Djuricin came to prominence in his native Austria with Sturm Graz, scoring 24 goals in 44 appearances, before joining Red Bull Salzburg in 2015.
[2] After a short spell with FC Stadlau in 2008, he moved to Germany to enter the youth academy at Bundesliga club Hertha BSC.
[5] Following injuries to Patrick Ebert, Raffael and Daniel Beichler, Djuricin received his maiden first team call up on the opening day of the 2010–11 2.
[9] He missed two months of the campaign with a broken sesamoid in his foot and made 17 appearances and scored three goals in a dire season for the Jahn,[10][11] with a bottom-place finish consigning the club to relegation to the 3.
[12] He made his debut in a 0–0 UEFA Europa League second qualifying round draw with Breiðablik on 18 July 2013, the first European appearance of his career.
[1] Djuricin showed good goalscoring form in the first half of the 2014–15 season,[1] scoring 17 goals in 21 games before departing the UPC-Arena on 8 January 2015.
[13] He scored just three goals in 16 appearances in the second half of the 2014–15 season, but received the first silverware of his career when Salzburg won the league title at the end of the campaign.
[15] He scored within 29 minutes of his debut in a 1–1 draw with against Leeds United on 12 September and made it two goals in three games with the winner versus Preston North End one week later.
[1][18] He returned to the bench in mid-January 2016 and broke back into the starting lineup in late February,[1] but was sidelined due to illness in March.
[27] In what remained of the 2020–21 season, he scored seven goals in 17 appearances,[1] helped the club qualify for the 2021–22 Europa Conference League and signed a new three-year contract.
[1] The result of a visit to Bayern Munich's heart specialist necessitated a six month break from football and despite returning for the 2024–25 pre-season, Djuricin's contract was terminated.
[38] His debut and first appearance at any level for just shy of a year came as a second half substitute in a 2–0 Austrian Cup quarter-final defeat to TSV Hartberg on 31 January 2025.
He scored a penalty at the 2010 UEFA European Under-19 Championship and the resulting win over the Netherlands qualified the team for the 2011 FIFA U-20 World Cup in Colombia, though he would miss the tournament through injury.
[40] He won two caps for the senior team in March 2015, in a 5–0 UEFA Euro 2016 qualifying over Liechtenstein and a 1–1 friendly draw with Bosnia and Herzegovina.