You could check there schedule for yourself and count 1-2-3-4.
Here's the thing about rankings. Sometimes a team you play early in the season is expected to be good and have a top 25 ranking. Maybe they really weren't that good, and maybe they were but they lost a key player and slid downward afterward. Sometimes you hear the experts say that one of their fave team's wins was over say a #15 team and they don't say that they played that team in mid November when it was a mess and unranked. So the "ranked teams" stuff can be a bit relative to when you played a team.
But if you don't want to take the time to look it up on your own and need the info fed to you, the answers are LSU, Colorado, OK, and Rutgers that the Cards played while they were ranked, unless you don't believe the Cards schedule for last year and want to sneer away at them. They also of course ended up losing three games to UConn, plus ones at KY, and then in the regional final to MD.
And as has been pointed out many times when posters start with all the scheduling digs, it's not that easy to predict how good certain teams will be a year or two in advance when the schedules are put together. Look how miffed that some of UTenn's opponents must have felt in recent years when they found out they'd scheduled a lemon. The important point is not to schedule an OOC of 14 home games against local middling majors that can creep into the #300s in ratings, like certain SEC teams are known to do.