Last week was another rough one for the ACC in women’s college basketball.
For the third consecutive season, the conference went head-to-head with the SEC in the annual SEC-ACC Challenge. And for a second straight year, the SEC won the majority of those matchups, this time taking 13-of-16 games.
And it wasn’t just that the SEC thoroughly beat the ACC. They did so by an average margin of victory of 13.6 points.
Duke, Miami and Florida State all lost at home by double figures. Pitt hardly resembled a Division I team as it got thrashed by Mississippi State on the road. And in a matchup of arguably the two best teams in each respective league, Texas defeated North Carolina comfortably in Austin.
To add salt to the ACC’s wounds, two teams that didn’t participate in the challenge — Wake Forest and Boston College — lost at home to mid-major programs.
It wasn’t all bad for the ACC. Syracuse, Virginia Tech and SMU won. And if the ball had bounced a different way a few times, N.C. State, Stanford and Louisville could have too. The Wolfpack lost by five points in overtime to Oklahoma, Tennessee beat the Cardinal by three points, and the Cardinals of Louisville lost at home to South Carolina by just two points.
But ultimately, resumes are about wins and losses, not what-ifs and what-could-have-beens. And right now, the ACC doesn’t have many resumes that look good. Entering Sunday’s games, just two ACC teams — North Carolina and Louisville — ranked in the top 30 of NET.
Meanwhile, the SEC had nine teams in the top 30 of NET entering Sunday.
There’s a lot of basketball left, of course, but through one month, this much is clear: The SEC still looks like the dominant conference in the sport and the ACC has some catching up to do to restore its reputation.
Here’s my AP Top 25 ballot this week…
Just missed: Michigan State, Villanova, Arizona State, Oregon, Alabama
25. Notre Dame
24. Ole Miss
23. Washington
22. USC
21. Nebraska
20. Princeton
19. Louisville
18. Ohio State
17. Tennessee
16. Oklahoma State
15. Baylor
14. Vanderbilt
13. Iowa State
12. Iowa
11. Kentucky
10. North Carolina
9. LSU
8. TCU
7. Michigan
6. Oklahoma
5. Maryland
4. UCLA
3. South Carolina
2. UConn
1. Texas