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Colorado Rapids defender Moïse Bombito (64) makes a pass during a game against Real Salt Lake at Dick's Sporting Goods Park in Commerce City on Saturday, July 20, 2024. (Photo by Zachary Spindler-Krage/The Denver Post)
Colorado Rapids defender Moïse Bombito (64) makes a pass during a game against Real Salt Lake at Dick’s Sporting Goods Park in Commerce City on Saturday, July 20, 2024. (Photo by Zachary Spindler-Krage/The Denver Post)
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Moïse Bombito grew up in Canada and is now chasing dreams in France, but Colorado will always be home.

In just three years, the now-former Colorado Rapids center-back went from playing for a community college to playing a big role on a contending MLS team, representing Canada at Copa América and now moving on to a top-five European league in France’s Ligue 1.

While the world may see the Rapids as a small stepping stone in Bombito’s meteoric rise to stardom, he sees Colorado as his launchpad.

“It’s a bit of a bittersweet moment, really, because I’ve created friendships, I’ve allowed myself to grow at this club, and this club has allowed me to grow as well,” Bombito said. “It’s hard to say goodbye because I’ve made friends here and there are people I want to stay in contact with even though I’m leaving.”

The permanent transfer for Bombito was formally announced Tuesday by the Rapids and by his new team, OGC Nice. In return for the star defender, the Rapids received $7.7 million with up to $3 million in incentives and a 20% sell-on clause should the Canadian move onto a new club.

It’s a feat almost unimaginable to most just a short two years ago. Entering the 2023 MLS SuperDraft, Rapids president Pádraig Smith saw the blueprint and took a chance on Bombito.

“I’ve joked around a lot with him over the past two weeks about how he was the best interview I’ve ever done at a combine. He was just incredible,” Smith said. “It gave us a lot of comfort when we thought about drafting him — we knew we were getting a good kid who was going to work hard and soak up as much information as he could to strive to be the best player he could be.”

He turned out to be all that and more for Smith, coach Chris Armas & Co.

His speed and size were always present — European clubs like Olympique Lyon and Red Bull Salzburg were interested because of those traits — but Armas was patient with his development, calling for him to become a “master of the basics” before letting his speed take over.

While he admitted he’s not quite a master yet, the work he puts in has never been about his own gain; everything he does is for the good of the team.

Tracking back from box to box on a pair of Inter Miami counterattacks in April caught the world’s attention when he was clocked as the fastest player in the MLS. But it wasn’t about the attention. Every jaw-dropping sprint or timely tackle was about stopping a chance, preventing a goal and helping his team win.

Bombito’s favorite moment in Colorado, he said, was not when he scored his first MLS goal on his birthday against LAFC with his mom in attendance. That was his second-favorite.

The first? Lifting the Rocky Mountain Cup in July.

“(The RMC) was a moment that brought all the Colorado Rapids fans and the whole organization together,” Bombito said. “It’s something we were looking for for many years, so for me to be able to be a part of that moment is something I’ll cherish.”

The transfer came with only a few days left in the MLS secondary transfer window. No subsequent moves were made by the time the window closed. The Rapids wanted to keep Bombito for the rest of this season while the iron was still striking hot for Armas’ underdogs. But the offer from Nice ended up being too good to turn down.

While Armas certainly would have liked to keep Bombito, he and the club have stuck to the philosophy that sent Bombito to Copa América and midfielder Djordje Mihailovic to the Olympics: “The players’ dreams are our dreams.” That takes some of the sting out of losing your best defender ahead of a potential Leagues Cup and MLS Cup run.

It’s bittersweet for Bombito, too — he’s achieving a childhood goal, but leaving a club and its fans he has come to love. One of the defining moments for Bombito as a member of the Rapids was the support he received after he was the target of racist harassment during Canada’s fourth-place finish at Copa América.

“(The fans) have brought so much support not just toward me, but toward the whole team,” he said. “When I saw (tifos and other shows of support) at the game against Montréal, I had a tear coming in and my eyes were warm. That just goes to show how close I am with the fan base here and how supportive they are.

“If I can ever come back to share that experience again with them, I’ll gladly do it.”

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