Goalkeeper Steve Mandanda, a World Cup winner with France in 2018, introduced his retirement from worldwide soccer on the age of 37 on Saturday.
“Today, the France team ends here for me,” Rennes guardian Mandanda mentioned at a press convention forward of Sunday’s sport at residence to Paris Saint-Germain.
The Kinshasa-born Mandanda made his France debut in 2008 and gained 35 caps for Les Bleus. He went to a few World Cups and was a part of the squad in Qatar the place France completed as runners-up to Argentina.
“I experienced some great moments with France, it’s been a privilege and joy for me to go through all these moments. But at 37 years old I think it’s the right time” to stroll away, he mentioned.
Mandanda’s retirement comes the identical week as that of Hugo Lloris, France’s first-choice keeper and most-capped participant who introduced Monday he was ending his worldwide profession.
“It allows us to come full circle with Hugo. We started together and we finish together. I didn’t have the same number of appearances as him but I’ve experienced a lot of things with him,” mentioned Mandanda.
Mandanda has spent nearly all of his profession with Marseille, taking part in a club-record 613 instances for them and successful the Ligue 1 title in 2010, however joined Rennes in July on a two-year deal.