The NCAA Division I Basketball Committee slated Duke as the No. 1 overall seed in its initial tournament rankings over the weekend. Voters in the AP Top 25 stuck with Tennessee as their top team.

The Vols received 40 of 64 first-place votes from a media panel in the poll released Monday, remaining ahead of Duke for fourth straight week. The No. 2 Blue Devils had 24 first-place votes.

AP Top 25 Poll First-place votes in parentheses Team Rec Last 1. Tennessee (40) 22-1 1 2. Duke (24) 21-2 2 3. Gonzaga 23-2 4 4. Virginia 20-2 3 5. Kentucky 20-3 5 6. Michigan 22-2 7 7. Nevada 23-1 6 8. North Carolina 19-4 8 9. Houston 23-1 12 10. Marquette 20-4 10 11. Michigan St. 19-5 9 12. Purdue 17-6 15 13. Villanova 19-5 14 14. Kansas 18-6 13 15. Texas Tech 19-5 18 16. Louisville 17-7 16 17. Florida St. 18-5 22 18. Kansas St. 18-5 - 19. LSU 19-4 21 20. Wisconsin 17-7 19 21. Iowa 19-5 20 22. Virginia Tech 18-5 11 23. Iowa St. 18-6 17 24. Maryland 18-6 24 25. Buffalo 20-3 23

No. 3 Gonzaga and No. 4 Virginia, the other top seeds in the NCAA's initial rankings Saturday, rounded out the top five with Kentucky.

Tennessee (22-1, 10-0 SEC) moved to the No. 1 spot in the AP poll after Duke (21-2, 9-1 ACC) lost to Syracuse on Jan. 14.

The Vols continued winning, stretching their school-record streak to 18 games with wins over Missouri and Florida last week.

Committee chair Bernard Muir said the decision for the top overall seed was close, but Blue Devils edged the Vols based on strength of schedule.

Tennessee was No. 1 in the South Region.

"I want these guys to enjoy what they're doing and I'm probably not the easiest guy to let that happen because I'm always thinking of ways we can get better, and I want to do it right now," Vols coach Rick Barnes said. "I appreciate how hard they're competed and the fact that they want to get better."

Duke won both of its games last week, rolling over Boston College by 25 before winning a rematch with Virginia 81-71 on Saturday. The Blue Devils needed overtime to beat the Cavaliers the first meeting and shot them out of the gym in the second, making 13 of 21 from the 3-point arc.

"We were just in our zone and it's great to see when our team is like that," said Duke's RJ Barrett, who had 26 points and was 6-for-10 on 3s.

Virginia dropped one spot after losing to the Blue Devils.

BIG 12 RACE

Kansas State moved back into the poll this week at No. 18.

Perhaps more importantly, the Wildcats are in control of the Big 12 race after knocking off rival Kansas and Baylor last week.

The Wildcats (18-5) are 8-2 in the Big 12, putting them 1½ games ahead of the 14th-ranked Jayhawks, No. 15 Texas Tech and No. 23 Iowa State. Kansas State plays Texas and Iowa State this week.

Kansas will need to make a late-season run for the second straight year if it is going to stretch its record run of conference titles to 15. The Jayhawks play TCU and West Virginia.

ZIGGING ZAGS

Gonzaga moved up a spot in the AP poll this week, was selected as the top overall seed in the West by the NCAA's selection committee and crushed WCC rival Saint Mary's 94-46 on Saturday.

But it wasn't all good news for the Zags last week.

Gonzaga forward Killian Tillie did not play against the Gaels and is out indefinitely after suffering a torn ligament in his right foot against San Francisco on Thursday. He missed the first two months of the season due to a foot injury and has played just nine games.

MOVING UP

No. 17 Florida State had the biggest jump in this week's poll, climbing five spots after beating Syracuse and Louisville, which remained at No. 16 despite the loss.

No. 9 Houston and No. 12 Purdue each moved up three spots.

MOVING DOWN

No. 22 Virginia Tech had a precipitous drop this week, falling 11 spots after losses to Louisville and Clemson.

DROPPING OUT

A week after moving into the poll at No. 25, Cincinnati dropped out beating Memphis and losing to Houston last week.