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Phil Moss

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Full name
  
Phil Moss

Siblings
  
Jonathan Moss

Years
  
Team

Position
  
Playing position
  
Defender

Role
  
Football manager

Place of birth
  
London, England

Name
  
Phil Moss


Phil Moss Mariners coach Phil Moss sees youth as way forward as A

Date of birth
  
(1971-10-05) 5 October 1971 (age 44)

Team coached
  
Central Coast Mariners FC (Manager, 2013–2015)

Similar People
  
Tony Walmsley, Graham Arnold, Jonathan Moss, Michael McGlinchey

Phil Moss (born 5 October 1971) is an English-born Australian football manager and former association football player who is currently the assistant coach of Sydney FC.

Contents

Phil Moss Poor season sees Mariners coach Phil Moss stood down The

Early life

Phil Moss Phil Moss confirms Central Coast Mariners39 interest in

Moss was born in London, England to Jewish parents and arrived in Australia as a child. His younger brother, Jonathan later became a first-class cricketer.

Playing career

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Moss came through the ranks at Manly United before making his first grade debut at 17, and enjoyed a season at the Central Coast Coasties in 1997, ironically alongside his new colleague, in Mariners Head of Sports Science Andrew Clark. Moss then made his mark in the old National Soccer League under Graham Arnold as a defender come midfielder at Northern Spirit via a short spell at Eastern Suburbs, before ultimately returning to his old stomping ground.

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Moss represented Australia in football at the 1997 Maccabiah Games. At the games opening ceremony a bridge he was about to step onto collapsed, killing several members of the Australian team and injuring a number of others including his brother Jonathan.

Coaching career

Phil Moss Phil Moss Socceroos should embrace tough World Cup group

At Cromer Park, Moss was player coach briefly before taking the reins as Head Coach, and steering the club toward the NSW Premier League.

Before entering as a coach at State League level, Phil had coached Dee Why Football Club in 1996, who were at the time a Premier League team in the Manly Warringah Football Association competition. It was here that he made his mark winning the Grand Final, beating Pittwater RSL (2-1), winning the MWFA Cup (knockout competition), then winning the MWFA sixaside competition and even taking the team to defeat Manly United's first grade squad in an exhibition match on Cromer Park's number one field.

Moss served for two years as an assistant coach with the Olyroos. He assisted Graham Arnold during the successful qualification campaign for the 2008 Beijing Olympics with the Olyroos.

After serving served as Graham Arnold's assistant at the Mariners from July 2010, Moss was appointed the new manager of the Central Coast Mariners on 14 November 2013. He succeeded Graham Arnold, who was signed by J.League team Vegalta Sendai. Prior to his appointment, Moss had held the assistant coaching role at the Mariners for three seasons; over this time the club won one championship, one premiership and made the grand final in two of the three seasons of his tenure. Under Moss, the Mariners managed third-placed finish in the A-League. After defeating Adelaide United in the elimination finals, the Mariners were eventually eliminated by the Western Sydney Wanderers in the semi-finals.

On 6 March 2015, Moss was sacked by the Mariners.

Moss later took legal action against the Mariners on the basis of wrongful dismissal, having been dismissed just seven months into a three-year contract, with Moss claiming the balance of his $150,000 salary plus breach-of-contract damages. He eventually received approximately $500,000 from the Mariners; this sum is believed to be the biggest payout over a coach's sacking in A-League history.

Managerial statistics

As of 19 December 2016

References

Phil Moss Wikipedia