He was a three-time United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association (USILA) All-American (two-time first team).
Morrow was raised in Troy, Michigan, a suburb of Detroit, where his father operated a tubing shop.
He attended Brother Rice High School in the nearby Bloomfield Township in Oakland County.
[1] In his first year at Princeton, he nearly quit the lacrosse team when he realized that, because of his background, he was behind the other players in his understanding of the game.
[3] Morrow scored two goals in the 16–14 semifinals victory over North Carolina in the first game using the titanium stick.
[4][5] During the 1993 NCAA Division I Men's Lacrosse Championship tournament, Morrow shut down Loyola's Kevin Beach, who had 6 goals in the first round game.
[9] During his four years, Princeton earned its first four berths in the NCAA Men's Lacrosse Championship.
[1][2] Morrow sold controlling interest of his company to New Balance in January 2004 but continues to be the President and CEO of Warrior Sports.
[1] As of 2001, Warrior and its 50 employees were the official equipment supplier of the U.S. Men's National Teams program and the MLL.
It opened on June 7 at Homewood Field in Baltimore near the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame.
[28] As of March 2007, he and his wife Christine, who is also a Princeton alumna, had three young children: three-year-old Samantha, two-year-old Kevin and newborn Jessica.
[1] Christine Schluter, a member of Princeton's Class of 1992, was a geochemist in Boulder, Colorado when she moved to Detroit to work for Morrow.