THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS scorekeepers and could I handle them? He sent me to Atkinson Field on McGraw and Junction across from Kronk Recreation Center. "I went to the field very early and got the lineups for all six teams. Back- ) to-back I can _do it blindfolded, but_I_ wasn't sure about the third game. I told the team scorer I'd pick up the information from him after the game. When I did, I found I only had to change a couple things. I didn't intend I to score that game, but I did. Since then there have been at least a dozen / -) times I've scored three games. "I've covered tons and tons of double-headers. I score two games at one time easier than one game, be- / cause when I do one game I don't watch the game. I'm carrying on a conversa- tion or listening to a game on the radio. When I'm doing two at once, naturally I have to pay attention." Moorawnick says he has scored "as many as eight games in a day: three, three and two. But baseball and softball account for only a small portion of Mooraw- nick's "account." He is the statistician for the Detroit Pistons of the National Basketball Association, the Detroit Red Wings of the National Hockey League, had been in the same capacity with the former Michigan Panthers of the United States Football League and regularly works on high school sports /- as a part-time employee at the Detroit ) \/ Free Press. He's the University of Michigan's baseball scorer and also does statisti- cal work for the Michigan High School Athletic Association, principally working the state football tournament finals at the Pontiac Silverdome. Over the course of a year, either How does someone manage on that, in this day of $12,000 basic autos $50,000 bungalows, $5 movies, $70 hotel room rates, 60 cent soft drinks and 40 cent candy bars? "But I turn in the wildest ex- penses — legitimately," Moorawnick says, referring to tax time. "I can take off travel, food and lodging. I pay my own way when I go with Michigan's baseball team on the spring trip. If you have reimbursed expenses you have to declare that as income. My expenses aren't reimbursed. "I have no expenses outside of taxes. I own my own home. I don't own a car. I am a virgin and so I have no sex expenses. I don't drink. I don't smoke. I have meals everywhere I service. I take trips with teams and get rides from my friends and associates. "Except for utility bills and taxes, whatever I get is 100 percent profit. I have the right, on my income, to get food stamps, but they won't give them to me because I have too much money in the bank. Even though I make slave wages during the year I can't get food stamps." He doesn't have any hospitaliza- tion insurance, but says he doesn't need it. With so many assignments at the Silverdome and Joe Louis Arena, it might seem impractical — nay, down- right impossible — to get to every game without a car. But Moorawnick does. And, he says proudly, "I never missed a game." "I take buses and get rides from friends. I get tickets for the kids to Pistons games in exchange for -rides to the Silverdome." He has kept track of Red Wing games on radio while working at Pis- house in 1971. The elder Moorawnidt died three years later. Moorawnick graduated from Cass Tech in Detroit in 1945 and went to Wayne (later Wayne State) University on a music scholarship, getting his de- gree in 1951. He was on the univer- sity's national collegiate cham- pionship table tennis team in 1951. That same year he was city and state bridge champ and teamed with a part- ner to win the national collegiate mixed pairs bridge title. 1951 was a busy year for Mooraw- nick. That's when he was awarded a Cass Tech basketball letter — six years after graduation. The honor, he says, was bestowed upon him by the school's coach, Frank "Ace" Cudillo — for keeping statistics. Moorawnick played the trombone in high school and he used it "as a way for a scholarship. When the schol- arship ended, the music ended. Al- though I still play the piano and love classical music, my talent is not in my hands, but in my ear. I could probably write or teach, but not play." But he did play — in the Wayne band at everything from halftime at Lions football games to the Soap Box Derby. "So I was around sporting events." He became acquainted with Joel Mason, who was the Wayne basketball coach, and says Mason hired him to keep his scorebook. "When I finished my education he had me keep stats and travel with the team. In the 1955-1956 season, Wayne went to the NCAA tourney and beat DePaul in the first round, then went to the regional at Iowa City and lost to Kentucky in the quarterfinals." Over the next 17 years Mooraw- Friday, February 8, 1985 nick traveled with Wayne sports teams, compiling baseball, football and basketball statistics. "Although they had been playing sports, they never had any permanent statistics," Moorawnick relates. "It was started with me by sports publicist Paul Pentecost." Michigan State also began utiliz- ing the young sports enthusiast's serv- ices, thanks to Moorawnick's cousin Walt Godfrey, who was an all-state basketball player at Cass Tech in 1951 and who also was a fine baseball player. "I'd hitchhike up Grand River to watch him play," Moorawnick says. "I'd eat on meal tickets Of guys who weren't eating and I'd sleep at the Shaw dormitory . . . I had nothing to do with the school, but they let me travel with the team. I kept stats. I didn't get paid or anything. But you know who some of the athletes were who gave me their meal tickets? I think you'd rec- ognize these names: Doug Weaver (current MSU athletic -director), George Perles (current Spartan foot- ball coach), Earl Morrall (former star quarterback both in college and the National Football League), Johnny Green (former star basketball player)." There were other names. Whenever Moorawnick speaks of his various experiences, invariably he re- calls athletes who went on to make big names for themselves. Those names in turn bring to mind others, and those still others. Talking to Moorawnick is like hit- ting the "directory" code on a computer terminal — bits of information keep flowing until the operator stops hit- N for statistical work or as a correspond- ent, Moorawnick is liable to draw checks also from the Ann Arbor News, Associated Press, United Press Inter- national, Detroit News, Michigan Daily, Adray Baseball League, Livonia Observer, Sports Illustrated, ESPN, Detroit Catholic League and others. He says for most he merely submits a bill once a year. There is no typical day for him. He might work five or six hours, 12 or 14, or none. He might work seven days a week or two. It depends on what is going on. And often statistical record keeping is handled at home at his lei- sure. Moorawnick's home is on Edin- borough in northwest Detroit. One might think the portly stu- dent of sports numbers earns a pretty good living. Full-time sports writers at major newspapers don't make an awful lot of money, though, and so a chronic part-timer makes even less. Moorawnick says his income is $5,000 to $6,000 a year. tons games, which he says come first if the teams are playing at the same time. The Pistons, though, "don't ap- preciate that." According to Moorawnick, a former Pistons score-table worker who now helps out at Dallas Mavericks' games told him the Mavericks had four persons doing the job Moorawnick does alone. His duties include compil- ing statistics for the program and the media notes. Moorawnick is in his 28th year with the Pistons. "I'm the only person connected with the team who was there on day one (when it moved from Fort Wayne, Ind., in 1957) and still is connected with the team," he says. Moorawnick used to live in the Tyler-Dexter area of Detroit. Before that he lived around Linwood and Euc- lid for 27 years in an apartment. His mother, Sylvia, owned a corset shop on 12th Street and Hazelwood. She died three years before Moorawnick and his father Jack bought Morrie's current 15 . Morrie Moorawnick has become a statistical and gastronomic legend in Detroit area sports arenas and baseball diamonds.