Showing posts with label AC Milan legends. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AC Milan legends. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

How Ruud Gullit brought back my Italian: An encounter in Amsterdam South-East

 

Ruud Gullit, the Dutch‑Surinamese former football star, after his professional career.

Ruud Gullit, the Dutch‑Surinamese former football star, after his professional career.


In the late nineties, during a visit to Amsterdam, I walked into Makro, once one of Europe’s largest supermarket chains, now long defunct. The Makro branch in Amsterdam South-East, near Balmer, was always busy, always alive.

 

However, on that day, something extraordinary happened. As I turned into one of the aisles, I suddenly found myself face-to-face with Ruud Gullit, the towering Dutch Surinamese football icon whose name had echoed across Europe for more than a decade.

 

His presence was unmistakable: the dreadlocks, the calm confidence, the aura of a man who had conquered world football. I knew he had played in Italy, and that connection stirred something deep within me.

 

Ruud Gullit’s Italian Journey: The Clubs That Shaped an Era

 

Ruud Gullit’s time in Italy was not just a chapter in his career; it was a defining era in world football. He joined AC Milan in 1987 for what was then a world-record transfer fee.

 

In Milan, he became part of the legendary Dutch trio, Gullit, Marco van Basten, and Frank Rijkaard, who transformed the club into a global powerhouse.

 

He won:

•             Three Serie A titles

•             Two European Cups

•             Two Intercontinental Cups

•             Two UEFA Super Cups

 

His power, elegance, versatility, and intelligence made him one of the most complete players of his generation. Milan’s dominance in the late 80s and early 90s can’t be told without his name.

 

Gullit also played for Sampdoria, first on loan and then permanently. There, he:

•             Won the Coppa Italia (1993–94)

•             Became a fan favorite for his creativity and leadership

 

His time in Italy cemented his status as a global star and earned him the 1987 Ballon d’Or, awarded during his Milan years.

 

The Moment Italian Returned to Me

 

Leaving Rome years earlier had slowly eroded my fluency in Italian. For a decade without anyone to speak with, the language I once loved and could write began slipping away.

 

However, seeing Gullit, knowing he had lived and played in Italy, sparked an impulse. I greeted him and said, half-jokingly, half-nostalgically:

 

“Voglio sapere se tu ricordi ancora il tuo italiano, o se io ricordo ancora il mio.” Meaning “I want to know if you still remember your Italian, or if I still remember mine.” He laughed warmly, a genuine, disarming laugh, and replied: “Certo,” meaning “Certainly.”


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Then he responded, smooth, natural, effortless, and as he spoke, something awakened in me. Words I thought I had forgotten began to return. The rhythm, the melody, the familiarity of the language flowed back into my mind.

 

It was as if Gullit had unlocked a door I thought was permanently closed. After a brief exchange, he nodded politely and continued his way. However, the impact of that moment stayed with me.

 

Why This Encounter Still Matters

 

Meeting Ruud Gullit and talking with him was more than meeting a football legend. It was a reminder of identity, memory, and the unexpected ways life reconnects us with our past.

•             He represented Surinamese excellence and his national team, Holland’s (Oranje), on the world stage.

•             He dominated Italian football and became a symbol of Milan’s golden era.

•             He carried himself with humility despite his global fame, and more importantly, the conversation in Italian revived a part of me I thought I had lost.

 

Some encounters last a moment, others last a lifetime; however, this one will stay with me forever.