Unsung sports: lacrosse's
Danowski, above; golf's Grzebien, below
Photos:Jon Gardiner |
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It's hard to mistake lacrosse player Matt Danowski's
Long Island roots. The soft r's and hard g's that litter his speech
are a dead giveaway. But seeing as how there are thirteen players
from the area on this team, it's not the accent that sets him apart.
It's this six-foot, 180-pound player's stickhandling and shooting
ability that make him one of the premier lacrosse players in the
nation. Leading the NCAA with ninety-two points this past season,
Danowski, now a junior, was voted first-team All America, and was
one of five finalists for college lacrosse's highest individual honor,
the Tewaaraton Trophy. He led Duke to a 17-3 record.
Duke's success was unexpected. The previous season was considered
a rebuilding year, as the team was forced to rely heavily on younger,
less experienced players. "We had something like fifteen to
seventeen freshmen and sophomores playing," Danowski says. The
Blue Devils won only five games, but the "experience and confidence" gained
were key factors in preparing last year's team to prevail against
more seasoned opponents, he says. Indeed, this young Duke team almost
upset senior-led Johns Hopkins in the national championship game
that ended in a 9-8 loss. Only one starting player graduated, and
so Danowski has high hopes for the coming season. "Next year,
I expect to be in the same place, but in a happy locker room," he
told The Chronicle after the loss to Hopkins.
Despite their success, Danowski and his fellow lacrosse players are
largely unheard of and unheralded on a campus where high-profile
sports such as basketball and football dominate the collective sports
consciousness. A low recognition factor has its pluses, Danowski
says. Small-sport collegiate athletes tend to be grounded by their
relative anonymity and more focused on academics and life after the
game. "You look at all the good lacrosse schools and you see
they're also very good schools. Duke, Georgetown, Princeton. I think
the kids who play lacrosse have more of a balance between academics
and athletics."
But if national trends are any indication, the anonymity of players
like Danowski may soon change. Lacrosse is North America's oldest
sport--it was played by Native Americans as early as the fifteenth
century--and now, at the beginning of the twenty-first century, it
may well be the country's fastest growing sport. According to US
Lacrosse, 354,361 people played the game in 2004 compared with 253,931
in 2001. "I think we're at a crossroads, with the sport growing
unbelievably," Danowski says. "Kids are playing all over
the place."
Professional indoor and outdoor lacrosse leagues are also picking
up steam as a new generation of lacrosse players comes of age in
America. The introduction of the two-point goal line and sixty-second
shot clock in professional lacrosse indicates this generation's willingness
to morph the traditional game into something faster and more modern.
Tommy Hilfiger designed the uniforms for Major League Lacrosse, and
TV networks are now broadcasting both the NCAA and professional championships.
Robbyn Footlick '85, a producer for ESPN, says that there is a clear
link between the growth of the professional game and the increasing
popularity of amateur lacrosse. "I think that the very existence
of a professional lacrosse league indicates that someone thinks that
this is a viable business, and that people are willing to pay money
to see the sport."
But not all sports are enjoying such surges in visibility. Women's
golf, for example--well-established on the professional level--is
struggling for attention on the collegiate stage. The Ladies Professional
Golf Association has been around for fifty-five years. It offers
$45 million in total prize money and features such stars as Annika
Sorenstam and Karrie Webb. However, Footlick points out, this popularity
has not trickled down into the amateur arena. "Golf at the college
level isn't nearly as visible as on the professional level," she
says.
Indeed, although the women's golf team is one of the winningest teams
in any sport at Duke in recent memory, its success has gone largely
unnoticed on campus. In May, the Blue Devils won their third national
title in six years. With that win, head coach Dan Brooks tied the
university's record for the most NCAA championships held by only
one other Duke coach--Mike Krzyzewski. But no benches were burned
in the name of Blue Devil women's golf.
Anna Grzebien, a sophomore who had never won a tournament, not only
led the team to victory with rounds of 73, 75, 65, and 73, but also
won the individual NCAA East Regional Championship, the NCAA National
Championship, and the Honda Award for Golf, given annually to the
best female collegiate golfer. In June, another Blue Devil, rising
junior Brittany Lang, tied for second place--and tops among amateurs--in
the U.S. Women's Open, one of four LPGA majors. "We get disappointed," says
Grzebien, "because, if you talk to some people [at Duke], they
don't even know we have a women's golf team."
Grzebien, who plans to join the professional tour after graduation,
says she believes that the relative anonymity of golf, like that
of lacrosse, will change in the coming years. "There is a new
golf generation coming up that has attracted more coverage by TV
and magazines." According to Footlick, the numbers of outlets
for these sports are increasing with the advent of what are called "niche
networks."
A prime example is ESPNU, a college-sports version of ESPN that provides
coverage of sporting events ranging from spring football practice
to women's bowling. "The continuing growth of niche cable networks," Footlick
says, "can only offer more opportunities for less visible college
sports"--opportunities that Duke lacrosse and women's golf are
primed to take advantage of.
--Corey Sobel '07
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