In the latest Coaches poll Texas and TCU dropped out after losses Saturday. Meanwhile, Texas A&M, Baylor moved up. Oklahoma re-entered the poll. Baylor stayed at No. 13 in the AP poll.

Also in the AP poll, Washington rose to No. 5, Clemson went up to 3; Louisville fell to 7; Alabama, Ohio State stayed 1-2.

AP POLL

The Top 25 teams in The Associated Press college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Oct. 02, total points based on 25 points for a first-place vote through one point for a 25th-place vote, and previous ranking.

Others receiving votes: W. Michigan 76, UCLA 56, LSU 49, North Dakota St. 46, Auburn 46, Georgia 42, Oklahoma St. 41, TCU 26, Maryland 23, Air Force 17, San Diego St. 10, Michigan St. 7, South Florida 6, Arizona St. 4, California 3, Indiana 3, Texas 1.

COACHES POLL

Schools Dropped Out

No. 16 Michigan State, No. 19 TCU, No. 20 Georgia, No. 24 San Diego State, No. 25 Texas.

Others Receiving Votes

LSU 77; Michigan State 71; Maryland 70; Georgia 65; Air Force 59; UCLA 50; Virginia Tech 50; Oklahoma State 43; TCU 32; South Florida 24; Arizona State 23; Auburn 21; Texas Tech 11; San Diego State 10; California 7; Indiana 3; Troy 3; South Alabama 2; Southern California 2; Minnesota 2; Southern Mississippi 2; Middle Tennessee 1; Eastern Michigan 1; Appalachian State 1; Wake Forest 1.

SportsDay college writer Chuck Carlton is one of the voters in this season's AP Top 25. Here is his ballot for Week 5:

1. Alabama

2. Ohio State

3. Clemson

4. Michigan

5. Washington

6. Houston

7. Texas A&M

8. Louisville

9. Tennessee

10. Miami

11. Wisconsin

12. Stanford

13. Baylor

14. Nebraska

15. Ole Miss

16. North Carolina

17. Colorado

18. Arkansas

19, West Virginia

20. Virginia Tech

21. Boise State

22. Oklahoma

23. Utah

24. Florida

25. Florida State

List of Voters

The Amway Board of Coaches is made up of 64 head coaches at Bowl Subdivision schools. All are members of the American Football Coaches Association. The board for the 2016 season: Chris Ash, Rutgers; Dino Babers, Syracuse; David Bailiff, Rice; David Beaty, Kansas; Bret Bielema, Arkansas; John Bonamego, Central Michigan; Terry Bowden, Akron; Matt Campbell, Iowa State; Ron Caragher, San Jose State; Rod Carey, Northern Illinois; Paul Chryst, Wisconsin; Chris Creighton, Eastern Michigan; David Cutcliffe, Duke; DJ Durkin, Maryland; Larry Fedora, North Carolina; Jimbo Fisher, Florida State; James Franklin, Penn State; Justin Fuente, Virginia Tech; Mike Gundy, Oklahoma State; Bryan Harsin, Boise State; Clay Helton, Southern California; Tom Herman, Houston; Doc Holliday, Marshall; Skip Holtz, Louisiana Tech; Joey Jones, South Alabama, Brian Kelly, Notre Dame; Sean Kugler, Texas-El Paso; Mike Leach, Washington State; Lance Leipold, Buffalo; Seth Littrell, North Texas; Rocky Long, San Diego State; Mike MacIntyre, Colorado; Gus Malzahn, Auburn; Chuck Martin, Miami (Ohio); Doug Martin, New Mexico State; Derek Mason, Vanderbilt; Urban Meyer, Ohio State; Trent Miles, Georgia State; Philip Montgomery, Tulsa; Scottie Montgomery, East Carolina; Chad Morris, Southern Methodist; Dan Mullen, Mississippi State; Mike Norvell, Memphis; Gary Patterson, TCU; Chris Petersen, Washington; Brian Polian, Nevada; Mark Richt, Miami (Fla.); Mike Riley, Nebraska; Rich Rodriguez, Arizona; Nick Saban, Alabama; Tony Sanchez, UNLV; Scott Satterfield, Appalachian State; Kirby Smart, Georgia; Frank Solich, Ohio; Rick Stockstill, Middle Tennessee State; Bob Stoops, Oklahoma; Kevin Sumlin, Texas A&M; Dabo Swinney, Clemson; Tommy Tuberville, Cincinnati; Ron Turner, Florida International; Matt Wells, Utah State; Kyle Whittingham, Utah; Kevin Wilson, Indiana; Everett Withers, Texas State.

ABOUT THE AP POLL

The Atlantic Coast Conference matched the Southeastern Conference for the most teams ranked in The Associated Press college football poll with six after a weekend where 10 Top-25 teams lost.

It's the first time since 2006 that the ACC has six ranked teams.

Alabama remained No. 1 and had 53 first-place votes and Ohio State held on to No. 2. Clemson, from the ACC, moved up two spots to No. 3 after a dramatic victory against Louisville, which slipped four spots to No. 7.

Michigan remained No. 4, and No. 5 Washington moved up five spots after a dominant victory against Stanford on Friday night. The last time the Huskies were ranked this high was 2000, when they won the Rose Bowl and finished No. 3 in the nation.

No. 10 Miami gives the ACC three in the top 10 to also match the SEC.

POLL POINTS

Ten ranked teams losing was the most in a regular-season week since Oct. 4, 2014, when 11 ranked teams went down, five to unranked teams. All the upheaval resulted in only four teams holding the same rankings they had last week: Baylor at No. 13 was the fourth, along with Alabama, Ohio State and Michigan.

IN

-- No. 21 Colorado (4-1) is ranked for the first time since Nov. 6, 2005. Fourth-year coach Mike MacIntyre, who came into the season with 10 victories at CU, has the Buffaloes off to their best start since that 2005 season when they also went 4-1 before finishing 7-6.

-- No. 23 West Virginia is ranked for the first time this season and one of only two remaining unbeaten teams in the Big 12 with Baylor.

-- No. 25 Virginia Tech slipped into the rankings for the first time since Sept. 7, 2014, during an off week.

-- No. 17 North Carolina jumped back into the rankings after beating Florida State with a last-play field goal. The Tar Heels have won four straight since an opening loss to Georgia.

-- No. 20 Oklahoma is back in the rankings after one week out.

OUT

-- Michigan State has lost consecutive games for the first time since 2012 and is unranked for the first time since October 2013.

-- San Diego State is out after having its 13-game winning streak broken 42-14 at South Alabama.

-- TCU dropped out after losing at home to Oklahoma.

-- Texas is gone after its second consecutive loss. The Longhorns made a huge jump into the rankings after week one, but head into the Red River Rivalry against the Sooners unranked for the fourth straight season.

-- Georgia's crushing loss to Tennessee was its second straight and left the Bulldogs unranked.

UP

-- No. 18 Florida and No. 19 Boise State each moved up five places.

-- No. 10 Miami jumped four spots.

DOWN

-- No. 23 Florida State fell 11 spots after losing the North Carolina.

-- No. 15 Stanford dropped eight spots after its first loss.

-- No. 11 Wisconsin slipped three after losing at Michigan.

CONFERENCE CALL

ACC -- 6. The last time the ACC had three teams in the top 10 was late last season.

SEC -- 6

Big Ten -- 4

Pac-12 -- 4

Big 12 -- 3

American -- 1

Mountain West -- 1

RANKED vs. RANKED

No. 1 Alabama at No. 16 Arkansas. The Crimson Tide has won nine straight meetings.

No. 9 Tennessee at No. 8 Texas A&M. First meeting since Aggies joined the SEC.

No. 23 Florida State at No. 10 Miami. Last time the Hurricanes were the higher ranked team when they played the Seminoles was 2010. Florida State was No. 23, Miami was 13th and the 'Noles won 45-17.

No. 25 Virginia Tech at No. 17 North Carolina. Little surprising to see the Hokies back in the mix so soon in Justin Fuente's first season.