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Paul Scholes Retires At Age 36

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LONDON ENGLAND - AUGUST 22:  Paul Scholes of Manchester United celebrates with John O'Shea as he scores their first goal during the Barclays Premier League match between Fulham and Manchester United at Craven Cottage on August 22 2010 in London England.  (Photo by Phil Cole/Getty Images)

Manchester United and England legend Paul Scholes has announced his retirement after a remarkable 17-year career with the club that saw him hailed as one of the finest players to ever live.

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From Our Editors

Paul Scholes - He Scored Goals, A Fantastic Video Tribute To A Legendary Player

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Paul Scholes retired from football today at the age of 36. A complete midfielder who spent his career at one club, he retired exactly the way we would have expected him to. No build up, no glory year, no big press conference. Paul Scholes issued a simple statement and walked away. 

I know it's cliche, but in this age of 24/7 media coverage, massive sponsorship deals and big time personalities, Scholes' regular guy personality and quiet persona was extremely refreshing. He didn't particularly like media attention and he never caused a stir. When he wasn't being played in the role he liked in the England side, he retired from international football and said he wanted to focus on his club career. No scene, no complaining about Sven-Goran Eriksson, no nothing. Had he complained about Eriksson, the media and fans would have been on his side, but that's not Paul Scholes.

Below the jump is a video tribute to Paul Scholes which I recommend watching. Hat tip to La Croqueta, the blog where I found this video. I highly recommend following that site's proprietor, Mohamed Moallim, on twitter.

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Original Story

Paul Scholes Retires Age 36

Legendary Manchester United midfielder Paul Scholes has retired today at the of age thirty-six, marking the end of a seventeen year career with the club in which he made almost five hundred appearances. Scholes was more than just a good one-team player, however - he was a genuine great in midfield, heralding the arrival of a game increasingly driving by passing vision and range. There's a reason the likes of Zinedine Zidane and Xavi Hernandez considered Scholes to be one of the absolute best players in the world, with Xavi praising him as the best midfielder of the past two decades:

A role model. For me, and I really mean this, he's the best central midfielder I've seen in the last 15, 20 years. He's spectacular, he has it all, the last pass, goals, he's strong, he doesn't lose the ball, vision. If he'd been Spanish he might have been rated more highly. Players love him.

Sometimes a figure of fun for his rash tackling, one suspects that Scholes was respected even by fans of rival teams for his remarkable skills. However, his biggest praise usually came from abroad, where a more thoughtful, technical style is favoured rather than the blood and thunder of the English game - attempts to indulge in the more brutal aspect of football usually turned out badly for both Scholes and whoever was unfortunately enough to get in his way.

Since I did a spectacularly poor job describing Scholes' career in words, we'll let the man himself do the talking:

What a player he was. Scholes, whose last match came as a substitute in Manchester United's 3-1 loss to Barcelona in the 2011 UEFA Champions League semifinal, will be given a coaching rule with the club, presumably helping to unearth and teach the skills that made him one of the very best players in the world.

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