Anthony DiMarzo

Anthony DiMarzo
 Lacrosse player 
Position Attack
NCAA team University of Delaware
Nationality United States
Shoots Right
Career highlights

    Anthony DiMarzo was an All-American lacrosse player at University of Delaware from 1992 to 1995, with 98 goals and 153 assists for 251 points in 58 games.

    Playing career

    As a sophomore in 1993, DiMarzo was voted an honorable mention All-America by the US Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association and led the nation in assists with a then team record of 50, since broken in 1999 by John Grant Jr.. The Blue Hen's went undefeated in the North Atlantic Conference and ranked in the top 20 three straight years during DiMarzo's scholastic career.

    DiMarzo ranked No. 2 nationally as a senior in 1995 when he scored a then school record 78 points on 39 goals and 39 assists. DiMarzo was voted first team attack along with Grant, on the University of Delaware Blue Hen's men's lacrosse 60th anniversary all-time team. Curtis Dickson in 2010, broke the Delaware school record active point-scoring streak of 47 games by Anthony DiMarzo set in 1992-95.

    DiMarzo's 153 career assists places him fifteenth on the all-time list and DiMarzo is also the all-time leading Blue Hen scorer. He was a three-time All-American while at Delaware and was inducted into the Delaware Athletics Hall of Fame in 2008.

    DiMarzo was a schoolboy star at New York's Lakeland High School where he scored 69 goals as a senior in 1991.

    DiMarzo's offensive coordinator while at Delaware was current Albany head coach Scott Marr.[1][2][3][4]

    Statistics

    University of Delaware

         
    Season GP G A Pts PPG
    1992 15 14 27 41 2.73
    1993 14 26 50 76 5.43
    1994 14 19 37 56 4.00
    1995 15 39 39 78 5.20
    Totals 5698153(a)251(b)4.48
    (a) 15th in NCAA career assists
    (b) 1st in University of Delaware career points

    See also

    External links

    References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, March 14, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.