When Dain Dainja poses a danger to opponents on the interior, No. 18 Memphis might be as dangerous as any other team.Dainja certainly was at his best Sunday during the Tigers’ 84-65 victory over Florida Atlantic, tying his career high with 22 points and finishing just one rebound off his season high with 11.The effort was a far cry from his four points and one rebound during Memphis’ 84-79 overtime loss at Wichita State on Feb. 16 in the Tigers’ previous game.Dainja and the Tigers will aim for another big game on Wednesday night when they try to stay atop the American Athletic Conference with a matchup against visiting Rice.Averaging 12.8 points and a team-high 6.6 rebounds per game, Dainja — an Illinois transfer — has enjoyed the best season of his college career. But his measly performance in the loss at the Shockers ate at him while Memphis (22-5, 12-2) sat idle for a week.”I want to win,” he said. “I’m just leaving it out on the floor every game. I just want to make that my mentality.”Tigers coach Penny Hardaway appreciated Dainja’s performance. He liked his response to his game against Wichita State even more. Instead of sulking about the lack of production, Dainja stepped up his level of work in the film room and during practice.”It just shows me that he cares,” Hardaway said of the 6-foot-9 Dainja. “That’s the one thing about this team that I do understand, that the guys care. They want to come back and do better. I don’t really think it’s a lot of people that can guard him one-on-one.”PJ Haggerty falls into that category, too. The player who contributes 21.3 ppg got his average against Florida Atlantic and ranks sixth in Division I in scoring. Tyrese Hunter adds 14.7 ppg.