Okay, so today I’m gonna spill the beans on how I dug up some kevin danso stats. It wasn’t as straightforward as I thought, lemme tell ya.

First off, I just googled “kevin danso stats” like any normal person would. But the results were all over the place. Some sites had outdated info, some were just plain wrong. It was a mess.
I needed something reliable, you know? So, I remembered a couple of sports websites I used to frequent. Think of the ones everyone knows, the ones that seem legit. I went to those, typed in his name, and bingo! Decent stats started popping up.
But I wasn’t satisfied. I wanted all the stats. Like, how many tackles per game? What’s his passing accuracy? That kind of deep dive. Those basic sports sites didn’t cut it.
Then I thought, “Hold on, what about his team’s official website?” So, I tracked down RC Lens’ website (yeah, that took a minute to find the actual official one, not some fan page). And guess what? They had a whole section dedicated to player profiles!
- Got his height and weight.
- Games played, starts, subs.
- Yellow cards, red cards (unfortunately, a few too many, haha).
Still, I wanted more granular data. I remembered there are these data-driven football sites that break everything down. Think the sites that give every player a rating each game. So I went digging for those.

After a bit of searching, I found one I sort of trusted. It had all these crazy metrics: interceptions, clearances, duels won, you name it. I’m not gonna pretend I understand half of them, but they looked impressive!
Here’s what I ended up doing: I cross-referenced the data from RC Lens’ website with the more detailed stats from that data-driven site. I even double-checked with a couple of other sports news outlets to make sure things lined up.
It was a bit of a pain, jumping between tabs and comparing numbers, but in the end, I felt like I had a pretty solid picture of Kevin Danso’s stats. Not just the basic goals and assists stuff, but the nitty-gritty details that really show what kind of player he is.
So, the moral of the story? Don’t just take the first stats you see on Google. Dig a little deeper, check multiple sources, and you might just uncover some interesting insights!