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India captain Sunil Chhetri has called time on his international career. Photo: Reuters

Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi … Sunil Chhetri: India captain, international football’s third-highest scorer, retires

  • Tributes pour in from football elite as India captain Sunil Chhetri calls time on record-breaking career
  • Attacker has hit 94 goals in 150 appearances for India in two decades representing country
Fifa

Tributes poured in from football’s elite as India captain Sunil Chhetri announced on Thursday he would retire from international football, ending a record-breaking career for his country spanning two decades.

The attacker has hit 94 goals in 150 appearances for India, behind only Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi in the list of active men’s international goalscorers.

He is also India’s most-capped player.

In a video message on social media platform X, Chhetri said the 2026 World Cup qualifier against Kuwait in Kolkata on June 6 will be his last international outing.

“It’s not that I was feeling tired, not that I was feeling this or that,” the 39-year-old said. “When the instinct came that this should be my last game, I thought about it a lot and eventually I came to this decision.”

Fifa tweeted an image of Chhetri on a podium alongside Messi and Ronaldo with the caption: “Retiring as a legend.”

While the English Premier League’s India account posted an image of him in action against Manchester United and labelled him: “Captain. Leader. Legend. Inspiration.”

India are second in qualifying Group A with four points, behind Qatar.

“The game against Kuwait demands pressure, we need the three points to qualify for the next round. It’s hugely important for us,” the skipper said. “But in a strange way, I don’t feel the pressure because these 15-20 days with the national team and the match against Kuwait is the last.”

Across club and country, Chhetri’s goal tally stands at 252 from 515 appearances, averaging almost a goal every two games.

He scored a penalty in India’s most recent outing, a 2-1 World Cup qualifying defeat to Afghanistan in March.

“The phases, the faces, the eras and battles – he’s been the one constant through it all,” Chhetri’s Indian Super League club Bengaluru FC said on X after the announcement. “He’s going to do it one last time, and we can never be grateful enough for the giant that walked amongst men.”

Football has struggled to find its feet among the 1.4 billion people of India, where the sport’s local following is dwarfed by the nation’s long-standing cricket obsession.

Former Fifa president Sepp Blatter once called India a “sleeping giant” of the sport.

India are 121st in the Fifa rankings, one spot below Lebanon which has a population of 5.5 million.

Chhetri began his football journey in 2002. It was reported in 2009 that he had signed for English Championship side Queens Park Rangers, but was unable to take up the contract after being denied a work permit.

He joined Kansas City Wizards in the United States in 2010 and in 2012 signed for Portugal’s Sporting CP, where he played for the reserves in the country’s second division.

In 2022, Fifa honoured Chhetri with a documentary titled “Captain Fantastic”.

India coach Igor Stimac told AFP in January that Chhetri was welcome to continue his career for as long as he chose.

“We are not putting any pressure on him whatsoever,” the Croatian said. “He is a proper role model for many Indian kids dreaming about becoming football players.”

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