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Emotional Andrés Iniesta announces retirement through 'tears of emotion and pride' – video

Tearful Andrés Iniesta announces retirement after trophy-laden career

  • Spaniard confirms the news at media event in Barcelona
  • ‘I never thought this day would come. I never imagined it’

The former Barcelona and Spain midfielder Andrés Iniesta announced his retirement on Tuesday after a trophy-laden career spanning 22 years. Iniesta, 40, was at the heart of those midfields during a period of sustained success for both teams in the late-2000s and early-2010s.

“Please allow me to be a little emotional today …” a tearful Iniesta, who most recently played for Emirates Club in the United Arab Emirates, told a press conference. “I never thought this day would come. I never imagined it. Yes, all these tears we have shed these days are tears of emotion, of pride. They are not tears of sadness.

“They are tears of that boy from a small town like Fuentealbilla, who had the dream of being a footballer and we achieved it after a lot of hard work, sacrifice … of never giving up, essential values in my life. I feel very proud of this path, with all the people who have accompanied me.”

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The technically gifted Iniesta made 131 appearances for Spain, scoring the only goal of the 2010 World Cup final with an extra-time strike to earn his country victory over the Netherlands as they lifted the trophy for the first time. He also played a key role in Spain winning the 2008 European Championship to snap a 44-year drought and was named player of the tournament when they successfully defended the title in 2012.

Born in Fuentealbilla, less than an hour’s drive south-east from the capital Madrid, Iniesta joined Barcelona’s La Masia youth academy at 12 years old and made 674 appearances for the Catalan side, captaining them for three seasons.

A year before becoming Spain’s World Cup final hero, Iniesta worked his magic in a Champions League semi-final against Chelsea. His brilliant shot deep in added time secured Barça a place in the final and they went on to lift the trophy, Pep Guardiola’s first European Cup triumph as a coach.

Andrés Iniesta celebrates Barcelona’s 2009 Champions League final win over Manchester United in Rome. Photograph: Manuel Queimadelos Alonso/Getty Images

Iniesta won nine La Liga titles with Barça, four Champions League titles, six Copa del Rey crowns, two Super Cups and three Club World Cups, many of them alongside Xavi Hernández, a rival for the accolade of being described as the best Spanish footballer of all time.

“One of the most magical teammates and one of those who I most enjoyed playing together, Andrés Iniesta, the ball will miss you and so will we! I wish you all the best, you are a phenomenon,” wrote his former Barcelona teammate Lionel Messi on social media. Runner-up for the 2010 Ballon d’Or behind Messi, Iniesta called time on his magnificent spells with Spain and Barcelona in 2018 and moved to Japan to play for Vissel Kobe.

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