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Cahill retires from Australia duty at 38
Tim Cahill.[file photo]

Australia's leading goal scorer Tim Cahill has retired from international soccer after a frustrating fourth World Cup tournament in Russia.


The 38-year-old Cahill, who has scored 50 international goals in 107 caps, only made a substitute appearance for the Socceroos in their final group game at the World Cup, which ended in a 0-2 loss to Peru.


"Today's the day that I'm officially hanging up my boots on my international career with the Socceroos," Cahill said on his Twitter account yesterday. "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."


Cahill's decision was hardly unexpected given his age and the fact the Socceroos have a new coach in Graham Arnold as they head into the defense of their Asian Cup title next year in the United Arab Emirates.


He had also struggled to get playing time at club level in the last year, leaving A-League side Melbourne City last December before he signed with English second-tier side Millwall — where he first came to prominence — in January.


The former Everton forward played just 10 games for the south London side, mostly from the bench and former Socceroos' coach Bert van Marwijk said that while Cahill's talisman presence would be valuable, he was not guaranteed a spot in his World Cup squad.


"He didn't play a lot and it's important that players have rhythm and play," the Dutchman, who was only appointed for the World Cup campaign, said of Cahill's struggles to get regular playing time.


"But there always are exceptions. He's a player who was very important for the national team in the qualification and in the playoffs."


Cahill's ability to score goals at crucial times had emphasized his importance to the side throughout his 14-year international career.


As a substitute he scored twice as the Socceroos beat Japan at the 2006 World Cup in Germany, earning the side its first win at the global showpiece.


Most recently with the team struggling after a marathon qualifying campaign he scored twice, the second an injury-time winner, against Syria last year that propelled the Socceroos into the inter-continental playoff with Honduras.


The goals, reminiscent of similar efforts against Qatar and Japan during the 2010 World Cup qualifying campaign, earned him special praise from then Socceroos coach Ange Postecoglou.


"Timmy was Timmy, that's why he's the greatest ever," Postecoglou said at the time. "I said when he broke the hundred games he's just a great Australian sportsman, beyond our sport."


Australia went on to beat Honduras 3-1 on aggregate to make its fourth successive World Cup finals.


Cahill, born in Sydney to a Samoan mother, spent much of the tournament in Russia on the bench, but did earn his 107th cap when he replaced Tomi Juric in the second half of the 0-2 loss to the Peruvians.


At the end of the game he was photographed tapping his wrist, which Australian media presciently suggested that "Timmy time" was over.


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