Colorado Springs          SC      16
20    Kennesaw State               SE      20
21    Cal St.-Dominquez Hills      W       17
22    Hillsdale                    GL      21
23    North Florida                SE      23
24    Indiana (PA)                 E       --
25    Texas A&M; Commerce           SC      25
--    Millersville                 E       19
--    Cal St.-Chico                W       24

Poll compiled by Alex Accetta, Fort Lewis College.

DI Men | DI Women | DII Men | DII Women | DIII Men | DIII Women

Men’s Cross Country Rankings

Poll released Nov. 1, 1999E = East, GL = Great Lakes, NC = North Central, SC = South Central, W = West, SE = Southeast.

                                       Rank
                                       Last
Rank  Team                   Region    Week

1     Western State                SC      1
2     Adams State                  SC      2
3     Abilene Christian            SC      3
4     Minn State-Mankato           NC      4
5     Lewis                        GL      5
6     Central Missouri St          GL      6
7     Cal-Davis                    W       7
8     Missouri Southern            GL      8
9     Edinboro                     E       9
10    Cal State-Chico              W       10
11    Lock Haven                   E       14
12    Harding                      SC      11
13    Truman                       GL      12
14    South Dakota State           NC      15
15    Southern Indiana             GL      16
16    Humboldt State               W       13
17    Augustana                    NC      17
18    New Mexico Highlands         SC      18
19    Kennesaw State               SE      19
20    Minnesota Duluth             NC      20
21    West Georgia                 SE      21
22    South Dakota                 NC      22
23    Alaska-Anchorage             W       --
24    Shippensburg                 E       --
25    Texas A&M; Commerce           SC      23
--    Cal-Poly Pomona              W       24
--    Millersville                 E       25

Poll compiled by Bill Gallagher, Ashland College.

Division III

DI Men | DI Women | DII Men | DII Women | DIII Men | DIII Women

Women’s Cross Country Rankings

Poll released Nov. 2, 1999

                                              Rank
                                              Last
Rank  Team (first place votes)Region Points   Week

1     ST. OLAF (4)                 C       193    1
2     MIDDLEBURY (3)               NE      192    3
3     CALVIN (1)                   GL      191    2
4     UW-OSHKOSH                   MW      176    4
5     UW-LACROSSE                  MW      162    5
6=    SUNY CORTLAND                MA      156    6
6=    WILLIAMS                     NE      156    7
8     BALDWIN WALLACE              GL      139    8
9     COLLEGE OF NEW JERSEY        MA      133    9
10    MACALESTER                   C       128    12
11    ST. THOMAS                   C       117    10
12    BRANDEIS                     NE      112    11
13    UC-SAN DIEGO                 W       109    13
14    AMHERST                      NE      88     17
15    WHEATON (ILL)                MW      77     18
16    COLORADO COLLEGE             W       74     16
17    LUTHER                       C       69     21
18    HAMILTON                     MA      68     15
19    MORAVIAN                     ME      66     14
20    WARTBURG                     C       49     19
21=   SUNY PLATTSBURGH             MA      34     20
21=   UW-STEVENS POINT             MW      34     23
23    DENISON                      GL      22     24
24    COLBY                        NE      13     --
25    RHODES                       SSE     12     --
--    SUNY GENESEO                 MA             22
--    EMORY                        SSE            25

ALSO RECEIVING VOTES: NEBRASKA WESLEYAN, AUGUSTANA (ILL), ITHACA , UW-WHITEWATER, DICKINSON, AND NORTH CENTRAL.

Poll compiled by Jeff and Laurie Miller.

DI Men | DI Women | DII Men | DII Women | >DIII Men | DIII Women

Men’s Cross Country Rankings

Poll released Nov. 1, 1999

                                              Rank
                                              Last
Rank  Team (first place votes)Region Points   Week

1     Calvin, MI (5)               GL      195    1
2     UW-LaCrosse (2)              MW      192    3
3     North Central, IL (1)        MW      188    2
4     Keene State, NH              NE      174    5
5     UW-Whitewater                MW      166    7
6     Heidelburg, OH               GL      159    6
7     UW-Stevens Point             MW      158    4
8     Williams, MA                 NE      141    8=
9     Nebraska Wesleyan            C       137    8=
10    UW-Oshkosh                   MW      125    10
11    UW-Eau Claire                MW      113    11
12    Puget Sound                  W       103    13
13    St. Johns, MN                C       101    12
14    Haverford, PA                ME      97     14
15    Tufts, MA                    NE      87     19=
16=   SUNY Cortland                MA      74     16
16=   MIT                          NE      74     17
18    College of New Jersey        MA      58     18
19    Bates, ME                    NE      46     15
20    St.Thomas, MN                C       41     22
21    UC San Diego                 W       38     23
22    Grinnell                     C       35     21
23    SUNY-Plattsburgh             MA      28     19=
24    Washington-St. Louis         MW      26     --
25    Emory                        SSE     11     --
--    Wartburg                     C              24
--    St. Lawrence                 MA             25

Others Receiving Votes; Coast Guard, Emory, Washington St Louis, Brandeis, Hope, Bowdoin, Kenyon

Poll compiled by Rick Witt, UW-Stevens Point

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USTFCCCA NCAA Division I
's Cross Country National Coaches' Poll

Preseason - October 19th

RANK TEAM & INFOPTS-1
FINAL


Week-by-Week Ranking

TeamPreseasonWeek #1Week #2Week #3
Iowa State1111
Oklahoma State3322
New Mexico2233
Virginia6644
Colorado131355
BYU4466
Wisconsin5577
Alabama111188
Notre Dame8899
Wake Forest1091010
Syracuse12121111
Butler15151312
Northern Arizona14141413
Oregon9101214
California Baptist15161515
Michigan State30271716
Tulane25231817
Stanford672118
MissouriRV2019
Princeton19202220
Washington State22182321
Arkansas20211922
Air Force23242523
Ole Miss27252724
Georgetown28302824
Eastern Kentucky17172626
Tulsa26293027
Harvard24252928
Boise StateRVRVRV29
Loyola-Chicago30
North Carolina181916RV
Oklahoma29RVRVRV
VillanovaRVRVRVRV
MichiganRVRVRVRV
WyomingRVRVRV
MinnesotaRV
LouisvilleRV
Middle TennesseeRV
Utah StateRV
Washington212224
Furman3028RV
LipscombRV
Virginia TechRVRV
GonzagaRVRV
PortlandRVRV
GeorgiaRVRV
TennesseeRVRV
CharlotteRV
Weber StateRV
IonaRV

USTFCCCA NCAA Division I Cross Country

1999 Rankings & Polls Calendar
Weeks Regional RankingsNational Coaches' Poll KEY DATES
PreseasonTue 9/14
MEN | WOMEN
Week 1Tue 9/28
MEN | WOMEN
Week 2Tue 10/5
MEN | WOMEN
Week 3Tue 10/12
MEN | WOMEN
Week 4Tue 10/19
MEN | WOMEN
Week 5Tue 11/2
MEN | WOMEN
Week 6Tue 11/16
MEN | WOMEN
FINAL Results
(official final ranking)
Sat 11/13
MEN | WOMEN
Mon 11/22
MEN | WOMEN