
Chelsea great John Terry will leave
the club at the end of the season, the Premier League leaders announced on
Monday. John Terry “John Terry and Chelsea Football Club today jointly announce
our captain will leave the club at the end of the season,” said a club
statement.
The 36-year-old former England
central defender has made 713 appearances for the west London side, third in
the Blues’ all-time list. But, despite being Chelsea’s captain, Terry has
become an increasingly peripheral figure under Italian manager Antonio Conte
and has made just five league appearances so far this season.
“I will decide on my future in due
course, but for now I am committed to helping the team achieve success this
season,” said Terry in a joint statement issued with Chelsea. “After 22
years
there is so much to say and so many people to thank at this great football club.”
Terry made his debut in 1998 and has captained Chelsea on a record 578
occasions while also scoring 66 goals.
No one has won more than his 14
major honours with the club. Terry’s medal-winning haul includes four Premier
League titles, five FA Cups and three League Cups. He also won the Europa
League during Rafael Benitez’s brief stint as Chelsea manager and lifted the
Champions League trophy in 2012 despite being suspended for the final against
German giants Bayern Munich. – ‘Right time’ –
Terry’s statement indicated that he
could return to Stamford Bridge in a different role when he finally hangs up
his boots. “The club and I have always had a fantastic relationship, which will
continue beyond my playing days,” he said. “We had some really positive talks
but with everything taken into careful consideration I have decided it’s the
right time for me to leave.
“I’ve always been conscious that I
depart at the right time, in the right way, and I feel that the end of this
season is the right time for the club and I. “I feel I still have plenty to
offer on the pitch but understand that opportunities here at Chelsea will be
limited for me. “I’m eager to carry on playing and so will be looking to
continue with a new challenge.
I will of course always be a Blue
and am desperate to end my final season as a Chelsea player with more
silverware.” Chelsea director Marina Granovskaia paid tribute to Terry by
saying: “He has been an outstanding player, inspirational captain and has
always demonstrated an exceptional commitment to the cause.
“He will always be held in the
highest regard by everybody at Stamford Bridge and we look forward to welcoming
him back in the future.” There had been speculation that Terry might leave
during the January transfer window, but former Italy manager Conte made it
clear he wanted the veteran centre-half to stay for the remainder of the
campaign.
“This squad needs him,” Conte said
at the time. “He’s a great player, but also a great man and for me it’s
fantastic to have a person like him to help me in my first season at Chelsea.
“For this reason, I repeat, John stays with us.” Terry, however, has not played
for Chelsea since their 2-0 FA Cup win over Wolves in February, with his last
league appearance back in November.
Apart from a brief loan spell at
Nottingham Forest, Terry has spent his entire professional career with Chelsea.
He was chosen as the Professional Footballers’ Association Player of the Year
in 2005 and won 78 England caps before retiring from international duty.
But the end of his international
career was overshadowed by allegations he racially abused Anton Ferdinand, the
younger brother of his England centre-back partner Rio Ferdinand, while playing
for Chelsea against Queens Park Rangers in 2011. After being stripped of the
England captaincy,
Terry was cleared of racially
abusing Anton Ferdinand in a London court in July 2012. But two weeks later he
was charged by the Football Association and he subsequently retired from
England duty before the start of an FA hearing that saw him banned for four
games.
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