COLUMBIA, S.C. — South Carolina coach Dawn Staley is sure of two things this season — there's more parity than ever at the top of women's basketball and her Gamecocks likely won't remain No. 1 for long.
Staley and the Gamecocks (10-0) are the top-ranked women's team in the land for the fourth consecutive week. Yet, for Staley, it's a tenuous position.
Besides the teams they'll face once league play begins in the competitive Southeastern Conference, her Gamecocks don't pound opponents the way juggernauts like Connecticut, Baylor and Tennessee were known to dominate when they held the top spot.
No. 2 could give No. 1 a run, probably No. 3 — but when the Huskies, Bears, and Lady Vols were peaking, there was a distinctive gap between them and the rest of the top 10.
"That's just not us," Staley said of her top-ranked Gamecocks.
Only 12 teams had been ranked No. 1 since the Top 25 became a writers' poll in 1994-95 before the Gamecocks' rise this season.
South Carolina's flashiest win was a nail-biting, 51-50 victory at No. 13 Duke earlier this month, the Gamecocks rallying from four points down in the final half minute to stay undefeated.
No. 3 Texas (9-0) and, No. 4 Texas A&M (11-0) join the Gamecocks as undefeated, top 10 teams. But that won't last as the state rivals face off Sunday.