Former Leeds United and Liverpool winger Harry Kewell
announced his retirement on Wednesday after almost two decades in professional
football.
The 35-year-old Australian returned to his homeland this
season to play with Melbourne Heart in the A-League in a last-ditch attempt to
go to this year's World Cup finals in Brazil.
But, as it has regularly done throughout his career,
Kewell's body failed him with the veteran missing nine games of the 2013/14
campaign so far with a combination of injuries, while Heart's dreadful season
(just six wins in 24 matches) did not aid his cause.
Kewell, who was voted Australia's greatest player ever in
2012, made his professional debut with Leeds United in 1996 at the age of 17.
The scintillating winger was named the English PFA's
Young Player of the Year in the 1999/00 season as he helped Leeds to third in
the Premier League with 10 goals and 13 assists.
At the end of the 2002/03 season, Kewell moved to the
club he supported as a kid - Liverpool - but never cemented a position at
Anfield due to a myriad of injuries.
Stints followed at Galatasaray, Melbourne Victory, Al
Gharafa and Heart but, essentially, Kewell's career never truly reached the
heights his potential suggested it should.
Despite this, Kewell will certainly retire as one of
Australia's best football exports, while he also played a key role in ending
his country's 32-year drought from the World Cup.
Kewell, somewhat fortuitously, set up Mark Bresciano's
goal in the second leg of a World Cup play-off against Uruguay in 2005, which
the Socceroos eventually won on penalties after the tie finished 1-1 on
aggregate.
At the World Cup in Germany in 2006, Kewell also scored
the crucial equaliser in Australia's final group match against Croatia, which
sent the Socceroos into the knockout stages.
Kewell also went to the 2010 World Cup in South Africa,
although he only played 24 minutes, as he was left out of Australia's first
match and got sent off in the first half of their second.
Culled from Soccerway
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