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Australia skipper Stephen Moore to retire from international rugby at end of year

Wallabies skipper Stephen Moore
Image: Wallabies skipper Stephen Moore

Stephen Moore is stepping down as Wallabies captain with immediate effect and will call time on his 12-year international career at the end of the season, the hooker said on Thursday.

Moore is the 10th most capped player in the history of the game and his 120 test appearances is second only to George Gregan (139) among Australian players.

The 34-year-old made his debut against Samoa in 2005 and played at three World Cups for the Wallabies, the highlight of his career being when he led his country to the final against New Zealand in 2015.

"It was a very tough decision but you talk to people who've done it and they say 'you know when it's time' and I think I've got that feeling," Moore told reporters.

"I just thought now was the right time, finish the year strongly and let the next crop of players take the team forward.

"I just didn't feel I could give it all I had until (the) 2019 (World Cup). I think it's a smart decision personally and also for the team, which at the end of the day is my priority."

Flanker Michael Hooper is his most likely successor, having performed the same role under coach Michael Cheika at the New South Wales Waratahs and for the Wallabies on a stand-in basis on several occasions.

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Australia play world champions New Zealand twice next month to open their Rugby Championship campaign but Moore is not expected to start with Tatafu Polota-Nau taking the number two shirt from him in recent tests.

Wallabies head coach Michael Cheika talks with skiipper Stephen Moore
Image: Wallabies head coach Michael Cheika talks with Stephen Moore

"His contribution to this current team cannot be understated," Cheika said.

"What he's achieved on the field is no mean feat but it's his work off the field in his role as captain of Australia that has really impressed me.

"We now have to make sure we send him off in the best way possible this year."

Already the second-most capped player in two decades of Super Rugby, Moore will play one more season with the Reds in 2018 after his international retirement.

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