Where Vanderbilt Basketball is Ranked in AP Top 25 After Tennessee Win

Vanderbilt basketball is rolling again, and the AP voters appear to have noticed.
Mar 7, 2026; Knoxville, Tennessee, USA;  Vanderbilt Commodores guard Duke Miles (2) brings the ball up court against the Tennessee Volunteers during the second half at Thompson-Boling Arena at Food City Center. Mandatory Credit: Randy Sartin-Imagn Images
Mar 7, 2026; Knoxville, Tennessee, USA; Vanderbilt Commodores guard Duke Miles (2) brings the ball up court against the Tennessee Volunteers during the second half at Thompson-Boling Arena at Food City Center. Mandatory Credit: Randy Sartin-Imagn Images | Randy Sartin-Imagn Images

In this story:


NASHVILLE—There’s the type of movement that Vanderbilt basketball has been hoping to hear about on a Monday afternoon. 

Vanderbilt basketball is ranked No. 222 in the AP Top 25, per the Monday afternoon release of the poll. The Commodores were boosted by a Tuesday-night win over Ole Miss and a win in Knoxville against No. 23 Tennessee. As a result, they moved up two spots and are back to firmly being an AP Top 25 team as the regular season comes to a close.

Vanderbilt held Tennessee to 82 points on 44.3% shooting from the field and 25.0% shooting from 3-point range. The Volunteers turned it over 11 times, which resulted in 11 Vanderbilt points. Tennessee guard Ja’Kobi Gillespie went for 17 points on 22 shots while turning it over five times. 

The Commodores were as high as No. 10 this season, which was the program’s highest since its preseason ranking of No. 9 in 2011-2012. Vanderbilt will face Kentucky on Tuesday night as it looks to move to 22-4 and to capitalize on its Saturday win over Texas A&M.

Vanderbilt is ranked above traditional ranked programs like Kentucky, Villanova and is one spot below Louisville. 

“We have a chance to have a good team,” Byington said after the Commodores’ season opener. “When you’re a coach you want hope for the season, you want optimism for the season. Some people lie about it, but I can say the truth and say I’m excited about this group. We’ll get better and better.”

Vanderbilt has put itself among the nation’s elite as a result of its start to the season that includes wins over Alabama, Wake Forest, Mississippi State, LSU, SMU, Saint Mary’s, VCU, UCF and all of its buy game opponents. The Commodores’ rèsumè is among the strongest in all of college basketball as a result of their upper-quad wins as well as their drastic margin of victory in non-power five games.

“We’ve got a long way to go,” Vanderbilt guard Duke Miles said after the Commodores’ Battle 4 Atlantis win over Saint Mary’s . “We’re trying to get to the end goal and March to be out there playing for a national championship, so that’s the main goal.” 

As Vanderbilt has taken a leap in 2025-26–Byington’s second year at the helm–it does so with a roster including just three returning scholarship players in Tyler Tanner, Devin McGlockton and Tyler Nickel. All three of which have significant roles on a team that possesses an eight-man transfer class headlined by TCU point guard Frankie Collins--who is no longer with the team--North Carolina big man Jalen Washington, Washington wing Tyler Harris, Miles and Cornell wing AK Okereke. 

Vanderbilt finished last season with its first NCAA Tournament berth since the 2016-17 season after a 20-win season, but this team has all the signs of being better than that one.

“The priority this recruiting season was to gain some more length, size,” Vanderbilt assistant coach Xavier Joyner told Vandy on SI over the summer. “We knew going into last year we were maybe the smallest team in the SEC regarding length, size so we wanted to upgrade that, which we did.”

Loading recommendations... Please wait while we load personalized content recommendations


Published
Joey Dwyer
JOEY DWYER

Joey Dwyer is the lead writer on Vanderbilt Commodores On SI. He found his first love in college sports at nearby Lipscomb University and decided to make a career of telling its best stories. He got his start doing a Notre Dame basketball podcast from his basement as a 14-year-old during COVID and has since aimed to make that 14-year-old proud. Dwyer has covered Vanderbilt sports for three years and previously worked for 247 Sports and Rivals. He contributes to Seth Davis' Hoops HQ, Basket Under Review and Mainstreet Nashville.

Share on XFollow joey_dwy