The familiarity makes playing for his dad on Team USA an easy transition.
"When it comes to the USA stuff, I try to make it the least about [the father-son dynamic] as possible," Matt said. "I don't really care that he's my father, he's my coach, that's really it."
Where the connection has paid the most dividends is in helping John get a feel for the U.S. team players.
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PHOTO BY JOHN STROHSACKER
John and Matt Danowski coach together at Duke and get to further strengthen their father-son bond when John will be the head coach for the U.S. team and Matt will be on the squad.
"Matt's been in the MLL for 10 years, so I rely on him for a lot of information," John said. "'What do you think the guys need? What can they handle? What's too much? What's not enough?' He knows. He knows the pulse of these athletes much better than I do. I'm used to working with college guys, the same guys for four years all-year round from August to May. It's a very different dynamic and Matt's been very helpful in bridging that gap."
Being one of the players with a lot of experience is vastly different from his first U.S. team.
"I was so green on that U19 thing," Matt said. "Me and Steve Panarelli were coming right out of (Farmingdale) high school and a lot of those guys were coming out of their freshman year of college. We were just trying to be good soldiers and not say much and get comfortable with the guys, the new rules. It was such a new experience for us in a lot of ways. I was trying to keep my head on straight as the world was spinning around me."
Now he's a father. He and his wife, Virginia (a gold medalist on the 2007 U.S. U19 team and the sister of his U.S. teammate Ned Crotty), have an 18-month old daughter, Coco.
He's juggling his coaching career with parenting and getting ready to play the sport he loves at the highest level. He says that he and Jordan Wolf joke about the saying, "You chop wood and carry water."
Lunch breaks became workout opportunities. He and Crotty, both members of the Duke coaching staff, pushed each other to keep working. And now the wait, all 15 years of it, is almost over. In just over a week, he'll board a plane and head back to the world championship for another shot at gold.
"I'm excited to play and work through the ups and downs as a team, to face challenges and get better with them, and see how we react and see what kind of team we're going to become," Danowski said. "I guarantee you the team that gets there is going to be different than the team that leaves."
NOTES: The U.S. team wrapped up its training camp at Gillette Stadium on Wednesday. Following a morning shootaround, they'll make the short trip to Boston for Thursday's game...the U.S. will dress 28 players for the game - 21 players on the travel roster and seven training team members...travel roster players Steve DeNapoli and Joe Fletcher will not play on Thursday...DeNapoli was tore his ACL during the MLL season and will miss the world championship...Fletcher is working through an injury...the seven training team members are Liam Byrnes, Will Haus, Myles Jones, Matt Kavanagh, Connor Kelly, Tim Muller and Jacob Richard.