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Position: A
Date of Birth: 08/12/1985
Height: 6' 1" Weight: 195 lbs
College Experience: Duke (2008) Resides: Farmingdal, NY
Biography:
As a Collegian: 2007: Matt was named Consensus National Player of the Year pick as the recipient of the Tewaaraton Trophy and the USILA's Lt. Raymond J. Enners Award ... Lt. Col. J. I. (Jack) Turnbull Award honoree as the nation's top attackman ... USILA First Team All-America pick ... ACC Player of the Year ... All-ACC selection ... ACC All-Tournament Team choice and ACC Tournament MVP ... NCAA All-Tournament Team honoree ... team captain along with Ed Douglas ... led the nation in both total points (96) and assists (52) ... started all 20 games ... scored 44 goals - second most on the club behind Zack Greer's nation-leading 67 tallies ... set Duke and ACC single-season record for scoring, with the 96 total points ranking tied for 12th on the NCAA's all-time list ... matched the school record, the third-highest single-season total in ACC history and the 22nd-best total in NCAA history with 52 assists ... paired with Greer to become the second set of teammates in NCAA history to each top the 90-point plateau in a single campaign, joining Cornell's Mike French (97) and Eamon McEneaney (96) in 1975 ... the 190 combined points set a new ACC single-season record, surpassing the previous mark held by Michael Watson and Doug Knight of Virginia (161 in 1996), and ranks second in NCAA history behind the record of 193 points set by French and McEneaney in 1975 ... became just the fourth player in NCAA history to record 40+ goals and 50+ assists in a single season ... in the ACC, ranked first in points per game (4.80), first in assists per game (2.60), second in game-winning goals (5) and third in goals per game (2.20) ... also paced the nation's attackmen in ground balls with 75 ... totaled 24 points in four NCAA Tournament games to post the third-highest single-tournament total in NCAA history behind McEneaney (25 in 1977) and Tim Goldstein (25 in 1987), both of Cornell ... paired with Greer to register 44 combined points in the NCAA Tournament to set a new tournament record, breaking the previous mark of 43 set by Gary Gait (23) and Tom Marechek (20) of Syracuse in 1990 ... with Greer and Ned Crotty (12), combined for the second-highest single-tournament scoring trio with 56 points, trailing only the group of Gait, Marechek and Greg Burns (16) of Syracuse in 1990 ... only player in the country with 40+ goals and 40+ assists on the season ... led Duke to 17 wins, matching the highest single-season total in NCAA history ... paired with Greer to form the nation's most prolific scoring tandem with a combined 190 points ... became just the eighth player in NCAA history to participate in the NCAA Tournament with his father as the team's head coach ... with three assists against Air Force (5/6), became Duke's all-time leader in assists, breaking the previous total of 114 held by Tony Cullen ... ACC Player of the Week honoree following a six-goal, one-assist outing at Maryland (3/2) ... scored at least one goal in every game ... posted a season-best 10 points on four goals and six assists in Duke's 19-11 win over North Carolina in the quarterfinals of the NCAA Tournament (5/12) ... in three ACC regular season games, carded 10 goals and five assists as the Blue Devils went unbeaten and secured the top seed for the league tournament ... guided Duke to the ACC Tournament championship by registering two goals and four assists against North Carolina in the semifinals (4/27) and three goals and one assist in the title tilt versus Virginia (4/29) ... handed out four or more assists in eight games ... scored three or more goals seven times ... helped Duke to its first number one national ranking in the USILA poll as well as the program's first number one seed in the NCAA Tournament ... finished third behind track star Walter Dix of Florida State and football standout Calvin Johnson of Georgia Tech in the balloting for the prestigious McKevlin Award, an honor presented annually to the top male student-athlete in the Atlantic Coast Conference ... named Duke's co-MVP with Rachel Moss of the Carlyle Cup, an all-sports competition between Duke and North Carolina. SUMMER, 2006: In the summer of 2006, served as an alternate on the United States Men's National Team ... played in two exhibition games ... registered two goals and two assists in the United States' 27-2 exhibition victory over Ireland on June 25. 2006: Started all eight games ... led Duke in total points (26), assists (14) and game-winning goals (2) while ranking fourth on the team in goals (12) ... tallied at least one point in all eight contests and had three or more in six games ... had season-highs of four goals and six points versus Bellarmine (2/28) ... logged two-goal performances against Villanova (2/25), Loyola (3/11) and North Carolina (3/18) ... game-winning goals came in Duke triumphs over Villanova and North Carolina ... logged four assists against Holy Cross (3/7) ... credited with 23 ground balls. 2005: USILA First Team All-America selection ... recipient of the Lt. Col. J.I. (Jack) Turnbull Award as the USILA National Attackman of the Year ... one of five finalists for the Tewaaraton Trophy, an honor presented annually to the national player of the year ... ACC Player of the Year honoree as voted on by the league's four head coaches ... All-ACC pick ... became just the third player in ACC history to earn both the league's Rookie of the Year (2004) and Player of the Year (2005) awards ... finished second behind men's basketball standout Sean May of North Carolina in the balloting for the prestigious McKevlin Award, an honor presented annually to the top male student-athlete in the Atlantic Coast Conference ... led the nation in scoring by establishing a school single-season record with 92 total points on 50 goals and 42 assists ... the 92 points matched the 19th highest single-season total in NCAA history and marked the most since 2000 when Syracuse's Michael Powell had 96 points ... landed one point shy of equalling the 42-year old ACC single-season standard of 93 points held by Maryland's Don Altman ... became just the fifth player in NCAA history to register 50+ goals and 40+ assists in a season, joining Delaware's John Grant (56-54 in 1999), Cornell's Mike French (65-40 in 1976), Holy Cross' George Paletta (52-46 in 1984) and Syracuse' Tom Korrie (56-40) in 1986 ... also paced the country in assists while ranking fourth in goals ... joined Dan Flannery (72) and Zack Greer (72) in becoming the second group of three teammates in NCAA history to register 70 or more points in a season, joining Virginia's 1996 trio of Doug Knight (86), Michael Watson (75) and Tim Whiteley (73) ... with 236 points, the Danowski-Flannery-Greer combination recorded the fourth highest total among three teammates in NCAA history ... the 50 goals rank as the eighth best single-season total in ACC history ... paired with Greer (57) to become the second pair of teammates in NCAA history to score 50 or more goals in the same season, joining French (63) and Jon Levine (50) of Cornell (1975) ... goal total also matched the third highest single-season count in Duke lacrosse history ... in the ACC, ranked first in points per game (4.60), second in assists per game (2.10) and fourth in goals per game (2.50), joining Flannery as the only players to rank among the league's top five in all three statistical categories ... named to both the ACC and NCAA All-Tournament teams ... for the second straight season, collected the Anthony W. Cullen Award as Duke's Offensive Player of the Year ... received ACC Player of the Week honors after a three-goal, two-assist performance in Duke's 17-2 win over then second-ranked Virginia (4/16) ... registered career-highs of six goals and 10 points at Army (4/23) ... after scoring five goals with two assists in the Blue Devils' victory over Fairfield (5/13) in the opening round of the NCAA Tournament, propelled Duke to Memorial Day Weekend with a five-goal, one-assist performance in an 11-8 national quarterfinal triumph over Cornell (5/22) ... finished the NCAA Tournament with 13 goals and eight assists including a two-goal, four-assist day against Johns Hopkins in the championship game (5/30) ... led all scorers with six total points in the national title game ... the 13 goals matched the third highest total in an NCAA Tournament and marked the most in the tournament since Brian Piccola of Johns Hopkins posted 13 goals in 1993 ... the 21 total points in the tournament marked the most since Syracuse's Gary Gait logged 23 in 1990 and rank as the fourth highest single-tournament total in NCAA history ... paired with Flannery (19) to combine for 40 points in the NCAA Tournament, the third most by two teammates ever ... also helped produce the third most prolific scoring trio in NCAA Tournament play, combining with Flannery and Greer (14) to amass 54 total points ... led a Duke offense that paced the country in scoring by averaging 13.4 goals per game while setting a new NCAA Tournament scoring record with 60 goals ... recorded a pair of game-winning goals and a league-best two man-down tallies ... picked up 38 ground balls. 2004: USILA Honorable Mention All-America and ACC Rookie of the Year choice after leading Duke in scoring with 42 points on 23 goals and 19 assists ... named the recipient of the Anthony W. Cullen Award as Duke's Offensive Player of the Year ... also Duke's Co-Rookie of the Year honoree started all 13 games ... earned a spot on the ACC All-Tournament Team after producing four goals and two assists in Duke's semifinal loss to Maryland (4/23) ... scored a season-high seven points on three goals and four assists versus VMI (3/2) ... registered four-goal, two-assist games against both UMBC (2/28) and Canisius (3/16). 2003 ILF U-19 WORLD CHAMPIONSHIPS: In the summer of 2003, joined future Duke teammates Kyle Dowd, Peter Lamade, Glenn Nick, Bret Thompson and Matt Zash on the gold medal-winning United States team at the International Lacrosse Federation Under-19 World Championships in Baltimore ... named to the ILF All-World Team and the MVP of the Under-19 World Championships ... led the U.S. in scoring with 27 points on 17 goals and 10 assists in six games. PERSONAL: Son of John and Tricia Danowski. Father is the head lacrosse coach at Duke and his sister, Katie, played lacrosse at Quinnipiac University before graduating in 2005. |
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Career Statistics »
| Year |
League |
Club |
GP |
Shots |
Goals |
2-pt Goals |
Assists |
Points |
Sh % |
GB |
Pen Min |
FO Won |
FO Att |
FO % |
| 2008 |
MLL |
New Jersey |
10 |
79 |
19 |
3 |
14 |
36 |
.241 |
16 |
2 |
0 |
0 |
.000 |
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Full roster...
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