For all the great games we saw over the weekend, there wasn’t a ton of movement in the Associated Press poll Top 25.

Even Ohio State, which was drubbed at home against Oklahoma, only fell six spots.

Perhaps voters are still sticking to their guns about the preseason notions they had about 25 teams. Whatever the case, there was still plenty to discuss about the latest AP poll.

Here were my three takeaways:

1. Why no more love for Georgia?

I know this might sound a bit crazy, but I sort of expected to see the Bulldogs climb all the way into the top 10 after winning at Notre Dame. I spent last week bashing Associated Press voters for including the Irish in the top 25, so I assumed that if Georgia won there, it would carry plenty of weight.

Instead, the Bulldogs moved up just two measly spots.

Does Georgia have a completely polished offense? No, but that defense and running game certainly looks top-10 worthy. That’s more than we can say of Ohio State or Washington, both of which are ranked inside the top eight. It looks like many are still skeptical of the Bulldogs after last year when they hit No. 12 after the SEC opener only to lose four of the next five games.

Georgia will have plenty of chances to earn that top-10 ranking. I just thought Saturday would’ve been one of them.

2. Hurricane Irma drops Florida teams

There are obviously things far more important than some meaningless Top 25 poll. Hurricane Irma’s path of destruction looks unprecedented, which is why all games in the state of Florida were canceled. Entering the weekend, there were four teams from the state Florida that were ranked.

Because of their inactivity, all four fell at least one spot.

  • No. 22 Florida dropped to No. 24
  • No. 10 Florida State dropped to No. 11
  • No. 16 Miami (FL) dropped to No. 17
  • No. 21 USF dropped to No. 22

Was that fair? No, but that was the unfortunate reality of essentially having a Week 2 bye. Still, all four of those teams will have plenty of chances to rise in the polls.

3. An even split?

Raise your hand if you can tell me the last time that each Power 5 conference had one representative in the top five of the AP poll. Anybody? Bueller?

The last time that happened was the final AP poll of the 2015-16 season. That is, until Sunday.

  1. Alabama
  2. Oklahoma
  3. Clemson
  4. USC
  5. Penn State

There’s parity in college football! Well, maybe not. The SEC still had six teams ranked inside the top 25, which was more than anyone else. That was the third straight week that the SEC won the AP’s conference supremacy argument, though the conference still has just one team ranked inside the top 10.

That could easily change in a hurry. Looking at you, Georgia.