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7, September 2019
Samuel Eto’o hangs up his boots 0
Four-time African Player of the Year, Cameroon’s Samuel Eto’o has announced his retirement at the age of 38. After 19 years “running”, he said he “needed a rest”.
“The end, towards a new challenge,” the former Barcelona, Inter Milan and Chelsea striker posted on Instagram. “Thank you all, big love, adrenalin.”
“In a few months you’ll see me doing something new,” Eto’o later said on the margins of an economic forum in DR Congo.
“I need a rest, I’ve been running for 19 years,” he added.
One of the greats in African sport
Eto’o stands alongside Liberia’s current president George Weah and Cote d’Ivoire’s Didier Drogba as a great of African sport, and cuts a mythical figure in his homeland where he is close to national president Paul Biya.
He is slated for a major role in the Confederation of African Football where he has vowed to fight corruption to ensure funds go into infrastructure.
The most memorable period of his club career includes five hugely successful seasons with Barcelona from 2004 to 2009.
Despite a knack for ruffling feathers, a return of 108 league goals from just 145 matches in five stunning seasons with Barcelona pays testament to his talent.
At his peak he enjoyed electric pace, impeccable touch and instinctive shooting to make him one of the most feared centre-forwards in the world.
Four World Cups for Cameroon
He won a pair of Champions League titles and three La Liga crowns before departing under a cloud for Inter Milan after a row with Ronaldinho prompted Pep Guardiola to drop him.
He then spearheaded Jose Mourinho’s charge to a never to be forgotten treble with Inter of Champions League, Serie A and Coppa Italia titles in his first season in Italy.
He led Cameroon to an impressive four World Cups in 1998, 2002, 2010 and 2014 and enjoyed huge success at the Africa Cup of Nations as the Indomitable Lions won in 2000 and 2002.
He was part of a golden generation that featured Rigobert Song, the late Marc-Vivien Foe and Geremi as Cameroon also won the gold medal at the Sydney Olympics in 2000, with the emerging Eto’o both scoring and converting a penalty in the shoot-out win over Spain in front of a blockbuster 114,000 crowds.
His pace left him as his career slowed down with low stints at Russia’s Anzhi Makhachkala, Chelsea and Everton in the Premier League.
Last year, after a short spell with Turkish side Konyaspor, he joined Qatar league side, Qatar Sports Club, his last club.
Source: RFI