A mantra John Danowski has carried throughout his career covers 11 letters, two words and a huge dollop of uncertainty.
Nobody knows.
It’s all-encompassing phrase, an acknowledgment that whatever internal issues a team has, it is usually evaluated on the one series of external events open for everyone to see — games.
And sometimes, those results are so all over the place that maybe even the coach doesn’t know. This is where Danowski’s latest Duke team enters the picture. A week after a comeback from an eight-goal halftime deficit fell short, the Blue Devils (8-3) scored twice in the first half and then dominated the final 30 minutes in a 14-7 defeat of Towson last weekend.
“We practice great,” Danowski said. “We don’t have bad practices. Great effort, and the guys care deeply. It’s just, sometimes, we don’t play very well in games. And, sometimes, we play really well in games.”
The words look a bit flip, but they’re not intended that way. Duke has played well and lost (Penn). It has played well and won (Denver). It has played sloppy and lost (Jacksonville and especially Loyola). And it has scrambled its way out of forgettable first-half showings and won (Vermont and Towson).
All of that has happened even before Duke’s six-game ACC schedule, which begins Saturday at Syracuse. It makes the Blue Devils oddly enigmatic — certainly not perceived as a juggernaut like at this time last season, even if that edition of Duke ultimately showed itself to be a good team capable of winning tight games but not a great one that could claim a title.
Nobody knows if Duke is a team that really can turn it on for 30 minutes at a clip, and nobody knows when doing so will be enough. The losses, Danowski said, magnify everything. Film is watched differently, more emotionally. Fundamentals are scrutinized again and again. Practice plans are questioned.
What is certain is Duke has been outscored 14-4 in the first half of its last two games, then outscored its opposition 20-5 afterward. How to make sense of that?
“If I had told you before the [Loyola] game you’re going to win the second half 8-2, you would have said, ‘Oh, coach, how much did we win by?’” Danowski said. “I didn’t tell you we’d be down 10-2 at half. We go 8-1 in the third quarter against Towson. We scored two goals in 30 minutes, and then we scored three goals in a minute and 40 [seconds] to start the quarter. I can’t explain that.”