After a wild Week 4 that involved some Texas-on-Texas violence (Texas hosted TCU while fellow in-state schools UTSA and Texas State battled it out), there was a lot of movement in our Best in Texas polls. With a logjam of Power 5 schools sitting at 3-1, a pair of big-name schools with losses to legitimate foes sitting at 2-2 and North Texas still holding strong as the state's lone unbeaten team, there are a lot of different directions voters could go this week.

(According to the most recently released AP poll -- AP voters would have Texas No. 1, Texas Tech No. 2, Texas A&M No. 3, TCU No. 4 and North Texas No. 5.)

Our voters disagreed, though, ranking Texas A&M and North Texas higher than AP voters did and putting Texas Tech lower.

On the heels of its big win over TCU (a week after beating another ranked team, USC), Texas was a pretty clear No. 1 among our voters, appearing atop the ballots of 10 of our 12 voters. But North Texas (fresh off a 40-point win) received a first-place nod of its own, as did TCU -- which, well, ¯\_(ツ)_/¯.

If anything, this week showed both on and off the field that there are a lot of schools that could stake a legitimate claim at being the "Best in Texas," and it will be interesting to see how the next few weeks play out.

Some of this week's key matchups include Texas Tech hosting West Virginia, Texas A&M taking on Arkansas in Arlington, Texas heading to Manhattan to battle Kansas State and Oklahoma hosting Baylor.

Here is this week's full poll:

[Previous installments: Week 3 poll | Week 2 poll | Week 1 poll | Preseason poll]

Full rankings

1. Texas (10 first-place votes): 141

2. Texas A&M: 129

3. North Texas (1): 117

4. TCU: 112 (1)

5. Texas Tech: 101

6. Houston: 83

7. Baylor: 72

8. SMU: 61

9. UTSA: 46

10. Rice: 38

11. Texas State: 24

12. UTEP: 12

Best in Texas panelists (click names to view their Twitter accounts): Ben Baby, Scott Bell, Chuck Carlton, Trenton Daeschner, Spenser Davis, Reece Graham, EJ Holland, Selby Lopez, Alex Miller, Jose Rodriguez, Kevin Sherrington, Brett Vito.

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1. Texas (3-1)

With its victory over TCU, Texas is now 3-1 for the first time since 2012 under Mack Brown and headed to Kansas State, where the Longhorns haven't won since 2002. (Chuck Carlton)

2. Texas A&M (2-2)

Now finished playing Clemson and Alabama over a three-week span, A&M has winnable games ahead starting with Arkansas who is already limping at 1-3. (Alex Miller)

3. North Texas (4-0)

UNT will roll into its C-USA opener against Louisiana Tech at 4-0 after hammering Liberty and improving to 4-0 without the benefit of a forfeit for the first time since 1966. (Brett Vito)

4. TCU (2-2)

Turnovers cost TCU dearly in Austin, with Texas scoring 14 points off takeaways. The Frogs must now regroup before hosting Iowa State, Texas Tech and Oklahoma in the coming weeks. (Reece Graham)

5. Texas Tech (3-1)

After an upset win vs. No. 15 Oklahoma State, Alan Bowman may be the QB of now and the future. Texas Tech's next test will be a against a tough West Virginia team. (Selby Lopez)

6. Houston (3-1)

Houston racked up a program-best 671 yards of offense en route to a 70-14 shellacking of Texas Southern. Next up: American Conference foe Tulsa, on Oct. 4. (Jose Rodriguez)

7. Baylor (3-1)

Baylor's defense led the Bears to a win over Kansas. Charlie Brewer, will have to improve the Bears' offense to compete with Oklahoma next week. (Selby Lopez)

8. SMU (1-3)

SMU took advantage of turnovers and the absense of injured Midshipmen to steal an overtime win from Navy in Dallas. The Ponies host Houston Baptist next. (Reece Graham)

9. UTSA (1-3)

The Roadrunners bookended their scoring with a defensive touchdown and safety on Saturday, beating Texas State by four points and getting their first win of the season. (Scott Bell)

10. Rice (1-3)

Rice got dominated by Southern Miss on Saturday, and it's not getting any easier. Next up on the schedule: at Wake Forest, who is coming off a tough loss to Notre Dame. (Spenser Davis)

11. Texas State (1-3)

Interceptions and an anemic rushing game plauged the Bobcats in a 25-21 loss to UTSA. Texas State is 2-23 against FBS opponents under coach Everett Withers. (Ben Baby)

12. UTEP (0-4)

UTEP was competitive but fell to winless New Mexico State to extend its losing streak to 16, which is the longest in college football. Next up is an in-state match against UTSA. (EJ Holland)