http://www.thecouriermail.news.com.au/common....00.html
JUST when Socceroo Harry Kewell thought his season of woe couldn't get any worse, it has.
The Liverpool striker's immediate future is murkier than the waters of the Mersey after he yesterday broke down on the comeback trail from a groin injury.
Kewell has been stopped in his tracks by a bout of achilles tendinitis which threatens to sabotage his bid to help Liverpool progress in the Champions League and lift the League Cup later this month.
He had hoped to return to action by coming off the bench at home to Fulham in the premiership tomorrow
But after failing to complete a single training session in the last week, Kewell is looking long odds for the Reds' home clash against Bayer Leverkusen on February 22 and the Millennium Stadium date with Chelsea five days later.
His Paris-based manager Bernie Mandic confirmed: "Harry's struggling a bit but the club are doing everything they can to get him right.
"He's had scans which don't show anything substantial but despite his best efforts at the moment he simply can't shake off the discomfort and get back on the park.
"Harry was desperate to be fit for the Fulham game as part of his plan to play himself in for the Levurkusen match."
The injury is the latest chapter in a chronicle of pain for Kewell over the past 14 months and a further smudge on the dimming lustre of Australian football's poster boy.
His form this season has been subverted by previous ankle and hamstring injuries. Ominously, Kewell underwent achilles surgery in 2000, ruling him out of the Sydney Games.
Concerns over the 26-year-old - who hasn't played since December 19 - are so great that London-based Socceroos physios Les Gelis and Anthony Crea have been summoned to Anfield to assess a condition which confounds Liverpool's medical staff.
In an unfortunate spin-off for the national team, Kewell - who broke a 34-game goal drought against Aston Villa on December 4 - will not now risk his fitness by returning to Australia next month for the matches against Iraq on March 26 and the tsunami fund-raiser against Indonesia.
Just when you thought things couldn't get any worse on the injury front.


