Four-time African player of the year Samuel Eto'o has signalled the end to his 22-year playing career.
The ex-Cameroon and Barcelona forward, 38, posted on Instagram, stating: "The end, towards a new challenge."
Eto'o,
his country's record scorer with 56 goals in 118 games, also enjoyed
brief stints in the English Premier League with Chelsea and Everton.
Last year, after a short spell with Turkish side Konyaspor, he joined Qatar Sports Club, his last club.
Eto'o
joined Spanish giants Real Madrid in 1996 at the age of 16, but was
limited to just three appearances before loan spells with Leganes,
Espanyol and Mallorca.
After a permanent move to Mallorca in
2000, he struck 54 goals in 133 outings to establish himself as the
team's all-time leading scorer.
His move to Barcelona followed in
2004 where the Douala native won three Spanish La Liga titles before
helping the Catalonian side to two European Champions League triumphs in
2006 and 2009, scoring in both finals.
In 2006, Eto'o became the first and only African to win the La Liga Golden Boot when he netted 26 times in 34 matches.
The
Cameroonian forward scored 108 goals in 144 games for the Nou Camp club
before a move to Inter Milan in 2009, where he won his third Champions
League crown as well as an Italian Serie A title and the Fifa Club World
Cup in 2010.
Eto'o then spent two years in Russia with Anzhi
Makhachkala before joining Chelsea in 2013. He later had short spells at
Everton, Sampdoria and Antalyaspor, before moving to Konyaspor and then
Qatar SC.
Indomitable Lion He made his debut for
Cameroon against Costa Rica in 1996 and was the youngest player at the
1998 World Cup aged 17 years and three months.
Eto'o went on to play in three more World Cups, captaining Cameroon at the 2010 and 2014 editions where he scored two goals.
He
was part of the team that won two successive Africa Cup of Nations in
2000 and 2002 and went on to become the tournament's record scorer with
18 goals.
Eto'o also has an Olympic gold medal which he won with
Cameroon in 2000 and was voted the third best player in the world in
2005.
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