"It's tough to leave this family, but I never had regrets," Vakatawa said on Tuesday. "The toughest moment was yesterday with my teammates. It was very difficult to tell it to all the people I spent time with, on and off the pitch."
France coach Fabien Galthié choked back tears at the news conference as he paid tribute to Vakatawa.
"Virimi made a lot of children dream," Galthié said. "He has been a key player in our adventure, in our history, he was great. He was one of the best players in the world in 2020 and 2021. No one can take that away from him."
The coach added Vakatawa was one of the older players in their young side and embraced his status as a leader, "even if he is discreet and team-oriented."
The 30-year-old Vakatawa was born in New Zealand, raised in Fiji — the country of his heritage — and arrived in France at 17.
He was convinced to join Paris-based Racing by Fijian star Sireli Bobo in 2010 and became eligible for France from 2013. After Vakatawa gained citizenship, sevens was first to utilize his pace, power and phenomenal footwork.
He couldn't be ignored by fifteens, and he made a try-scoring debut for France in the 2016 Six Nations and was named man of the match. He was also nominated for the tournament's best player.
He helped Racing reach two European Cup finals in 2018 and 2020, when he was nominated for European player of the year.