Damian Mori (born 30 September 1970) is an Australian former football player who is an assistant coach for Adelaide United.[1] He won two Johnny Warren Medals, awarded to the best player in the Australian league and was top scorer on 5 occasions. He established a reputation as a pacy, poaching goalscorer, which is notable for a player who started his career as a defender.

Damian Mori
Mori (left) contests a ball with Mark Schwarzer (right) in an NSL match.
Personal information
Date of birth (1970-09-30) 30 September 1970 (age 53)
Place of birthMelbourne, Australia
Height1.80 m (5 ft 11 in)
Position(s)Forward
Senior career*
YearsTeamApps(Gls)
1989–1990South Melbourne33(5)
1990–1991Sunshine George Cross24(4)
1991Bulleen16(7)
1991–1992Melbourne Knights29(12)
1992–1996Adelaide City126(75)
1996–1997Borussia Mönchengladbach6(0)
1997–2000Adelaide City91(56)
2000–2004Perth Glory112(77)
2004–2005Adelaide City44(33)
2005–2006Perth Glory17(7)
2006Adelaide City18(13)
2006Central Coast Mariners8(6)
2006–2007Queensland Roar8(2)
2007Adelaide City17(13)
2007Central Coast Mariners3(0)
2008–2010Adelaide City37(22)
2010South Adelaide Panthers4(2)
2011Adelaide City3(0)
Total596(334)
International career
1991–1992Australia U-2313(5)
1992–2002Australia45(29)
Managerial career
2005–2008Adelaide City
2010–2018Adelaide City
2020–2022FK Beograd
2022–Adelaide United (assistant)
*Club domestic league appearances and goals

Early and personal life edit

Mori was born in Box Hill North, Victoria in 1970. His father, Joseph Mori, was a footballer who emigrated from Slovenia.[2] His paternal grandfather was of Italian ancestry.

Club career edit

Mori was successful at club level – mainly in the Australian domestic league. After developing into Adelaide City's most important and best player, he spent a single season (1996–97) overseas in Germany with Borussia Mönchengladbach. This move was characterised only by frustration. He appeared in only six games, and never played more than half a match. In those six games, he didn't score once. Mori returned home to become NSL Top Goalscorer the following season.

In 1996, Mori held the world record for the fastest goal after he scored for City in just 3.69 seconds, straight from the kick-off, in a 2–2 draw with Sydney United.

In 2000, Mori transferred to Perth Glory and enjoyed great success. The striking partnership with Bobby Despotovski was renowned as one of the most potent in the competition. Mori won the NSL championship in 2002–03, scoring in the Grand Final. He was also part of the 2003–04 Perth Glory championship side.

Following the end of the National Soccer League in 2004 he moved back to Adelaide City to play and coach in the South Australian Premier League. He was extremely successful here, winning the "Coach of the Year" award. However, many were surprised at the fact that the NSL all-time top goalscorer was not on the shortlist of any A-League club.

It later emerged that a major stumbling block was Mori's desire for a part-time contract to allow him to manage business interests in Adelaide. Prior to round four of the A-League season, it was announced that Perth Glory had signed Mori on a short-term contract to replace injured defender David Tarka. Mori subsequently came on as a substitute in the Glory's 1 – 0 away win over the New Zealand Knights on 22 September 2005. After some excellent displays, particularly a brace against Newcastle United Jets and a hat-trick against Adelaide United, the club strongly desired a permanent deal. After some wrangling with Adelaide City chairman Bob D'Ottavi, Mori agreed to a one-year deal.

On 9 December 2005, it was announced that Mori would be appointed as assistant manager at Perth Glory. This appointment followed the elevation of Alan Vest to Manager after the departure of Steve McMahon. After the completion of the 2005–06 A-League season, Mori returned to Adelaide City as player-manager.

On 27 September 2006, Mori signed with the Central Coast Mariners on a short-term deal to cover the loss of Nik Mrdja which was extended once. After the short-term contract with the Mariners had expired, the FFA did not allow Central Coast to re-sign him. On 21 November 2006, he was approached by new Queensland Roar manager Frank Farina and signed the following day on a short-term "until the end of the season" contract. After the Roar failed to make the playoffs, Mori returned to SA to be the player-coach once again of defending South Australian champions Adelaide City.

International career edit

Mori made his international debut against Solomon Islands on 4 September 1992. In an international career that spanned over the next ten years, he was capped 45 times and scored 29 goals.

Career statistics edit

Club edit

Appearances and goals by club, season and competition[3][4]
ClubSeasonLeagueNational cup[a]ContinentalOtherTotal
DivisionAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
South Melbourne1989National Soccer League20400204
1989–9013100131
Total33500335
Sunshine George Cross1990–91National Soccer League24420264
Bulleen1991Victoria Premier League167167
Melbourne Croatia1991–92National Soccer League2611312912
Adelaide City1992–93National Soccer League3012323314
1993–943111323413
1994–952718202918
1995–963631303931
Total1247211413576
Borussia Mönchengladbach1996–97Bundesliga600060
Adelaide City1997–98National Soccer League27192719
1998–9930153015
1999–200034223422
Total9156009156
Perth Glory2000–01National Soccer League28192819
2001–0227182718
2002–0331243124
2003–0426162616
Total112770011277
Adelaide City2004SA Premier League1811001811
20052622102722
Total4433104533
Perth Glory2005–06A-League17700177
Adelaide City2006SA State League1813542317
Central Coast Mariners2006–07A-League860086
Queensland Roar2006–07A-League820082
Central Coast Mariners2007–08A-League300030
South Adelaide Panthers2010SA State League4242
Adelaide City2011SA Premier League3030
Career total5372952290000559304
  1. ^ Includes the NSL Cup.

International edit

National teamYearCompetitiveFriendlyTotal
AppsGoalsAppsGoalsAppsGoals
Australia U231991302252
1992612283
Total9144135
Australia1992410041
1993004141
1994004040
1995213051
1996324173
1997762096
199841010510
2001340034
2002430043
Total27271824529
Career total36282265834
Scores and results list Australia's goal tally first, score column indicates score after each Mori goal.
List of international goals scored by Damian Mori[5]
No.DateVenueOpponentScoreResultCompetition
111 September 1992Stade Pater, Papeete, Tahiti  Tahiti1–03–01994 FIFA World Cup qualification
224 September 1993Dongdaemun Stadium, Seoul, South Korea  South Korea1–11–1Friendly
315 November 1995Breakers Stadium, Newcastle, Australia  New Zealand1–03–0Trans-Tasman Cup
414 February 1996Lakeside Stadium, Melbourne, Australia  Japan1–03–0Friendly
514 September 1996Kings Park Stadium, Durban, South Africa  Ghana1–02–0Friendly
621 September 1996Loftus Versfeld, Pretoria, South Africa  Kenya3–04–0Friendly
711 June 1997Parramatta Stadium, Sydney, Australia  Solomon Islands1–013–01998 FIFA World Cup qualification
82–0
94–0
106–0
119–0
1212 December 1997King Fahd Stadium, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia  Mexico3–13–11997 FIFA Confederations Cup
1325 September 1998Suncorp Stadium, Brisbane, Australia  Fiji1–03–11998 OFC Nations Cup
142–0
153–0
1628 September 1998Suncorp Stadium, Brisbane, Australia  Cook Islands2–016–01998 OFC Nations Cup
174–0
186–0
197–0
202 October 1998Suncorp Stadium, Brisbane, Australia  Tahiti1–04–11998 OFC Nations Cup
212–0
223–1
239 April 2001BCU International Stadium, Coffs Harbour, Australia  Tonga2–022–02002 FIFA World Cup qualification
245–0
258–0
2612–0
276 July 2002Ericsson Stadium, Auckland, New Zealand  Vanuatu1–02–02002 OFC Nations Cup
288 July 2002Ericsson Stadium, Auckland, New Zealand  New Caledonia4–011–02002 OFC Nations Cup
2914 July 2002Ericsson Stadium, Auckland, New Zealand  Tahiti2–12–12002 OFC Nations Cup

Honours edit

South Melbourne

Adelaide City

Perth Glory

  • NSL Championship: 2002–03, 2003–04

Australia

Individual:

  • Johnny Warren Medal: 1995–96, 2002–03
  • NSL top scorer: 1995–96 (31 goals), 1997–98 (19 goals), 1999–2000 (22 goals), 2001–02 (17 goals), 2002–03 (24 goals)

References edit

  1. ^ "Damian Mori returns to Reds as assistant coach". Adelaide United. 22 August 2022.
  2. ^ Hill, Simon (29 January 2013). "Simon Hill chats to Damian Mori about his career in the NSL and A-League and his coaching ambitions". Fox Sports Australia. Retrieved 6 February 2014.
  3. ^ Damian Mori at National-Football-Teams.com
  4. ^ "Damian Mori – Australian Player Database". OzFootball. Retrieved 28 June 2021.
  5. ^ Damian Mori – Goals in International Matches

External links edit