Harry Kewell: The man that divided a nation

By Alex Chisholm / Roar Pro

In 2012 Harry Kewell was voted as the greatest ever Australian football player by his fellow players, the media and more importantly the fans. So why is it that he has divided a nation between the adoring and the doubtful?

His roller coaster ride of a career holds the answers.

Harry Kewell was picked up by Premier League side Leeds United after a successful tour with his junior team Marconi Stallions.

This meant, that at the tender age of 15, Kewell was off halfway around the world to begin his football career.

He was plucked from the Leeds youth team for his first international cap for Australia at the age of 17 years and seven months, still the record for the youngest debutant for the Socceroos.

Just seven months after his international debut, Australia’s love affair with Kewell began as he netted his first goal in an incredibly difficult away tie to Iran for the 1998 World Cup qualifiers. He then repeated the effort in the return tie at the MCG, but unfortunately for Australia the two draws were not enough to secure a spot due to the away goals rule.

This exposure at the highest level seemed to boost Harry Kewell, as he was part of the Leeds youth team that won the Youth FA Cup which led to him cracking the first team.

He had fellow Australian Mark Viduka by his side at Leeds as they set about forming a deadly partnership at both club and international level.

In the 1999-2000 season, Kewell went on to win the PFA Young Player Award and was selected in the PFA Team of the Year on the back of his most successful season for Leeds. However, after scoring 45 goals in 181 appearances for Leeds, the club found itself in financial trouble. They had sold most of their star players the season before, but in the summer of 2003, Kewell left for Liverpool.

After the highs of his Leeds days, his career was about to take that infamous dip on your favourite roller coaster ride.

Unfortunately for Kewell, injuries were starting to eat away at his career during his final season at Leeds but they were to get even worse at Liverpool.

He showed some absolute moments of brilliance in the red of Liverpool, and more importantly showed why he deserved to wear the famous number seven jersey that legends such as Kevin Keegan and Kenny Dalglish had worn before him. Unfortunately they were only moments, glimpses if you will, at what Kewell could do.

This is when people throughout the football world questioned his desire, attitude and consistency as his injury toll mounted.

It must be said that Harry Kewell was only the second ever Australian, after Craig Johnston, to play for Liverpool. But of course Johnston never represented Australia due to his club commitments and was also actually born in South Africa.

So for a young generation, Harry Kewell is the reason why Liverpool has such a strong supporter base in Australia. He was someone the kids of Australia could dream of being and so they supported the club.

He will be remembered for his time at Liverpool by most for his withdrawal due to injury during the first half of the epic 2005 Champions League final against AC Milan in Istanbul. He was booed off the pitch by Liverpool fans at the time – they even suggested he had faked the injury. Liverpool went on to win on penalties after coming from 3-0 down.

Kewell became the first and only ever Australian player to win the Champions League.

However, it took Kewell until November to fully recover from this injury, just in time for Australia’s crucial two-legged play off against Uruguay to qualify for the 2006 World Cup. After tasting defeat to the same foe four years previous, Australia made up for it with two brilliant performances.

Kewell was a second half substitute – due to his fitness – in the second leg, but provided the impetus his nation so desperately needed. He slotted home the first penalty in the shootout win that took Australia to their first World Cup appearance in 32 years.

A year later in the 2006 FA Cup final, his cup final curse seemed to continue as he was again forced from the field due to injury – this time in the second half. The fans did not boo him this time, as they understood just how injury-prone Kewell had become. Liverpool did the business again beating West Ham on penalties.

This latest injury put Kewell in doubt for Australia’s World Cup campaign. However, he started their first match against Japan before making a substitute appearance against Brazil. He then scored the goal against Croatia that would see Australia through to the Round of 16, Australia’s best ever performance at the World Cup. They would eventually bow out to Italy in unfortunate circumstances – a late penalty – with Kewell again crippled by injury.

Harry went on to play a key role in Australia’s first Asian Cup campaign in 2007. Australia bowed out to Japan in the quarter-finals.

He returned to Liverpool under an injury cloud, but gained form and fitness in time to come off the bench in the 2007 Champions League final against old foes AC Milan. This time Milan won, however, and Kewell left a season later after another injury-hit campaign.

He joined Turkish giants Galatasaray the following summer and reignited his career. Kewell enjoyed a fruitful spell here, making 63 appearances with a return of 22 goals.

During his time at Gala, Australia qualified for a second consecutive World Cup and a third in total. Kewell even captained the side for a match against Iraq in the qualification phase.

The 2010 World Cup was a disaster for Kewell, his campaign only lasting 24 minutes as he did not play against Germany and was sent off for the ball striking his arm on the goal-line while defending a corner. He was therefore suspended for their final group match against Serbia, which they won but still failed to make the Round of 16.

After this tournament, Kewell played a major part in what Australians hoped would be the crowning glory of the ‘golden generation’ by winning the 2011 edition of the Asian Cup. He scored three times in the tournament, but the Socceroos were unable to overcome main rivals Japan in the final.

Kewell finished up his season with Galatasaray, but would not be offered a new contract. He returned home to the A-League with Melbourne Victory pulling the coup of signing the Socceroo.

It was a slow start to his Victory career, as his team struggled to gel. Kewell however, was a shining light, making 25 appearances and scoring eight goals. Unfortunately he did not stay on for a second season and returned to England due to his wife Sheree Murphy’s mother battling cancer.

He made an ill-fated switch to Al Gharafa in 2013 after being unable to secure club football while in England. He played three games and scored one goal.

Shortly after he announced he would sign for Melbourne Victory’s cross town rivals Melbourne Heart, where he would play under former teammate John Aloisi.

The Heart struggled with marquee man Orlando Engelaar breaking his leg in pre season and Kewell battling injuries himself. Aloisi was eventually sacked after the longest winless run in A-League history and Harry Kewell decided to call it a day. He made his last appearance, quite fittingly, against the Western Sydney Wanderers – a team he fought hard for to get into the A-League.

Throughout his career the Australian public and media have written him off for being too flash, talking with an English accent, being overpaid and overrated – all of which can be attributed to tall poppy syndrome of course. But if you look at his achievements throughout his career, there’s little doubt that Kewell was world class.

Also, at every time of asking Harry Kewell was there for his country and put his body on the line for that Green and Gold jumper. You couldn’t get a prouder Australian than Harry Kewell.

He may not be the greatest footballer to every Australian, but certainly the Australian public and media should thank him for his wonderful service to the game. He made it ‘cool’ to play football.

Thanks Harry.

The Crowd Says:

2016-08-30T06:46:19+00:00

Tamie

Guest


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2014-05-24T22:01:23+00:00

j binnie

Guest


Stavros - Back in 1984 it was decided to find out if the Olympics should be held without a football tournament. Adidas did the survey and because the Olympics were being held in a "non- football" country,the USA, it was felt a clearer result would be the outcome.Figures proved that if the competition ,the Olympics, had not had the football tournament,the Games would have been a financial disaster.Remember ,the USA being blessed in every city with large stadia did not have to lay out the Governement monies that are spent today.Los Angeles was the host city,but with the Colosseum,the city's major venue,havng a crowd capacity of 60,000, the finals of the football tournament were moved to the Sacramento Rosebowl where matches were sold-out attracting crowds of over 100,000.The four semi -finalists came from France,Italy,Yugoslavia and Brazil,so no home town favouritism helped build the crowds."Banning football from the Olympics" has never been discussed since that time. The Olympics were held again in the USA ,in Atlanta in 1996 and again the Football tournament outdrew the other sports in the Games,32 matches being watched by average crowds of 38,000 per game, The final again was a sell-out with 83,000 watching Nigeria beating Argentina. Just as a by the by when the games were held in another "non-football" country,Australia in the year 2000 the football tournament (32 matches) were attended by an average crowd of 32,000 per game and the final saw Cameroon beat Spain in front of 104,000 people. Cheers jb

2014-05-24T16:27:44+00:00

Evan Askew

Guest


The careers of Ned Zelic and Paul Okon with the national team endeed well before 2006.The period I would waget that the likes of Kewell, Viduka, Schwarzer, Bresianno and Cahill earned their national caps. Had the careers of those two players who were comparable to Kewll and Viduka conincied with the 2006n world cup I could guarantee they would be considered in the same bracket and their number of caps would have being comparable to Kewell and Viduka.

2014-05-24T04:28:21+00:00

Realfootball

Guest


MF, I owe you an apology. In another thread I accused you of being a trojan horse for a troll. Clearly this is not the case. I was a trifled annoyed at the time by your negativity. However, you can generally be relied upon to be informed, lucid and logical. Having said that, I'm off surfing...

2014-05-24T04:27:39+00:00

nachos supreme

Guest


Figo.Lets not forget Figo.

2014-05-24T01:15:59+00:00

Kurt

Guest


1.He some how fitted under international marquee, his vacancy was filled by contreras 2. So you you made a point about something you can't substantiate Are you saying my opinion is ignorant, in what way? every point i made has a base or is a query. At the same time if I was to make a statement like kewell isn't a marquee, or kewell wasn't gettin paid alot, I'd have a source to reference

2014-05-23T23:50:49+00:00

Mister Football

Roar Guru


You've obviously misunderstood my comment (you have actually backed me up by providing those stats). They both played insufficient games to force their way into my top two players (Harry and Dukes), but they were certainly top shelf in terms of being quality players, so I would always try and find a spot for both in my top 5. Is that clear enough for you?

2014-05-23T23:35:07+00:00

Fussball ist unser leben

Roar Guru


Paul Okon played 28 games for the National Team & captained the team during the WC2002 qualifying campaign. Ned Zelic played 32 games for the National Team. Hardly a significant difference.

2014-05-23T23:28:40+00:00

Fussball ist unser leben

Roar Guru


@Kurt 1. Archie Thompson was MVFC's Australian marquee from 2005-2014. Harry Kewell's wage was subject to the salary cap. 2. You do not have proof of Kewell's contract either and, apart from you, no one in Australia has mentioned Kewell was on anything other than the minimum wage at MelbHeart. I want you to understand that opinions based on ignorance are worthless.

2014-05-23T23:22:14+00:00

Kurt

Guest


1. He was a marquee 2. Once again does not mention clauses, and the likes, also he didn't have a club for a year (i understand it was for family matters) and the World Cup was at the end of this season maybe he was lookin to stay in the coaches eye

2014-05-23T23:21:09+00:00

Mister Football

Roar Guru


I certainly put Zelic and Okon in my top 5. Okon didn't play enough through injury, and Ned walked out on the NT prematurely.

2014-05-23T15:23:59+00:00

Daniel Hackett

Guest


Oh it will and very soon.. you will see very soon a lot of big clubs chasing matty ryan u mark my words!

2014-05-23T14:55:45+00:00

Pauly

Guest


Oh Stavros, people in China, India, Indonesia and the USA will still watch the WC - more than the number of people in those countries who will tune into rhythmic gymnastics, athletics or swimming even when their country is involved. Olympics - just an irrelevant snorefest, a bit like tapas (little bits of different things) when you're really dying for a steak.

2014-05-23T14:49:28+00:00

Pauly

Guest


Steve, it is just a shame most of the kids playing "rugby" would rather be lining up for NSW or Queensland in Origin than playing union. Union should tackle RL before coming after other sports.

2014-05-23T14:04:23+00:00

Ben

Guest


Rest easy Steve. The best solution for you would be to try to avoid watching or reading about soccer altogether - then you won't have to worry about its impact on rugby.

2014-05-23T13:15:50+00:00

Realfootball

Guest


In 20 years time the world will have gone underwater so I won't care. We'll all be watching water polo.

2014-05-23T13:13:21+00:00

Realfootball

Guest


Perhaps that is because you didn't know him...

2014-05-23T13:12:58+00:00

Realfootball

Guest


Not Zelic at his best too?

2014-05-23T13:11:40+00:00

Realfootball

Guest


Ha! Well said.

2014-05-23T10:52:10+00:00

TRUE 9

Guest


Hahahaha

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