Sunil Chhetri has drawn the curtain on his India career for good. The 41-year-old icon, who briefly emerged from retirement to answer his nation’s call one final time, confirmed that his international journey has reached its definitive conclusion following the Blue Tigers’ elimination from AFC Asian Cup 2027 qualification. “For me, there are no regrets. The regret is that we did not qualify for the Asian Cup. For the four games (in the qualifiers) I really gave my best,” Chhetri stated, encapsulating both acceptance and disappointment in equal measure.
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The Comeback That Wasn’t Meant to Be
Chhetri’s return to international football reads like a script written in compromise and unfulfilled ambitions. Having bid farewell to the Blue Tigers in June 2024 with a memorable send-off at Kolkata’s Salt Lake Stadium, the striker seemed content to focus solely on club football with Bengaluru FC. But Indian football had other plans.
| Chhetri’s 2025 India Comeback | Details |
|---|---|
| Retirement announcement | June 2024 vs Kuwait |
| Comeback decision | March 2025 |
| Requesting coach | Manolo Márquez |
| Matches played after return | 6 games |
| Goals scored | 1 goal |
| Final match | October 14 vs Singapore (1-2 loss) |
| Career international goals | 95 in 157 appearances |
When then-head coach Manolo Márquez reached out in early 2025, Chhetri initially declined. The decision to stay retired made perfect sense—at 40 years old, he had given Indian football two decades of service, 95 international goals, and countless memories. Why risk tarnishing that legacy?

The answer came from Chhetri’s stellar ISL form. The veteran striker had netted 14 goals in the 2024-25 season, finishing as the second-highest scorer behind only Golden Boot winner Alaaeddine Ajaraie. That performance convinced Márquez that Chhetri still had something vital to offer, and eventually convinced Chhetri himself.
“I knew the call came because of my ISL form. The qualifiers made me say yes in the end,” Chhetri explained, acknowledging that the AFC Asian Cup 2027 qualifiers provided the compelling reason his club form alone could not.
The Qualification Campaign: A Disaster Unfolds
India entered the final round of Asian Cup qualifiers as the highest-ranked team in Group C, a position that should have guaranteed smooth passage to the continental tournament. Instead, the campaign became a case study in underperformance and missed opportunities.
| India’s Asian Cup Qualifying Record | Results |
|---|---|
| Match 1 vs Maldives (Away) | Won 3-0 |
| Match 2 vs Singapore (Away) | Drew 1-1 |
| Match 3 vs Bangladesh (Home) | Drew 0-0 |
| Match 4 vs Singapore (Home) | Lost 1-2 |
| Final standing | 4th in Group C – Eliminated |
The defining moment came on October 14, 2025, at the Fatorda Stadium in Goa. India took an early lead through Lallianzuala Chhangte’s spectacular 30-yard strike in the 14th minute, sending home supporters into raptures. For a brief moment, qualification hopes flickered back to life.
Then reality struck. Singapore’s Song Ui-young equalized just before halftime with a precise strike into the bottom corner, and six minutes into the second half, he completed his brace to give the visitors a lead they would never relinquish. Despite desperate late attempts, including chances for Brandon Fernandes and Udanta Singh, India could not find the equalizer.
The mathematics were brutal. Stuck on two points from four matches, even winning their remaining games would yield only eight points—insufficient to qualify with both Singapore and Hong Kong already on eight points and guaranteed to accumulate more. India’s Asian Cup dream died that night in Goa, and with it, Chhetri’s international hopes.
Peace in Closure: Telling Khalid Jamil
For many athletes, the second retirement proves more difficult than the first. The emotional attachment, the lingering sense of unfinished business, the fear of regret—all conspire to make walking away nearly impossible. Chhetri experienced none of that.
“It was easy telling (coach) Khalid (Jamil) sir about my decision. I joined the national team only to help in the qualifiers. Once we were mathematically out, I was happy telling the coach, and he understood,” Chhetri revealed with remarkable clarity.

This matter-of-fact acceptance reflects both Chhetri’s maturity and his realistic assessment of the situation. Unlike his June 2024 retirement—an emotional farewell punctuated by tears and tributes—this departure carried a businesslike finality. He had returned with one specific mission: help India qualify for the Asian Cup. That mission failed. Time to move on.
Current head coach Khalid Jamil, while respecting Chhetri’s decision, kept the diplomatic door slightly ajar. “Sunil is a legend of Indian football. He is a role model for Indian football, and the door is always open for him,” Jamil stated, though both men understand the veteran won’t be walking through that door again.
The Numbers Don’t Tell the Whole Story
Chhetri leaves Indian football with a statistical legacy that places him among the sport’s all-time greats. His 95 international goals rank him fourth on the all-time men’s scoring list—behind only Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi, and Ali Daei. Among active players at the time of his final retirement, only Ronaldo and Messi have scored more.
Yet the bare numbers obscure the context. Chhetri achieved this remarkable tally while representing a nation that has never qualified for a FIFA World Cup and has struggled consistently at the continental level. He scored against teams that often defended in numbers, on pitches that ranged from adequate to abysmal, in matches that received minimal global attention.
More tellingly, Chhetri’s brief comeback yielded just one goal in six appearances—a header against Maldives in his first match back. For a striker who had averaged nearly 0.6 goals per game across his career, this drought highlighted the physical realities of playing international football at 41.
The Bigger Picture: India’s Systemic Failures
Chhetri’s inability to salvage India’s qualification campaign exposes problems far deeper than one aging striker’s declining powers. India entered these qualifiers as the highest-ranked team in their group yet finished last, winless after four matches with two home games squandered.

The failure represents a systemic collapse: inadequate tactical preparation, lack of quality depth, inability to execute under pressure, and administrative chaos that saw the domestic league’s future thrown into doubt simultaneously with crucial international matches. Chhetri returned to find an Indian football ecosystem in crisis, and even his legendary status couldn’t paper over those cracks.
His decision to decline the captaincy during his comeback stint speaks volumes. Chhetri preferred letting Gurpreet Singh Sandhu, Sandesh Jhingan, and Rahul Bheke shoulder leadership responsibilities—a graceful acknowledgment that his role was temporary support, not long-term rebuilding.
What’s Next: The Club Finale
While Chhetri’s India chapter has closed, his professional career continues—for now. The veteran has hinted strongly that the 2025-26 ISL season will be his last, with one crucial caveat: he wants to end on a high note.
“If we win the ISL, it will give me a chance to wear national (winning) club colours and play in international competitions again. At 42, it’s not easy. I want to score 15 goals this season and retire,” Chhetri told The Times of India, setting ambitious targets for his Bengaluru FC swansong.
This goal-oriented approach characterizes Chhetri’s career. Even at an age when most footballers have long since retired, he sets specific, measurable objectives: 15 goals, an ISL title, perhaps one final AFC competition appearance. It’s the mindset that made him India’s greatest footballer and sustained his elite performance into his fifth decade.
However, the current ISL crisis complicates these plans. With the league suspended amid commercial rights disputes, Chhetri’s final season faces the possibility of delays, disruption, or even cancellation. Indian football’s administrative chaos may yet deprive its greatest player of the farewell he deserves.
The Regret That Matters
Chhetri’s comments reveal a man at peace with his decisions but disappointed by outcomes beyond his control. “For me, there are no regrets,” he emphasized, drawing a careful distinction between personal performance and collective failure.
The one regret he acknowledges—India’s failure to qualify for the Asian Cup—cuts deeper precisely because it wasn’t his regret alone. An entire generation of Indian footballers shares that burden, from the coaching staff to the AIFF administrators whose incompetence created the conditions for failure.

Chhetri gave his best in those four qualifying matches, as he did in the 153 other international appearances across his career. That he couldn’t single-handedly drag India to qualification at age 41 reflects not on his legacy but on the state of Indian football itself.
Read More: ISL Tender Fails as AIFF Receives Zero Bids Despite Four Interested Parties
FAQs
Why did Sunil Chhetri come out of retirement?
Former India coach Manolo Márquez personally requested Chhetri’s return specifically for the AFC Asian Cup 2027 qualifiers, convinced by the striker’s excellent ISL form where he scored 14 goals.
How many goals did Sunil Chhetri score in his comeback stint?
Chhetri scored just one goal in six appearances after returning to the national team—a header against Maldives in his first match back in the March 2025 FIFA window.
What is Sunil Chhetri’s final international goal tally?
Chhetri finished his international career with 95 goals in 157 appearances, ranking him fourth all-time behind Cristiano Ronaldo, Lionel Messi, and Ali Daei.
When will Sunil Chhetri retire from professional football?
Chhetri plans to retire after the 2025-26 ISL season, with a goal of scoring 15 goals and winning the title to qualify for AFC competitions one final time.
Why did India fail to qualify for the AFC Asian Cup 2027?
India finished bottom of their qualifying group with just two points from four matches, including a crucial 1-2 home defeat to Singapore that mathematically eliminated them from contention.







