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Minnesota enters women's AP Top 25, top 5 remain unchanged

NEW YORK -- Getting ranked so quickly wasn't on Lindsay Whalen's mind when she took over the head-coaching job at Minnesota this season.

Whalen enjoyed tremendous success as a player at the school in the early 2000s, where being in the AP Top 25 was commonplace from the middle of her sophomore season on. She helped Minnesota reach the Final Four her senior year.

It only took one win to get her team ranked in her first year as coach as the Gophers entered the poll at No. 25 on Monday. It's the first ranking for the school since 2015.

"We didn't really talk about a ton," Whalen said about getting ranked. "We just wanted to get off to a good start the first game and get a lot of fan support."

The opening win over New Hampshire on Friday drew more than 14,000 fans.

"It's only one game and we have a lot of work to do," she said.

Minnesota has a favorable schedule with just one road game -- Wednesday at Xavier -- over the next month.

"The good thing is we have one road game where we get the rhythm of what it's like to go on the road," Whalen said. "Then we have a long stretch at home before we go to Boston College. Win your home games and you have a chance to have a successful season."

Whalen became the 39th person to play and coach a team that was ranked when her alma mater entered the poll at No. 25. Whalen is the 12th to do it at the same school.

While Minnesota entered at No. 25, most of the poll was relatively unchanged. Notre Dame, UConn, Oregon, Baylor and Louisville still are the top five teams. The Irish are no longer a unanimous choice by the 31-member national media panel. They lost one first-place ballot to Oregon, which rallied to beat No. 18 Syracuse at home on Saturday.

Top 25 teams went 39-1 against unranked opponents this past week with then-No. 21 Duke suffering the only loss with a defeat at Northwestern.

Here are a few other tidbits from the poll:

Irish eyes are smiling: Notre Dame ran over Harvard in its season opener and looks to keep it going against Penn on Monday night. The Irish then visit No. 15 DePaul on Saturday.

Conference supremacy: The Southeastern Conference has six ranked teams. The Pac-12 and ACC had five and the Big Ten three. The American, Big East and Big 12 each have two.

Falling Blue Devils: Duke saw its run of 35 straight weeks ranked end on Monday. It was the ninth longest active streak. The Blue Devils have the third longest streak ever in the poll when they were ranked for 312 consecutive weeks before that came to an end in 2016.

Tiebreaking: While the top 10 teams were unchanged, Texas and Tennessee were no longer tied at 11th. The Lady Vols fell one place to 12.