SPARKS, Md. — John Danowski trotted onto Tierney Field on Tuesday night and shook hands with just about every U.S. men’s national team staff member he could find — a testament to his easy-going persona and joy for interaction.
He cracked jokes with Ryder Garnsey, comparing the week’s heat and humidity to “February in South Bend.” He leaped to dodge a deflected shot during warm-ups and hunted down the man who launched it.
It’s the same enthusiasm Danowski had when he stepped into the role as head coach of the U.S. men’s national team in late 2014. He inherited a team looking for revenge and led the U.S. to the gold medal in Netanya, Israel.
This summer, and this week, admittedly felt different for the legendary coach — so much has occurred since the run to gold in 2018, and so many of the critical members of that team have moved on. The last world championship cycle lasted three years, whereas this time will be built in just over 365 days.
“Last time around, we were able to build around singular events,” he said. “We knew the foundation and we were looking to fill around them. Here, the tryouts are more important than last time. The dynamic coming into 2018 was that we had guys that lost in 2014, so there was an edge. We had guys who didn’t make the team, and they had an edge. This team is much younger, and they don’t have either of those experiences.”
The new generation of 67 U.S. national team prospects met this week at USA Lacrosse headquarters for senior team tryouts — some returning from the last tryout process hoping to repeat, some pushing for their first spot after multiple attempts and many suiting up in the red, white and blue for the first time.
With such a variety of talent and experience, and just one year until the world championship in San Diego next summer, the job for Danowski and his staff is entirely different than the one they approached eight years ago.
However, he brings back continuity with assistants Seth Tierney and Joe Amplo, adding a former evaluator in Charley Toomey to round out his staff.
“We had a lot of fun the first time around. We had fun on the phone, we had fun talking, we had fun being together,” Danowski remembered. “The hope is that the players feed off of that. We’re giving up our time and we have to make sure we’re having fun with this. It’s really important to maintain the chemistry that we have and hopefully, we can be role models for this team.”
This week, those in attendance spent plenty of time walking through the concepts of international lacrosse, like situational offense without a shot clock, clearing and time management. Veterans like Michael Ehrhardt, Marcus Holman and Tom Schreiber guided newcomers like Tewaaraton winner Logan Wisnauskas, Virginia junior Connor Shellenberger and Maryland NCAA champion Brett Makar.
Morning practices featured walkthroughs of offensive and defensive concepts, leaving energy for the night sessions, where the pool split into three teams and played 15-minute, full-field games.
The three-day camp will be short, but it marks the start of a process that will end on the West Coast, where this time, the U.S. will be the hunted.
“Netanya was so special,” Danowski said. “We’re not trying to duplicate that. We’re just trying to live the next experience.”