^National Prep Football Poll – Week 10=^By Jamie DeMoney=
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The National Prep Football Poll is
compiled by Jamie DeMoney of XOS Digital with input from sportswriters,
experts, and coaches. The national Top 25 and regional Top 10's follow with
won-loss records:
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#1.
Las Vegas, Bishop Gorman (9-0), last three wins by a combined 203-13
#2.
Concord, Calif., De La Salle (7-0), 420-26-3 record since 1979
#3.
Moultrie, Ga., Colquitt County (8-0), crushed then-undefeated Valdosta, 48-20
#4.
Miami, Booker T. Washington (8-0), owns 34-game winning streak
#5.
Allen, Texas (7-0), seeks third consecutive state crown
#6.
Paramus, N.J., Paramus Catholic (6-0), two-time defending Non-Public Group IV
state champ
#7.
Bellevue, Wash. (7-0), 11 state titles since 2001
#8.
Bellflower, Calif., St. John Bosco (6-1), handed JSerra its first loss, 49-44
#9.
Ramsey, N.J., Don Bosco (4-1), only loss to No. 6 Paramus Catholic
#10.
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., St. Thomas Aquinas (6-1), nine former players on NFL
rosters
#11.
Manvel, Texas (7-0), 35-point average win margin
#12.
Buford, Ga. (7-0), favored to win 10th state title since 2001
#13.
Miami, Central (7-1), only loss to No. 4 Booker T. Washington
#14.
DeSoto, Texas (7-0), sr. LB Chris Orr a Wisconsin recruit
#15.
Folsom, Calif. (7-0), sr. Washington commit Jake Browning’s 13,609 passing
yards ranks sixth all-time
#16.
Santa Ana, Calif., Mater Dei (6-1), edged regionally-ranked Servite, 20-17
#17.
Daytona Beach, Fla., Mainland (8-0), five shutouts this season
#18.
South Jordan, Utah, Bingham (8-1), blasted Copper Hills, 64-3
#19.
Starkville, Miss. (8-0), blanked state-ranked Madison Central, 28-0
#20.
Dallas, Skyline (7-0), crushed last two foes by combined 98-0
#21.
Pinson, Ala., Clay-Chalkville (8-0), sr. DE Kendall Jones headed to Mississippi
St.
#22.
Cedar Hill, Texas (6-1), sr. LB Richard Moore will play at Texas A&M
#23.
Metairie, La., Archbishop Rummel (7-0), trying for third consecutive state
crown
#24.
Honolulu, Punahou (6-0), alma mater of President Barack Obama
#25.
Carmel, Ind. (9-0), first 9-0 start since 1986
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^Northeast=
#1.
Paramus, N.J., Catholic, 6-0
#2.
Ramsey, N.J., Don Bosco, 4-1
#3.
Jersey City, N.J., St. Peter's Prep, 5-1
#4.
Oradell, N.J., Bergen Catholic, 5-2
#5.
Gibsonia, Pa., Pine-Richland, 8-0
#6.
Buffalo, N.Y., Canisius, 6-0
#7.
Montvale, N.J., St. Joseph Regional, 3-2
#8.
Philadelphia, St. Joseph’s Prep, 4-3
#9.
Hammonton, N.J., St. Joseph, 6-0
#10.
Red Bank, N.J., Red Bank Catholic, 6-0
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^East
Coast=
#1.
Duncan, S.C., Byrnes, 7-1
#2.
Virginia Beach, Va., Ocean Lakes, 7-0
#3.
Germantown, Md., Northwest, 7-0
#4.
Rockingham, N.C., Richmond, 8-0
#5.
Irmo, S.C., Dutch Fork, 6-2
#6.
Richmond, Va., Hermitage, 7-0
#7.
Owings Mill, Md., McDonogh, 5-2
#8.
Goose Creek, S.C., 7-1
#9.
Baltimore, Gilman, 6-2
#10.
Olney, Md., Good Counsel, 7-1
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^Southeast=
#1.
Moultrie, Ga., Colquitt County, 8-0
#2.
Miami, Booker T. Washington, 8-0
#3.
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., St. Thomas Aquinas, 6-1
#4.
Buford, Ga., 7-0
#5.
Miami, Central, 7-1
#6.
Daytona Beach, Fla., Mainland, 8-0
#7.
Starkville, Miss., 8-0
#8.
Pinson, Ala., Clay-Chalkville, 8-0
#9.
Metairie, La., Archbishop Rummel, 7-0
#10.
Hoover, Ala., 6-2
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^Midwest=
#1.
Carmel, Ind., 9-0
#2.
Louisville, Ky., Male, 8-0
#3.
Mentor, Ohio, 8-0
#4.
Huber Heights, Ohio, Wayne, 8-0
#5.
Bloomfield Hills, Mich., Brother Rice, 8-0
#6.
Muskegon, Mich., 8-0
#7.
Lakewood, Ohio, St. Edward, 6-2
#8.
Cincinnati, St. Xavier, 6-2
#9.
Lincolnshire, Ill., Stevenson, 8-0
#10.
Hudson, Ohio, 8-0
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^Midlands=
#1.
South Jordan, Utah, Bingham, 8-1
#2.
Webb City, Mo., 9-0
#3.
Independence, Mo., Fort Osage, 9-0
#4.
Omaha, Neb., North, 8-0
#5.
Prairie Village, Kan., Shawnee Mission East, 7-0
#6.
Provo, Utah, Timpview, 9-0
#7.
St. Louis, Christian Brothers, 9-0
#8.
Olathe, Kan., North, 7-0
#9.
Eden Prairie, Minn., 8-0
#10.
Aurora, Colo., Grandview, 8-0
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^Southwest=
#1.
Las Vegas, Bishop Gorman, 9-0
#2.
Allen, Texas, 7-0
#3.
Manvel, Texas, 7-0
#4.
DeSoto, Texas, 7-0
#5.
Dallas, Skyline, 7-0
#6.
Cedar Hill, Texas, 6-1
#7.
Southlake, Texas, Carroll, 7-0
#8.
Tulsa, Okla., Union, 6-1
#9.
Waco, Texas, Midway, 7-0
#10.
Chandler, Ariz., 7-1
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^West
Coast=
#1.
Concord, Calif., De La Salle, 7-0
#2.
Bellflower, Calif., St. John Bosco, 6-1
#3.
Bellevue, Wash., 7-0
#4.
Folsom, Calif., 7-0
#5.
Santa Ana, Calif., Mater Dei, 6-1
#6.
Honolulu, Punahou, 6-0
#7.
Corona, Calif., Centennial, 5-2
#8.
Long Beach, Calif., Poly, 7-1
#9.
Bothell, Wash., 7-0
#10.
Anaheim, Calif., Servite, 4-3
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FEATS OF THE WEEK: Moultrie, Ga., Colquitt
County vaulted six spots in the national poll to No. 3 after a 48-20 win at
previously-unbeaten Valdosta, Ga. Senior running back Sihiem King (uncommitted)
ran for 302 yards and three touchdowns for Colquitt County. ... Junior Jadyn
Kowalski passed for a state-record 599 yards with five touchdowns, but his Bellevue,
Neb., West squad was defeated, 47-43, by Omaha, Neb., Creighton Prep. ...
Junior Logan Garrels caught 20 passes for a state-record 340 yards with three
touchdowns to lift Des Moines, Iowa, Lincoln past Des Moines, Iowa, Hoover,
49-35. ... Senior Kevin Robledo of Westlake Village, Calif., Westlake broke a
state record when he booted the 40th field goal of his prep career, helping to
decide a 40-37 win over Newbury Park, Calif. ... Junior Tucker McCann of
O’Fallon, Ill., set his state’s record for the longest field goal when he hit a
60-yarder in a 16-13 loss to Belleville, Ill., East. ... Ansonia, Conn., fell
one win shy of a state record for consecutive wins. The Chargers were stopped,
14-8, by Newtown, Conn., ending a 48-game winning streak that began in 2011.
... Three single games combined to produce almost 500 points. Senior running
back Cliff Miller (uncommitted) scored 10 touchdowns to lead Tiffin, Ohio,
Columbian to a thrilling 83-82 overtime win over Shelby, Ohio; Jacksonville,
Texas, outlasted Nacogdoches, Texas, 85-79, in five overtimes. (The teams
played a national-record 10-overtime game in 2010.); and Hayward, Calif.,
Tennyson topped Castro Valley, Calif., 85-77, in overtime.
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Copyright 2014 World
Features Syndicate, Inc...endit
Compiled weekly weekly since 1987 and distributed by World Features Syndicate and the Associated Press, the National Prep Poll is the nation's second oldest weekly high school sports rankings. Doug Huff compiled the rankings from 1987 until 1999. Jamie DeMoney has compiled the poll since the start of the 1999 basketball season to the present.
PrepNation.com was originally launched August 1, 2001 by Jamie DeMoney for the purpose of creating a permanent online home for the National Prep Poll football and boys basketball rankings.
The National Prep Poll is the only high school poll distributed to newspapers and websites around the United States by the Associated Press.
Among the criteria used in the weekly compilation of the National Prep Poll rankings are strength of schedule, the ability to accomplish the ultimate goal on a team's schedule (i.e. winning a championship), impact players and performers, a team's coaching and recent tradition.
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