[1] Playing as a half-back flanker initially, Mohr later became one of the league's greatest full-forwards; he kicked 101 goals in 1936 (the first St Kilda player to kick more than 100 goals in a season) and was the VFL Leading Goalkicker in that year.
[2] But in May that year, after having only played one game for the season, Mohr announced his retirement, saying that he felt he could not reach form and that it was also time to make way for a younger player.
[3] In 1947, Essendon champion Dick Reynolds, in an article for the now-defunct Melbourne newspaper The Argus, wrote about Mohr that: [He] was handicapped because he played with a team that had few successes.
In a stronger team he might easily have qualified for a higher place in full forward rankings.
[6] In St Kilda's Team of the Century, he was named on the half-forward flank to accommodate Tony Lockett at full-forward.