Samir Nasri Confirms Retirement from Football at Age 34
Samir Nasri has confirmed his retirement from football at the age of 34.
The former France international announced his decision on Sunday on Canal+, a media outlet where he is now a pundit.
Nasri came through at Marseille and transferred to Arsenal in 2008, spending three years at Emirates Stadium before he joined Manchester City.
At Manchester City, Nasri won two English Premier League (EPL) titles, a League Cup and a Community Shield.
He joined Sevilla on loan in 2016/2017 and seemed to have revitalised his career in La Liga, though the move was not made permanent.
A short spell in Turkey with Antalyaspor followed, but Nasri mutually terminated his contract in January 2018, before he received a six-month ban from football by UEFA.
This was for breaching WADA rules in December 2016 by receiving an intravenous drip of 500 millilitres of water containing nutrients.
It is that ban that Nasri says made him fall out of love with football, with the playmaker always saying he was innocent.
“One episode hurt me badly and changed my relationship with football: my suspension,” he said on Canal+.
“I found that more than unfair, I had not taken any doping product. It was just an injection of vitamins because I was sick. It cut me off in my tracks.”
Nasri returned to play with West Ham on a short-term contract in 2018/2019, playing five league games in total.
He linked up with ex-Manchester City teammate Vincent Kompany at Anderlecht the following season, though it was another ill-fated spell and he was released in 2020.
Of his move to Anderlecht, Nasri said: “There was an emotional side, but also the idea of being a player and also a little in the staff.
“As I would like to coach, I told myself that I would learn with him [Kompany].
“It didn’t go as planned. Then the championship was stopped because of COVID-19. Afterwards, I didn’t necessarily want to [play].
“No challenge excited me and I couldn’t see myself coming back to France if it wasn’t Marseille.”
Nasri impressed at Arsenal, scoring 18 league goals and setting up a further seven across his three seasons at the club, though injuries often kept his appearances down.
He never quite lived up to the billing at Manchester City, though he did help the club to their first ever Premier League crown in 2011/2012.
In 2013/2014, he scored seven goals and created as many as Manuel Pellegrini’s side clinched the title.
His appearances dwindled later in his Manchester City career, and he played just 12 times in the league in his final full season at the Etihad Stadium.
He started on only four occasions before he was loaned out by Pep Guardiola in 2016