
City star's Socceroos hopes hit by fresh injury
Leckie won the Joe Marston Medal as player of the match in City's 1-0 win over Melbourne Victory on Saturday night, despite having his nose splattered across his face after copping an accidental boot early in the second half.
A battered Leckie confirmed after his heroic performance that he had been called up - for the first time under Tony Popovic - for crunch World Cup qualifiers against Japan in Perth on June 5 and against Saudi Arabia in Jeddah five days later.
But the 2022 World Cup hero is now unlikely to go - between both requiring assessment on his face in Melbourne on Monday and a fresh soft tissue injury.
The 34-year-old revealed he had suffered a hamstring injury on Tuesday and had carried it into Saturday's decider, when he starred at defensive midfield - showcasing his grit and versatility.
"I was selected for the national team but now I'm not sure. There's a good chance I won't go because of this," he said.
"But also on Tuesday, I hurt my hamstring, so I basically played with a strained hamstring.
"It was minor but we didn't get it scanned. I didn't want to know it was.
"I just wanted to get through Friday's session. It didn't feel too bad. And then with medication and stuff (I could play)."
Leckie hasn't played for Australia since the June 2024 win over Palestine, when Graham Arnold was still coach.
"I want to be there. I really do," he said.
"I've always said that I love the national team. I love representing Australia.
"But obviously over the last two years, my body's just been a lot of dramas with injuries.
"And as much as I would like to be there, what's happening now with this and recently with my leg, I really, really think I do need just a really good break. And hopefully it all works out for next season.
"Just have a nice break, get through the preseason - because I need a good pre season - not just stop-start. Because I was back four or five times this year.
"I need consistency. My body needs game time, and hopefully with a really good break that'll happen."
He hopes that getting his body right can deliver the consistent form to make a run at a potential fourth World Cup.
"I need to play a really good season to give myself a chance," he said.
"If I'm playing, I'm healthy, playing well, that's what's gonna keep an opportunity to potentially compete."
Leckie could at least soak up his first championship win.
"It feels unbelievable," he said.
"I was saying, if we had lost this game and I walked away looking like this, then I would get devastated. It's all worth it.
"Now we've made another special moment where, when I finish my career, I can look back on and I've probably got scars that'll remind me as well."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
2 hours ago
- News.com.au
Western United lodges appeal in fight against its A-League licence being stripped
Western United has lodged its appeal against Football Australia's decision to strip the club of its A-League licence. Having asked for an extension, United had until 10am on Thursday to submit the appeal. The club announced on Wednesday night that the appeal had been lodged. 'As this is a regulatory process, the club will be making no further comment at this time,' a United statement said. FA, which stripped the financially embattled United of its A-League licence on August 8 for failing to meet the criteria required to compete in the national men's and women's competitions, is expected to give its verdict on the appeal next week. The club's financial woes include a multimillion-dollar tax bill reportedly owed by United chairman Jason Sourasis. Building ðŸ'°ðŸ'š — Western United FC (@wufcofficial) August 20, 2025 Players and staff received their monthly wages late in April, May and June and were only paid overdue superannuation payments earlier this month. In May, United announced that KAM Melbourne, a subsidiary of American company KAM Sports, would become the club's new majority investor. However, the Australian Professional Leagues is yet to receive KAM Melbourne's full ownership proposal – understood to be worth $100m when including the purchase of the club's parent company Western Melbourne Group – and therefore cannot approve it. United was also banned by FIFA from registering players due to a six-figure sum that was owed to the club's former striker and 2022 A-League title-winner Aleksandar Prijovic. The ban led to United this week releasing former Sydney FC striker Jaiden Kucharski, who had only joined the club last month.

The Age
3 hours ago
- The Age
‘We can do it': Heidelberg's semi-pros back at work and eyeing another A-League upset
Australian soccer's giant killers Heidelberg United believe they can go all the way in the Australia Cup, but they face tough hurdles before their semi-final in September. There were raucous celebrations from the Warriors at Olympic Village after they overpowered A-League team Wellington Phoenix 4-0 in the quarter-final of the Australia Cup – Football Australia's version of England's FA Cup. The NPL Victoria team's quarter-final win came a week after their 3-0 victory over another A-League outfit, the Western Sydney Wanderers. It also set two new competition records, going down as the biggest win by a state league side against an A-League rival and becoming the first time state league team to record four 'cup-set' wins over A-League clubs. Goals from Max Bisetto and Asahi Yokokawa early in the second half followed a Wellington own-goal in the first half. Chok Dau delivered the crowd-pleasing fourth goal in the 85th minute. The Warriors are now waiting to see which A-League team they will come up against in the Australia Cup semi-final in September. It will be either Sydney FC or newcomers Auckland FC, who meet in their own quarter-final in Sydney on Saturday night. The Bergers players went back to work on Wednesday, among them 22-year-old left-back Fletcher Fulton, who works as a civil engineer for PAD Civil and was still on a high. 'It was unreal, there was definitely more expectation coming into this game and some added pressure, but it could not have gone more perfectly,' Fulton said. Sydney are a perennial contender in the A-League and Auckland won the premier's plate for finishing top of the ladder last season, but Bergers coach John Anastasiadis said his club was determined to become the first state league side to win the Cup since it started in 2014.

ABC News
7 hours ago
- ABC News
South Melbourne FC, Preston Lions pushing for A-League promotion as Western United struggles
Two local football clubs in Melbourne say they are ready to step up to the A-League should the embattled Western United fold. Men's champions just three years ago, Western United is fighting to stay alive amid a financial crisis with its licence stripped by Football Australia's First Instance Board this month. The expansion club has until 10am on Thursday to lodge an appeal against the decision. Storied clubs Preston and South Melbourne said if they were given the chance they would breathe new life into Australia's top-flight competition. Both have a rich history and were once a part of the defunct National Soccer League (NSL), the predecessor to the A-League. "This place has a heart, it has history. How many of the A-League clubs can say they've got 78 years of history and three generations of grandfather, father, son or daughter coming to the one game?" Preston Lions president David Cvetkovski said. "We have a heart, we have a soul." Founded in 1947 by Macedonian immigrants as a place to connect, Preston enjoyed success in the 1980s and 1990s but found itself relegated to lower leagues about 15 years ago. Cvetkovski, whose dad took him to Preston matches as a kid, said the club rebuilt through its people. "The one thing we knew with this place is we have the supporters," he said. Its members stuck by and within a decade Preston climbed back to the top of the National Premier Leagues (NPL) Victoria. It's where Preston has re-established a rivalry with South Melbourne, a club that has long dominated the state competition. In round five this year, more than 9,000 screaming fans packed Preston's stands when the two sides clashed in a fixture dubbed The Big Show, according to the clubs. "In the closeness of a suburban ground the vibe that night was simply electric," Cvetkovski said. "I think we sold through 3,500 kebapi (kebab) rolls that night. "These community clubs are attracting crowds, they're attracting people to come out. Why? Because they've got a good product and they're a good club." The attendance at that game easily eclipsed three of the five A-League men's fixtures that weekend and matched the remaining two, according to crowd figures published by With an impressive record of producing Socceroos, including Ange Postecoglou — who has gone out to carve an impressive career as a coach — South Melbourne has long fought to return to the top of Australian football. The club said it has been ready for two decades. "We'd bring success, we'd bring excellence in football and a real passion for it," South Melbourne president Nick Maikousis said. The club has made several attempts to enter the A-League — in its last bid the club lost out to Western United, which entered the competition in 2018 as part of an expansion. Established to represent growing communities in Melbourne's western suburbs, the promise of a new stadium was central to United's successful bid. But the 15,000-seat stadium in Tarneit — a joint project with money from private investors and planning approval from the local council — is yet to be built. Cvetkovski said any new A-League club can have a stadium or financial backing, but it must also have a pulse. "For any club just to come about and create a new identity, brand connection and that link to passion is not easy," he said. He added there is no club without its supporters and community, and that money alone will not do it. Maikousis said Western United's struggles bring into question the method by which new A-League clubs are picked. "There seems to be a systemic failure," Maikousis said. "There have been plenty of clubs that have failed in the A-League in the last 20 years. "[Football Australia] need to take a breath and make sure that the next club that goes into the A-League adds value to it." Another pathway to promotion could open up when a national second-tier competition known as the Australian Championship starts in October. South Melbourne and Preston will feature and hope to show they are serious about making the leap to the A-League. "It'd be such a magnificent story for the A-League expansion to come from the Australian Championship," Maikousis said. "I think it's more than a trial run. It's something that must be successful." Cvetkovski said Preston held no fear about playing in the A-League and said they could build a side within months. "If you told us that we had to play the A-League, we would have no problem competing in all facets," he said. The Australian Championship is designed to "connect the football pyramid in Australia and elevate aspirational clubs to the national stage", according to a Football Australia spokesperson. "FA will continue to monitor the growth of the Australian Championship, noting it remains a key strategic objective to establish a standalone NST home & away league competition in the future," they said. The A-Leagues have been contacted for comment.