Miami slips past Ohio State for top spot

Miami finally moved atop the Bowl Championship Series standings – by the slimmest of margins.

The defending national champion Hurricanes squeaked past Ohio State, which needed overtime to beat Illinois 23-16 Saturday, in the latest standings released Monday. They edged the Buckeyes by 0.01 points, and the top two BCS teams have never been closer.

Miami, No. 1 in the AP media and coaches’ polls, has 3.69 points to top the standings for the first time this season, while Ohio State has 3.70 points. Washington State is third with 9.11 points.

The tight margin will be meaningless if Ohio State (12-0) and Miami (9-0) – the only unbeaten teams remaining – win the rest of their games. The top two teams in the final BCS standings released Dec. 8 will play in the national title game at the Fiesta Bowl in Tempe, Ariz., on Jan. 3.

“The BCS really hasn’t entered my mind,” Miami coach Larry Coker said. “I don’t think it’s entered the minds of our players much. It’s one of those things that’s totally out of our control.”

The Buckeyes’ close win against Illinois was partly to blame for their drop. Ohio State lost the No. 1 spot in The New York Times computer poll to Miami this week, increasing its computer-rank average to 1.50 while the Hurricanes’ was lowered to 1.33. That ranking is an average of seven different computer polls.

Miami, which did not play Saturday, also picked up points when its strength of schedule went from 1.60 to 1.36 this week. Ohio State, which has a composite total of 4.50, is so close to Miami because of a 0.8-point quality-win deduction for a victory against BCS No. 3 Washington State earlier this season.

Ohio State plays its regular-season finale against No. 12 Michigan (9-2) at home Saturday. Miami, which has won 31 straight games, plays host to No. 17 Pittsburgh (8-2) on Thursday, then plays at Syracuse (4-7) and home against No. 13 Virginia Tech (8-2) on Dec. 7 to close out the season.

Through games of Nov. 161. Miami 3.69; 2. Ohio State 3.70; 3. Washington St. 9.11; 4. Oklahoma 10.75; 5. Georgia 12.16; 6. Notre Dame 13.13; 7. Iowa 13.66; 8. Southern Cal 15.54; 9. Michigan 22.82; 10. Texas 25.46; 11. Kansas St. 29.07; 12. Florida St. 29.25; 13. Colorado 32.65; 14. Florida 33.27; 15. Penn St. 36.48.

The Buckeyes are not concerned with the latest BCS standings.

“I don’t care. It doesn’t matter,” Ohio State free safety Donnie Nickey said. “If we’re 1 or 2, we’re in the game. Let’s do it.”

The BCS formula uses the AP media and coaches’ polls, computer polls, strength of schedule, won-loss record and a bonus-point system.

Washington State would be the biggest beneficiary if Ohio State or Miami slips up. Also hoping for help are No. 4 Oklahoma (10.75) and No. 5 Georgia (12.16).