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Keytron Jordan, CBS Sports

It’s getting clear at the top. While all of the No. 1 seeds went undefeated over the past seven days, each of the four projected No. 2 seeds from last week’s bracketology lost. In the biggest matchups of the week, Texas avenged an earlier loss against LSU and UCLA handed Michigan its third three-point loss of the season against a top-five opponent.

With Louisville falling to Duke and Iowa losing a third straight game (against Minnesota), there is now a sizable gap between the No. 1 seeds and the rest of the field. Even a Vanderbilt win over Texas in a blockbuster matchup on Thursday would not change much immediately, although it could position the Commodores to contend for a No. 1 seed down the line.

For now, UConn, UCLA, South Carolina and Texas are doing everything they need to and then some. Here are mind-boggling stats about each of the top dogs.

UConn has won 20 straight games by at least 25 points, the longest streak by any team since 2000. The Huskies have only won two games this season by fewer than 25 points — 13 points against Louisville and three points against Michigan, both in November. UConn’s points per game differential this season is +39.3, the third-highest since 2000. The only better teams? The 2014-15 and 2015-16 UConn squads in Breanna Stewart’s final two seasons in Storrs.

UCLA has already tallied 13 Quad-1 wins this season, five more than any other team in the country (Texas has eight). Last season, only four teams had more than eight Quad-1 wins by Selection Sunday (South Carolina led the way with 16), and they all received No. 1 seeds. The Bruins have a commanding lead in wins above bubble (WAB), and would be the No. 1 overall seed if not for UConn’s status as the undefeated reigning national champion.

South Carolina has done a lot of winning under head coach Dawn Staley, who will seek her 500th win with the program on Saturday at LSU. But some of those biggest wins have come recently. On Sunday, the Gamecocks had their largest win ever against a ranked opponent, a 93-50 trouncing of Tennessee. Just two weeks prior, they beat Vanderbilt by 29 points, the school’s largest win against a top-five team. South Carolina remains dominant, with its only regulation loss coming by two points against Texas.

Following Monday night’s win against Kentucky, Texas has now won 40 straight home games, the longest active streak in the country. It’s been more than two years since the Longhorns dropped a game in Austin — against Oklahoma in January 2024. That span includes 12 wins against ranked teams and four wins against top-five teams. Texas has beaten ranked Oklahoma, LSU and Kentucky at home this month, and we’re only nine days in.

Bracketology — Feb. 10

Seed
1

Huskies

Bruins

Gamecocks

Longhorns

16 Chattanooga/Alabama A&M Howard/Cal Baptist

Bearcats

Knights

8

Orange

Lady Bulldogs

Fighting Irish

Ducks

9

Fighting Illini

Cyclones

Cornhuskers

Cowgirls

5

Mountaineers

Wildcats

Lady Raiders

Rebels

12

Aztecs

Racers

RedHawks

Bulldogs

4

Sooners

Bears

Terrapins

Horned Frogs

13

Phoenix

Cowboys

Cougars

Red Wolves

6

Tar Heels

Lady Volunteers

Golden Gophers

Crimson Tide

11

Bison

Arizona St./Clemson

Owls

Utah/Virginia Tech
3

Buckeyes

Spartans

Blue Devils

Hawkeyes

14

Bobcats

Colonels

Panthers

Lady Techsters

7

Huskies

Wolfpack

Tigers

Trojans

10

Cardinal

Wildcats

Bulldogs

Rams

2

Lady Tigers

Commodores

Wolverines

Cardinals

15

Vandals

Tritons

Leathernecks

Midshipmen

On the bubble

Last four in

  • Utah
  • Arizona State
  • Clemson
  • Virginia Tech

First four out

  • Virginia
  • Colorado
  • Fairfield
  • Richmond

Next four out

  • BYU
  • South Dakota State
  • California
  • Kansas

What to watch for

ACC Bubble Teams Look to State Their Cases

This season’s NCAA Tournament bubble is crowded with teams from the ACC and Big 12, and this week will be a huge opportunity for ACC teams to pick up quality wins against one another.

Stanford is currently a No. 10 seed, while Virginia Tech is the last team in, Virginia is the first team out and California sits in the next four out. This week, both Virginia and Virginia Tech will face Stanford and California, with all four games carrying huge bubble implications. 

Stanford and Virginia Tech were in much better shape last week, but the Cardinal had an ugly 22-point loss in a Quad-3 game against Georgia Tech, while the Hokies went 0-2 in Quad-1 opportunities against Notre Dame and NC State. Virginia and California both went 2-0 last week to return to bubble consideration but are a combined 0-13 in Quad-1 games this season.

There’s one more ACC bubble team, Clemson, which sits in the last four in. The Tigers face Georgia Tech at home and Syracuse on the road. With all the chaos coming around it, a pair of victories would go a long way towards Clemson receiving a spot in the NCAA Tournament.