Save Log in , register or subscribe to save articles for later. Save articles for later Add articles to your saved list and come back to them any time. Got it Normal text size Larger text size Very large text size Mark Schwarzer can still recall the look of terror in Eddie Thomson’s eyes. It was 1993, and Australia was playing a World Cup qualifier against Canada in Edmonton. Fifteen minutes into the match, goalkeeper Robert Zabica made a rash challenge on striker Dale Mitchell, who had broken through the Socceroos’ defensive line and was bearing down on goal. Mark Schwarzer made two penalty shootout savess for the Socceroos in 1993 but it wasn’t until more than a decade later that he became a household name. Credit: SMH Zabica clattered into him just outside his box. Schwarzer, aged 20 and just a couple of months removed from winning the National Soccer League grand final with Marconi, was expecting him to be shown a yellow card. But after a period of deliberation, the referee produced a straight red – prompting a shocked Thomson, the then-Socceroos coach, to turn to his bench and look at the player he’d have to send on. “I remember Eddie Thomson just turning to me with his eyes wide open,” Schwarzer says. “Probably thinking: ‘Oh my god. Now I’ve got to play him’.” In a more just world, Schwarzer wouldn’t have even been there. He’d been called up only because Mark Bosnich, then Australia’s best goalkeeper, chose club over country, a common dilemma before FIFA introduced designated international windows in 2002. The Canada games clashed with the start of the Premier League season, and Bosnich, trying to cement his spot at Aston Villa, withdrew. Schwarzer got the last-minute call-up.AdvertisementIn his Aston Villa days, Mark Bosnich was considered one of the best goalkeepers in the English Premier League. Credit: Reuters “It was such an unfair scenario for ‘Bozza’ and other players to be in,” Schwarzer says. “It was completely out of order for them to be put in that position. The good thing is it’s been changed. But obviously, whenever those sort of scenarios develop, there’s more often than not someone else who benefits from it.” That was him. These were the inauspicious circumstances that launched his almost 20-year international career: one that spanned four World Cup cycles, a record 109 caps and some of the most important moments in Australian football history. It has now been recognised with a place in the Sport Australia Hall of Fame, making him just the ninth footballer to be inducted. It wasn’t the steadiest start. After coming on, Schwarzer conceded at his near post as Canada prevailed 2-1 over the 10-man Socceroos but in the second leg in Sydney, Australia won by the same scoreline, forcing the tie into extra time and then penalties: Schwarzer emerged as the hero by making two saves in the shootout. Bosnich was back in the team by the time the Socceroos faced Diego Maradona’s Argentina in another losing World Cup qualifying play-off. It wasn’t until another two saves in a shootout more than a decade later, against Uruguay, that Schwarzer would become a household name, and that the Socceroos would actually break their long World Cup drought. ‘There were football fans that were born that night’AdvertisementThe story of “that night”, as it has come to be known – Mark Bresciano’s goal, Tony Popovic’s substitution after just 31 minutes for Harry Kewell, the tension of extra time, Schwarzer’s famous stops to deny Darío Rodríguez and Marcelo Zalayeta’s penalties, Mark Viduka’s miss, the eternal image of a shirtless John Aloisi wheeling away after scoring his, and how it all turbocharged the growth of the sport in Australia – has been told and retold so many times that, in truth, there is nothing new to say about it. But the impact still echoes today. This year marks the 20th anniversary of that landmark achievement – one that, without a hint of hyperbole, Schwarzer believes changed not only the face of Australian sport, but the trajectory of thousands upon thousands of lives, far beyond the players and coaches who were directly involved. As he processed the heartbreak of their failure against Uruguay four years earlier, Schwarzer remembers sitting on the team bus in Montevideo, telling himself: “We just need to qualify. If we qualify, the game is going to change.” As a young fan, Schwarzer remembers watching the Socceroos continually fall short of qualification, contemplating the possibility that it would never actually happen. “We’re never going to get there. We’re just so far away from it,” he thought. “You just felt that there was something seriously missing.Advertisement“And then obviously as a player, at that stage in my career, I was thinking: ‘Gosh. Am I going to miss out on this opportunity? Is it going to be after I finish playing that we’re going to qualify? Am I going to be one of these players that just misses out, like so many – like Ned Zelic, Paul Okon, just to name a couple’. They were instrumental in us coming through as players. They were kind of like the pioneers of the game … they missed out. I still sometimes think about it.” Mark Schwarzer played for the Socceroos on 109 occasions, more than any other player in history. Credit: Getty Images Strikers always get the glory, so Aloisi’s celebration became the enduring symbol but Schwarzer’s performance was a seminal moment of its own. It became the benchmark by which all future Australian penalty shootouts would be measured, and it inspired many young footballers to pick up the gloves. “It’s a ripple effect on not just football players, but the football community,” he says. “There were football fans that were born that night, that were sucked into supporting the national team. As players who were playing week in, week out at the highest levels, in front of massive crowds and massive stadiums. It was hard to take, going back to Australia not having that all the time. “For people not to fully understand, or to really get that feeling of what it’s like to go to a World Cup … we’ve seen it, we’ve watched it but we’ve never been part of it. We all talked about it. We knew that things would change. Part of it was always about, if you can create change as big as this, to qualify again for only our second World Cup, after 32 years, this rollercoaster of emotions and experiences that we’d all been part of … but none of us thought it would change to the effect that it did.” ‘The boys won the title, not me’AdvertisementSetting aside his contribution at international level, Schwarzer’s club career alone is possibly grounds for Hall of Fame induction. After enduring some tough early years in Germany, the country of his parents’ heritage, he made his name in England. Indeed, no Aussie has played more often in the Premier League than Schwarzer, who made 514 appearances across 21 seasons for Middlesbrough, Fulham, Chelsea and Leicester City. The next best, Lucas Neill, made 279 appearances, so it’s almost impossible to imagine anyone bettering Schwarzer’s record, a testament to his longevity, which was incredible even for goalkeepers, who tend to have longer careers than outfields and who can play on into their 40s, as he did. “The beauty of the position is if you’re able to maintain your levels of fitness and be a little bit lucky in terms of injuries, you’re able to play a lot longer than most outfield players,” he says. “That was obviously something that I was able to do.” Through all of that time, Schwarzer won just one trophy. Well, there are two others, for which he gives himself zero credit but those aside, it’s just the 2003-04 League Cup he helped Middlesbrough win as their starting goalkeeper, coming in his seventh season of regular football. His only regret? That was in 2010, when Arsene Wenger wanted to bring him to Arsenal. Schwarzer was 37 and eager to play for a club that was not only contending for the Premier League title, but also playing in the UEFA Champions League – a new experience for him. Harry Kewell and Mark Schwarzer in 2005. Credit: Getty Images At first, Fulham were open to selling him; manager Roy Hodgson told Schwarzer as such. But then Hodgson moved to Liverpool, and his replacement Mark Hughes was interested in letting him only go if the Cottagers could bring in another goalkeeper first. That didn’t happen, and the door was slammed shut. “That was the one and only time in my career that I really struggled with a decision,” Schwarzer says. “I was desperate, and I was doing everything I possibly could to facilitate the move, but the club were working completely against me.”Advertisement
Click here to read article