Ex-Inter striker Samuel Eto’o claims he will ‘die’ Nerazzurro as he recalls his move from Barcelona, playing as a full-back and winning the Champions League.

Eto’o moved to Inter in the summer of 2009 as part of a swap deal with Zlatan Ibrahimovic and went on to score 53 goals in two seasons, winning the Treble in 2010.

“If you’re an Interista once, you’ll die an Interista. That’s just how it is,” he told Gazzetta dello Sport.

Ex-Inter striker Samuel Eto’o claims he will ‘die’ Nerazzurro as he recalls his move from Barcelona, playing as a full-back and winning the Champions League.

Eto’o moved to Inter in the summer of 2009 as part of a swap deal with Zlatan Ibrahimovic and went on to score 53 goals in two seasons, winning the Treble in 2010.

“If you’re an Interista once, you’ll die an Interista. That’s just how it is,” he told Gazzetta dello Sport.

“Mourinho convinced me in a simple way: he sent me Inter’s No 9 shirt and wrote to me saying ‘it’s yours, it’s waiting for you.’

“There was a big difference between the salary offered by Inter and what I asked for, so I amazed everyone at the table.

“I said, ‘let’s turn the missing part into team bonuses, if we win the Champions League within two years.’ Ten months later, we were European champions.

“Materazzi then messaged me saying, ‘if you come to Inter, we’ll win everything.’ I didn’t have his number in my address book so I asked [Demetrio] Albertini: ‘Is it yours?’

“It really was Marco’s. Such a thing had never happened to me in my whole career: that message carried great weight in my decision. And it gave birth to a friendship.

“President Moratti called me shortly after and, in perfect French, said to me: ‘Eto’o, trust me: you’ll have a great time at Inter, it’ll feel like home.’ He was right.”

Despite being one of Europe’s most clinical finishers in the 2000s, the 39-year-old is arguably best known for filling in at full-back against Barca in the Champions League semi-finals…

“I was only a proper full-back at Barcelona, ​​but that was because of an emergency. And besides, what I thought that night was actually what I’d thought for the entire season.

“When Thiago Motta was sent off, Mourinho called me and Zanetti over. He explained to us how to position ourselves on the field: I didn’t even have time to think about how much I should’ve run, being out wide.

“I said to myself, ‘let’s give it my all and we’ll see what happens.’ At the end of the match, we were in the Final.

“I’ll always remember two things about that night [in London against Chelsea]. Mourinho’s speech before the game: ‘No team I’ve coached can beat me.’

“We entered the field with a different kind of determination: we weren’t only playing for ourselves but also for our coach.

“Then there was the stop I took before I scored. The ball dropped and I said to myself: ‘If you take it well, you’ll easily score.’ I still have that control in my eyes.

“My speech for the Final wasn’t long, I simply said: ‘A Final isn’t played, it’s won. We die on the pitch and bring the cup back to Milan, or we die because we don’t go back to Milan. Therefore, let’s go back and bring the cup with us’.”

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