HFC Haarlem
Est. 1889 · Netherlands
About HFC Haarlem
HFC Haarlem are one of Dutch football's most historic clubs, founded on 1 October 1889 in the city of Haarlem and among the oldest football clubs in the Netherlands. The club won the Dutch national championship in 1945-46 and reached five KNVB Cup finals, winning in 1902 and 1912. They are perhaps best known to the wider football world as the club that launched Ruud Gullit's professional career, the future European champion wearing their shirt as a teenager before moving on to Ajax, Fiorentina, and AC Milan. Haarlem were declared bankrupt in 2010, ending a 121-year professional story.
HFC Haarlem were founded in 1889 and played in Haarlem, North Holland. They competed in the Eredivisie across multiple eras before being declared bankrupt in 2010. Their greatest honour was the national league title in 1945-46. The club is forever associated with Ruud Gullit's early career. Their colours were red and black.
Red and black are the colours of HFC Haarlem, worn by one of Dutch football's oldest and most storied institutions across more than a century of competition. The club's Eredivisie kits from the late 1970s and early 1980s are highly sought-after among collectors, representing the era when a teenage Ruud Gullit lit up their home matches. Their 1982-83 strip, worn as Haarlem qualified for UEFA Cup football by beating Spartak Moscow in the competition that year, is one of the most iconic in Dutch football history.
