Manchester United midfielder Paul Scholes has announced his retirement from football at the age of 36, with immediate effect.
Scholes, who made his United debut in 1994, played 676 times for the club and will now join the coaching staff at Old Trafford.
There had been speculation about the 36-year-old's future in the past few weeks after he became increasingly dissatisfied with his bit-part role at Old Trafford.
In the end, the announcement came in much the same way that he conducted his career, with minimal fuss and no interest in the limelight.
"I am not a man of many words but I can honestly say that playing football is all I have ever wanted to do and to have had such a long and successful career at Manchester United has been a real honour," he said.
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"This was not a decision that I have taken lightly but I feel now is the right time for me to stop playing. To have been part of the team that helped the club reach that 19th title is a great privilege."
Scholes's 77th-minute substitute's appearance in the Champions League final was his last competitive appearance, but the midfielder will play in his testimonial match at Old Trafford in August.
Famously taciturn
Although Paul Scholes was born in Salford, not far from Old Trafford, he was brought up on the Langley estate in Middleton and grew up watching football on the terraces at Oldham Athletic's Boundary Park ground three or four miles away.
He joined the Latics as a junior, and played for them alongside his future Manchester United midfield colleague Nicky Butt, as well as the Neville brothers, Gary and Phil.
He started training with Manchester United after being spotted by Mike Coffey, the then United scout who taught him at Cardinal Langley High School. He joined the club as a trainee in the summer of 1991.
His debut came on 21 September 1994, where he scored twice in a 2-1 victory over Port Vale in the Football League Cup.
In addition to winning 10 Premier League titles, Scholes was a member of the team that triumphed in the 2008 Champions League final against Chelsea, but was suspended for the 1999 final win over Bayern Munich.
He also won 66 England caps before retiring from international football following the Euro 2004 tournament, aged only 29, in order to spend more time with his young family and less within the confined atmosphere of a travelling football team.

