Career
He played 14 seasons beginning with the team in the Canadian Soccer League, later joining the American Professional Soccer League, before finishing up a Whitecap. He retired from the professional outdoor game in 2001. Although Mobilio had trials overseas, most notably in Scotland (he played two Scottish Premier League games in the 93/94 season for Dundee Football Club) and the Netherlands, he never left Vancouver.
His 167 goals in 280 games is second for a player in professional soccer in Canada and the United States after the NASL"s great Giorgio Chinaglia and his total of 243.
He was a six time league all-star (Computer Science Laboratory 1988, 1990, and 1991. APSL 1993 and 1996; A-League, 1997).
The Computer Science Laboratory"s all-time leading scorer and 1990 top scorer and Most Valuable Player. He began the 1996-1997 NPSL season with the Harrisburg Heat, but was traded to the Edmonton Drillers after seven games. Indoor soccer He also was a long-time pro indoor soccer player, being named MISL Newcomer of the Year for 1989 playing for the Baltimore Blast.
He played with the Blast until 1992.
Mobilio also played in the National Professional Soccer League with the Philadelphia Kixx and the Detroit Rockers. He made his senior debut for Canada in a January 1986 friendly match against Paraguay and went on to earn 25 caps. His final international was a November 1997 World Cup qualification match against the United States of America. International goals Scores and results list Canada"s goal tally first.
Upon retirement, Mobilio worked as a technical director with the Coquitlam City Soccer Association and became a coach of youth soccer in Coquitlam.
Mobilio died in 2004 at age 35 of a sudden and massive heart attack, suffered while driving from a friend"s house in Burnaby after playing a game of amateur soccer.