The month of the making of Harry Kewell
By David V., 13 Jul 2009 The Crowd is a Roar Pro
- Tagged:
- English Premier League, football, Harry Kewell
No Australian football fan has forgotten the events of November 1997. The events in Tehran and Melbourne have been written about in great detail elsewhere, and needless to say it was one of the most heartbreaking experiences we have all had to endure. And the wait of 8 years simply prolonged the agony.
But November 1997 was also the month of the making of the “Golden Boy” of Australian football, Harry Kewell.
It was November 8, 1997 when Leeds hosted Derby at Elland Road- the rivalry between the two clubs goes back to the 1970s, then saw some of the most appalling violence of the early 1980s as both clubs declined. But in 1997, these were two clubs very clearly on the up.
Kewell had already made his mark on an improving Leeds side. He had already scored a couple of goals, but his performance in this game had garnered attention for one splendid goal. Leeds had bored everybody to death the previous season, albeit securing Premiership safety, but the new season brought the necessary changes. Youth was the key.
Derby were on a high after defeating Arsenal 3-0 the previous week- and Arsenal went on to win the double! This was also the first season in their new home of Pride Park, but the first game against Wimbledon had been abandoned after light failure.
Nevertheless, this was a Derby squad boasting memorable talent such as Igor Stimac, Aljosa Asanovic (think a Nick Carle kind of player but actually better), Paulo Wanchope, Stefano Eranio and Francisco Baiano. Jim Smith had proven a highly effective manager to date, but he would later lose the plot.
It was all Derby in the first half an hour, playing the kind of football that had seen them comfortably demolish Arsenal. They were 3-0 up with Dean Sturridge scoring twice in 11 minutes, and Aljosa Asanovic seemingly putting the game beyond doubt with a penalty.
But Leeds sparked to life.
Rod Wallace had pulled one back. And then five minutes before half time, Harry Kewell stunned the crowd with a goal.
A stunning volley that would rank among the top goals of 97/98. The goal set Leeds on to win the game, which they did in the final 10 minutes through a Jimmy Floyd Hasslebaink penalty and then Lee Boyer, on as a sub, scoring the winner in the last minute. 4-3 it finished.
Leeds went on to finish 5th while Derby finished a credible but somewhat disappointing 9th, having been in the mix for Europe most of the season.
Both clubs gambled massively on success and paid a heavy price as the football world came crashing financially by 2002. Dark clouds gathered around Leeds, while Derby suffered a dismal relegation- both clubs were to pay for their overspending and neither have fully recovered.
But it’s amazing to think how significant that one goal was, to so many.
Harry Kewell had attained stardom.
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- Explore:
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Midfielder said | July 13th 2009 @ 8:36am | Report comment
David
Work calls will write and comment latter .. excellent article …. and Harry ..maybe we will never see a player as good again or at least for a long time…
The best thing I can say about Harry is at his peak he was rated by most judges as one of the best five left sided players in the world .. Only Bozza has been rated in this class…
Koala Bear said | July 13th 2009 @ 11:15am | Report comment
Davis V,
I don’t know too much about Leeds but who can ever forget Viduka’s contribution with a 4 goal tally over Liverpool..? Harry was good for Leeds, but the Duke’s arrival was also a magnificent buy by O’Leary … I don’t know about Jacob Burns tho… He must have had one too many Guinnesses on the day when he signed him…
~~~~~~
KB
Koala Bear said | July 13th 2009 @ 11:20am | Report comment
“David V” oops too many Guinnesses….
~~~~~~
KB
Andrew said | July 13th 2009 @ 11:35am | Report comment
KB
He also signed Seth Johnson to massive money…but maybe Risdale desrves the blame for that one. Burns would have only cost them a fiver
Viduka’s 4 agains liverpool was the best individual performance in a match I have ever seen (no beed to put the words Astralian in there)
But Kewells season and a half where he won Young Player of the Year and I think might have been third on Player of the Year was the greatest sustained performance. He was just so exciting to watch. I think he was the best player in the league that year (at least the most exciting to watch) but you normally have to be at the top for a few years before they give you the award.
Even when he is injury plagued I still enjoy watching him play (2006 world cup for example) because he is top class and I enjoy just watching him pass the ball.
David V. said | July 13th 2009 @ 11:49am | Report comment
I wouldn’t say though he was the best left-sided player I’ve seen, considering Ryan Giggs has been around, and that there’s been Leighton James, Kevin Sheedy, Davie Cooper and countless other quality left-footers who, arguably, have done more.
And are we not forgetting the glut of underrated and overlooked English lefties, ignored by foolish England coaches?
David V. said | July 13th 2009 @ 12:09pm | Report comment
Yes what happened to the money Derby got for Seth Johnson? Derby squandered money and their Premiership place in the process, Jim Smith lost the plot and none of Colin Todd or John Gregory could solve problems. Hence the sad shadow of a club you see today.
The same thing happened to Nottingham Forest, Leicester and even Notts County. All clubs that lived beyond their means for years and ultimately collapsed when time came to pay up.
Midfielder said | July 13th 2009 @ 12:21pm | Report comment
David
No doubt Duke is a great player … but he was never rated in the top five strikers of his time… at Leeds Harry along with Carlos & Giggs was considered among the best five left sided players in the world…
Just poped in will add more tonight.
Andrew said | July 13th 2009 @ 12:55pm | Report comment
David V
No doubt here are many players that have had better careers than Harry because the ankle injury robbed him of his pace a such an early age.
That 18months when he was the main man at leeds though were really exciting, and even now at roughly half the speed of his old self I still enjoy watching him play as it’s been a treat to ahve an Aussie that good.
He’s our own Le Tissier, Waddle, Charlie George except we got too see him play for Australia … just not a lot before he was injured (I can’t remember when but I’m sure he had serious problems before the 2000 olympics which would have made him roughly 22?)
David V. said | July 13th 2009 @ 12:58pm | Report comment
“No doubt here are many players that have had better careers than Harry because the ankle injury robbed him of his pace a such an early age.”
And pace is all important for a winger? Neither Cooper nor Sheedy had any real pace, but their passing and shooting accuracy and football brain were all the more important. I can say the same for Ian Woan, who in my books still remains one of the best lefties never to play for England.
I’d say Oscar Crino was one of the most technically gifted players Australia has ever produced, he was the complete playmaker in his prime. Just a shame we didn’t get near a World Cup then.
Towser said | July 13th 2009 @ 1:16pm | Report comment
Shame Harry didnt play many games in his prime for Australia. If he was in his prime today we(NT fans) would have seen more of him given the increase in higher profile matches since being in Asia. Harry for me a player Australia never got the most out of as far as contributing to football here in comparison to say top Rugby or cricket players contribution to the profile of their sport.