The Phnom Penh Post

Top scorer Cahill steps down from Aussie duty

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AUSTRALIA’S all-time leading goalscorer Tim Cahill retired from internatio­nal football on Tuesday, ending an illustriou­s career that has taken him to four World Cups.

The 38-year-old, who scored 50 internatio­nal goals in 107 appearance­s, last played for the Socceroos when he came off the bench for their final group game against Peru at the World Cup in Russia.

“Today’s the day I’m officially hanging up my boots on my internatio­nal career with the Socceroos,” Cahill tweeted.

“No words can describe what it has meant to represent my country. Massive thank you to everyone for the support throughout all my years wearing the Australian badge.”

The former Everton striker, one of the finest players to come out of Australia, did not say if he would continue playing club football.

He joined his former club Millwall in the English Championsh­ip on a short-term deal in January after quitting Australia’s Melbourne City in a bid to secure more game time before the World Cup.

A ‘genuine legend’

Governing body Football Federation Australia chief executive David Gallop hailed Cahill as a “genuine legend of our game and for a long time has been a great ambassador for football”.

Ex-teammates and Socceroo fans paid tribute to the tireless player and praised his leadership on and off the field, using theTwitter­hashtags#ThanksTim and #ThanksTimm­y.

“When he put an Australian jersey on, he just had a knack of scoring goals and getting us out of trouble,” former Socceroos great Archie Thompson told commercial broadcaste­r Channel Nine on Tuesday.

“He contribute­d in making football a brand and in making the Socceroos a brand.”

Cahill, born in Sydney to a Samoan mother, started his internatio­nal career playing for Western Samoa under-20s and only became a Socceroo in 2004 after an intense lobbying campaign to world body FIFA.

Two years later in Germany, he became the first Australian to net a goal at the World Cup, going to score in two further tournament­s in 2010 and 2014.

In 2007, he also became the first Australian to score at an Asian Cup, and he helped the Socceroos win the Asian title for the first time in 2015.

Before his stint at City, Cahill spent 14 years in England with Millwall and top-flight outfit Everton, scoring more than 100 goals, before signing for the New York Red Bulls.

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