Sagarin has three different ratings, PREDICTOR, GOLDEN MEAN and RECENT. Then those three ratings are synthesized to come up with his overall RATING.
I would kind of caution against using the "RECENT" rating exclusively. Sometimes when the recent rating is significantly different than PREDICTOR or GOLDEN MEAN, it is an indication of true "trend", and might make the RECENT rating more indicative than the others. But RECENT could differ for a lot of other reasons as well. Injuries, hot or cold play by key players, confidence levels, luck, officiating, etc can cause a temporary difference in the RECENT rating, but it could regress towards the mean over time. By definition, RECENT involves heavy weighting towards a smaller sample size, and I think it is important to keep that in mind.
Here are the PREDICTOR ratings (with RECENT rating in parentheses) as of this morning:
PREDICTOR:
1. Oregon #11 (#13, was #14 before Sunday games)
2. Arizona #14 (#63, was #27)
3. Colorado #27 (#26, was #38)
4. Washington #57 (#65, was #65)
5. Stanfurd #61 (#22, was #22)
6. OSU #66 (#51, was #92)
7. ASU #69 (#76, was #77)
8. USC #75 (#66, was #66)
9. Utah #77 (#83, was #63)
10. UCLA #114 (#204, was #200)
11. WSU #158 (#168, was #168)
12. Cal #182 (#151, was #149)
On Sunday, OSU beat Arizona, and their RECENT rank climbed from 92 to 51, while Arizona dropped from 27 to 63. I think that illustrates how volatile the RECENT ranking can be.
Note that Stanfurd is much better in RECENT play than PREDICTOR, while UCLA and Arizona are much worse in RECENT play than PREDICTOR. It'll be interesting to see if those RECENT trends hold, or does Arizona and UCLA trend back up, and Stanfurd back down?