David Robert Joseph Beckham, OBE[2]
(born 2 May 1975)[3] is an English association footballer who currently plays
for Los Angeles Galaxy. He has previously played for Manchester United, Preston
North End, Real Madrid, A.C. Milan, as well as the England national team, for
which he holds the all-time appearance record for an outfield player.[4]
Beckham's career began when he
signed a professional contract with Manchester United, making his first-team
debut in 1992 aged 17.[5] During his time there, United won the Premier League
title six times, the FA Cup twice, and the UEFA Champions League in 1999.[5] He
left Manchester United to sign for Real Madrid in 2003, where he remained for
four seasons,[6] clinching the La Liga championship in his final season with the
club.[7] In January 2007, it was announced that Beckham would leave Real Madrid
for the Major League Soccer club Los Angeles Galaxy,[8] signing a five-year
contract with them on 1 July 2007. While a Galaxy player, he spent two loan
spells in Italy with Milan in 2009 and 2010. On 20 November 2011, he joined an
elite group of players to have won three league titles in three different
countries, when Los Angeles won their third MLS Cup.[9]
In international football, Beckham
made his England debut on 1 September 1996, at the age of 21. He was made
captain from 15 November 2000[10] until the 2006 FIFA World Cup finals,[11]
during which he played 58 times. He earned a much-publicised hundredth cap
against France on 26 March 2008,[12] and became the all-time outfield player
appearance record holder on 28 March 2009 when he surpassed Bobby Moore's total
of 108 caps.[4] With 115 career appearances to date he has stated that he does
not intend to retire from international football, having missed the 2010 World
Cup through injury and not featuring in England manager Fabio Capello's
post-World Cup plans.[13]
Beckham has twice been runner-up
for FIFA World Player of the Year[5] and in 2004 was the world's highest-paid
footballer when taking into account salary and advertising deals.[14] Beckham
was the first British footballer to play 100 Champions League matches.[5] He is
third in the Premier League's all time time assist provider chart, with 152
assists in 265 appearances.[15] When joining the MLS in 2007 he was given the
highest player salary in the league's history, with his playing contract with
the Galaxy over the next three years being worth US$6.5m per
year.[16][17][18][19]
He is married to Victoria Beckham
(previously Victoria Caroline Adams) and they have four children, Brooklyn
Joseph, Romeo James, Cruz David, and Harper Seven. As of 2009, the couple's
joint wealth is estimated at £125 million.[20]
****
Personal information
Full name David Robert Joseph
Beckham
Date of birth 2 May 1975
(1975-05-02) (age 36)
Place of birth Leytonstone, London,
England
Height 6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)[1]
Playing position Midfielder
Club information
Current club Los Angeles Galaxy
Number 23
Youth career
Tottenham Hotspur
Brimsdown Rovers
1991–1993 Manchester United
Senior career*
Years Team Apps† (Gls)†
1993–2003 Manchester United 265
(62)
1995 → Preston North End (loan) 5
(2)
2003–2007 Real Madrid 116 (13)
2007– Los Angeles Galaxy 74 (11)
2009 → Milan (loan) 18 (2)
2010 → Milan (loan) 11 (0)
National team‡
1992–1993 England U18 3 (0)
1994–1996 England U21 9 (0)
1996– England 115 (17)
* Senior club appearances and goals
counted for the domestic league only and correct as of 19 January 2012.
† Appearances (Goals).
‡ National team caps and goals
correct as of 3 November 2009
H&M Superbowl David Beckham
Commercial
****
Club career
Childhood and early career
Buy this Photo at AllPosters.com Beckham
was born at Whipps Cross University Hospital in Leytonstone, London,
England.[21] He is the son of Sandra Georgina (née West) (b. 1949), a
hairdresser, and David Edward Alan "Ted" Beckham (b. Edmonton, London,
July–September 1948), a kitchen fitter, who married at the London
Borough of Hackney in 1969,[22][23] He regularly played football in
Ridgeway Park, Chingford, as a child, and attended Chase Lane Primary
School and Chingford Foundation School.[24] In a 2007 interview, Beckham
said that, "At school whenever the teachers asked, 'What do you want to
do when you're older?' I'd say, 'I want to be a footballer.' And they'd
say, 'No, what do you really want to do, for a job?' But that was the
only thing I ever wanted to do."[25] Beckham's maternal grandfather was
Jewish,[26] and Beckham has referred to himself as "half Jewish"[27] and
wrote in his autobiography "I've probably had more contact with Judaism
than with any other religion".[28] In his book Both Feet on the Ground,
he stated that growing up he attended church every week with his parents
and his older sister, Lynne Georgina and younger sister, Joanne
Louise.[29][30]
His parents were fanatical
Manchester United supporters who would frequently travel to Old Trafford from
London to attend the team's home matches. David inherited his parents' love of
Manchester United, and his main sporting passion was football. He attended one
of Bobby Charlton's football schools in Manchester and won the chance to take
part in a training session at FC Barcelona, as part of a talent competition. He
played for a local youth team called the Ridgeway Rovers – coached by his
father, Stuart Underwood and Steve Kirby. Beckham was a Manchester United mascot
for a match against West Ham United in 1986. Young Beckham had trials with his
local club Leyton Orient, Norwich City and attended Tottenham Hotspur's school
of excellence. Tottenham Hotspur was the first club he played for. During a
two-year period in which Beckham played for Brimsdown Rovers' youth team, he was
named Under-15 Player of the Year in 1990.[31] He also attended Bradenton
Preparatory Academy, but signed schoolboy forms at Manchester United on his
fourteenth birthday, and subsequently signed a Youth Training Scheme contract on
8 July 1991.
Manchester United
Beckham was part of a group of
young players at the club who guided the club to win the FA Youth Cup in May
1992, with Beckham scoring in the second leg[32] of the final against Crystal
Palace. He made his first appearance for United's first-team that year, as a
substitute in a League Cup match against Brighton & Hove Albion, and signed his
first professional contract shortly afterwards. United reached the final of the
Youth Cup again the following year, with Beckham playing in their defeat by
Leeds United, and he won another medal in 1994 when the club's reserve team won
their league, although he did not play in any first team games that season.
On 7 December 1994, Beckham made
his UEFA Champions League debut, scoring a goal in a 4–0 victory at home to
Galatasaray in the final game of the group stage. However, this victory was of
little use as they finished third out of four in their group behind FC Barcelona
on goal difference.
He then went to Preston North End
on loan for part of the 1994–95 season to get some first team experience. He
impressed, scoring two goals in five appearances, notably scoring directly from
a corner kick.[33] Beckham returned to Manchester and finally made his Premier
League debut for Manchester United on 2 April 1995, in a goal-less draw against
Leeds United. He played four times for United in the league that season, as they
finished second behind Blackburn Rovers and missed a third successive Premier
League title by a single point. He was not in the squad for United's FA Cup
final clash with Everton on 20 May, which they lost 1–0 and were left without a
major trophy for the first time since 1989.
United manager Sir Alex Ferguson
had a great deal of confidence in the club's young players. Beckham was part of
a group of young talents Ferguson brought in to United in the 1990s (known as
"Fergie's Fledglings"), which included Nicky Butt and Gary and Phil Neville.
When experienced players Paul Ince, Mark Hughes, and Andrei Kanchelskis left the
club after the end of the 1994–95 season, his decision to let youth team players
replace them instead of buying star players from other clubs (United had been
linked with moves for players including Darren Anderton, Marc Overmars, and
Roberto Baggio, but no major signings were made that summer), drew a great deal
of criticism. The criticism increased when United started the season with a 3–1
defeat at Aston Villa,[34] with Beckham scoring United's only goal of the game;
however, United won their next five matches and the young players performed
well.
Beckham swiftly established himself
as United's right-sided midfielder (rather than a right-winger in the style of
his predecessor Andrei Kanchelskis) and helped them to win the Premier League
title and FA Cup double that season, scoring the winner in the semi-final
against Chelsea and also provided the corner that Eric Cantona scored from in
the FA Cup Final. Beckham's first title medal had, for a while, looked like it
would not be coming that season, as United were still 10 points adrift of
leaders Newcastle United at the turn of the new year, but Beckham and his
team-mates had overhauled the Tynesiders at the top of the league by mid March
and they remained top until the end of the season.
Despite playing regularly (and to a
consistently high standard) for Manchester United, Beckham did not break into
the England squad before Euro 96.[35]
At the beginning of the 1996–97
season David Beckham was given the number 10 shirt that had most recently been
worn by Mark Hughes. On 17 August 1996 (the first day of the Premier League
season), Beckham became something of a household name when he scored a
spectacular goal in a match against Wimbledon. With United leading 2–0, Beckham
noticed that Wimbledon's goalkeeper Neil Sullivan was standing a long way out of
his goal, and hit a shot from the halfway line that floated over the goalkeeper
and into the net.[36] When Beckham scored his famous goal, he did so in shoes
custom-made for Charlie Miller ("Charlie" embroidered on boots), which had been
given to Beckham by mistake.[37] In a UK poll conducted by Channel 4 in 2002,
the British public voted the goal No.18 in the list of the 100 Greatest Sporting
Moments.[38] During the 1996–97 season, he became an automatic first-choice
player at United helping them to retain the Premier League championship, and
being voted PFA Young Player of the Year by his peers.[39]
On 18 May 1997, Eric Cantona
retired as a player and left the coveted number 7 shirt free, and with Teddy
Sheringham arriving from Tottenham Hotspur as Cantona's successor, Beckham left
his number 10 shirt for Sheringham and picked up the number 7 jersey. Some fans
had felt the number 7 shirt should be retired after Cantona had himself retired,
but the shirt number remains in use to this day (most recently by another
England star Michael Owen).
United started the 1997–98 season
well but erratic performances in the second half of the season saw United finish
second behind Arsenal.[40]
In the 1998–99 season, he was part
of the United team that won The Treble of the Premier League, FA Cup and
Champions League, a unique feat in English football. There had been speculation
that the criticism that he had received after being sent off in the World Cup
would lead to him leaving England, but he decided to stay at Manchester United.
To ensure they would win the
Premier League title, United needed to win their final league match of the
season, at home to Tottenham Hotspur (with reports suggesting that the
opposition would allow themselves to be easily beaten to prevent their deadly
local rivals Arsenal from retaining the title), but Tottenham took an early lead
in the match. Beckham scored the equaliser and United went on to win the match
and the league.
Beckham played centre-midfield in
United's win over Bayern Munich in the 1999 UEFA Champions League Final, since
United's first string centre-midfielders Paul Scholes and Roy Keane were
suspended for the match. United were losing the match 1–0 at the end of normal
time, but won the trophy by scoring two goals in injury time. Both of the goals
came from corners taken by Beckham. Those crucial assists, coupled with great
performances over the rest of the season, led to him finishing runner up to
Rivaldo for 1999's European Footballer of the Year and FIFA World Player of the
Year awards.
Despite Beckham's achievements in
the 1998–99 season, he was still unpopular among some opposition fans and
journalists, and he was criticised after being sent off for a deliberate foul in
Manchester United's World Club Championship match against Necaxa. It was
suggested in the press that his wife was a bad influence on him, and that it
might be in United's interests to sell him,[41] but his manager publicly backed
him and he stayed at the club. During the 1999–2000 season, there was a talk of
a transfer to Juventus in Italy, but this never happened.
By the early 2000s, the
relationship between Ferguson and Beckham had begun to deteriorate, possibly as
a result of Beckham's fame and commitments away from football. In 2000, Beckham
was given permission to miss training to look after his son Brooklyn, who had
gastroenteritis, but Ferguson was furious when Victoria Beckham was photographed
at a London Fashion Week event on the same night, claiming that Beckham would
have been able to train if Victoria had looked after Brooklyn that day. He
responded by fining Beckham the maximum amount that was permitted (two weeks'
wages – then £50,000) and dropping him for a crucial match against United's
rivals Leeds United. He later criticised Beckham for this in his autobiography,
claiming he had not been "fair to his teammates"[42] Beckham had a good season
for his club, though, and helped United to win the Premier League by a record
margin.
"He was never a problem until he
got married. He used to go into work with the academy coaches at night time, he
was a fantastic young lad. Getting married into that entertainment scene was a
difficult thing – from that moment, his life was never going to be the same. He
is such a big celebrity, football is only a small part."' – Alex Ferguson
speaking about Beckham's marriage in 2007.[43]
Beckham helped United retain the
Premier League title in 1999–2000 by an 18-point margin – after being pushed by
Arsenal and Leeds United for much of the season, United won their final 11
league games of the season, with Beckham scoring five goals during this
fantastic run of form. He managed six league goals that season, and scored eight
goals in all competitions.
He was a key player in United's
third successive league title in 2000–01 – only the fourth time that any club
had achieved three league titles in a row. He scored nine goals that season, all
in the Premier League.
On 10 April 2002, Beckham was
injured during a Champions League match against Deportivo La Coruña, breaking
the second metatarsal bone in his left foot. There was speculation in the
British media that the injury might have been caused deliberately, as the player
who had injured Beckham was Argentine Aldo Duscher, and England and Argentina
were due to meet in that year's World Cup.[44] The injury prevented Beckham from
playing for United for the rest of the season and they missed out on the Premier
League title to Arsenal (also being knocked out of the European Cup by Bayer
Leverkusen on away goals in the semi-finals), but he signed a three-year
contract in May, following months of negotiations with the club, mostly
concerning extra payments for his image rights. The income from his new
contract, and his many endorsement deals, made him the highest-paid player in
the world at the time.[45]
2001–02 was arguably Beckham's best
season as a United player, though. He scored 11 goals in 28 league games, and a
total of 16 goals in 42 games in all competitions, the best tally of his career.
Following an injury early in the
2002–03 season, Beckham was unable to regain his place on the Manchester United
team, with Ole Gunnar Solskjær having replaced him on the right side of
midfield. His relationship with his manager deteriorated further on 15 February
2003 when, in the changing room following an FA Cup defeat to Arsenal, a furious
Alex Ferguson threw[46][47][48][49][50] [51][52] or kicked a boot that struck
Beckham over the eye, causing a cut that required stitches. The incident led to
a great deal of transfer speculation involving Beckham, with bookmakers offering
odds on whether he or Ferguson would be first to leave the club.[53] Although
the team had started the season badly, their results improved greatly from
December onwards and they won the league, with Beckham managing a total of 11
goals in 52 games in all competitions.
He was still a first-choice player
for England, however, and was awarded an OBE for services to football on 13 June
2003.[54]
Beckham had made 265 Premier league
appearances for United and scored 61 goals. He also made 81 Champions league
appearances, scoring 15 goals. Beckham won six Premier League titles, two FA
Cups, one European Cup, one Intercontinental Cup, and one FA Youth Cup in the
space of 12 years. By this stage, he was their joint second longest serving
player behind Ryan Giggs (having joined them at the same time as Nicky Butt,
Gary Neville and Paul Scholes).
Real Madrid
As the summer 2003 transfer window
approached Manchester United appeared keen to sell Beckham to FC Barcelona[55]
and the two clubs even announced that they reached a deal to move the player to
Barcelona,[56] but instead he joined reigning Spanish champions Real Madrid for
€35 million (£25m) transfer fee[57] on a four-year contract as the latest of the
galáctico signings by club president Florentino Pérez. The news came as a bitter
pill to the newly elected Barça president Joan Laporta who based much of his
presidential campaign precisely on signing Beckham.[58] Though announced in
mid-June, the transfer was completed on 1 July 2003, making him the third
Englishman to play for the club after Laurie Cunningham and Steve McManaman.
Following a successful medical on 2 July, Beckham was unveiled in front of 500
accredited journalists from 25 countries at Real's basketball facility where he
was handed the Real shirt by club legend Alfredo di Stéfano.[59] Although
Beckham had worn the number seven shirt for Manchester United and England, he
was unable to wear it at Madrid as it was currently assigned to club captain
Raúl. The Englishman decided to wear number 23 instead, citing his admiration of
basketball player Michael Jordan, who also wore the number 23 shirt, as the
reason behind his decision.[60]
In the week before Beckham
presentation, Real named Carlos Queiroz as their new head coach, meaning that
Beckham got reunited with a familiar face upon arriving to Madrid since Queiroz
spent the previous season as Alex Ferguson's assistant at Manchester United. In
late July 2003, the club went on a tour of the Far East as part of the
pre-season training, but also to cash in on Beckham's huge marketing appeal in
Asia where he enjoyed tremendous following. Real's brand recognition in that
part of the globe was already well established as the club made financially
successful trips to Asia during previous off-seasons, however the presence of
global marketing icon such as Beckham made this particular tour a financial
smash for los Merengues.[61]
Shortly after his Real switch,
Beckham also dropped his longtime agent Tony Stephens of SFX Europe who guided
him to and through super-stardom and was one of the key players that engineered
Beckham's move from Manchester to Madrid. Beckham signed on with Simon Fuller
and his company 19 Entertainment that already managed the career of David's wife
Victoria.[62] Beckham also appointed close friend Terry Byrne to be his personal
manager.[16][63]
In late August 2003, Real Madrid
won the Spanish Super Cup over two legs versus RCD Mallorca, with Beckham
scoring the final goal in a 3–0 return leg win at home, thus setting the stage
for the start of the league season. Playing on a star-laden team along with
Zinedine Zidane, Ronaldo, Luis Figo, Roberto Carlos, Raúl, Iker Casillas, etc.,
Beckham did not require much time to settle in, scoring five times in his first
16 matches (including a goal less than three minutes into his La Liga debut).
Queiroz mostly favoured the adaptable 5–3–2 formation with two fullbacks Michel
Salgado and Roberto Carlos often joining the attack down the wings, while
Beckham quickly found a regular playing spot on the right of the 3-man midfield
alongside Zidane and Figo.[64]
Real Madrid were runners-up in the
Copa del Rey, were knocked out of the UEFA Champions League at the quarter-final
stage and finished the league season in fourth place, meaning the team, whose
president Pérez expected them to win either the Spanish league or the Champions
League each season, did not match expectations.
In July 2004, while Beckham was in
pre-season training in Spain, an intruder scaled a wall at the Beckham home
while carrying a can of petrol. Victoria and their children were in the house at
the time, but security guards apprehended the man before he reached the
house.[65]
The league season began with new
head coach José Antonio Camacho behind the bench, but he ended up lasting only
three matches, handing in his resignation following week 3 fixture as Real
dropped to eighth spot in the La Liga standings. Camacho's assistant Mariano
García Remón took over on temporary basis as Real leadership scrambled to find a
permanent replacement. Beckham made more headlines on 9 October 2004 when he
admitted intentionally fouling Ben Thatcher in an England match against Wales in
order to get himself booked. Beckham was due to receive a one-match suspension
for his next caution, and had picked up an injury, which he knew would keep him
out of England's next match, so he deliberately fouled Thatcher in order to
serve his suspension in a match that he would have had to miss anyway. The
Football Association asked Beckham for an explanation of his actions and he
admitted that he had "made a mistake" and apologised.[66] He was sent off
shortly afterwards, this time in a league match for Real Madrid against Valencia
CF. Having received a yellow card, he was judged to have sarcastically applauded
the referee and was given a second yellow card, causing an automatic dismissal,
although the suspension was cancelled on appeal two days later.
By Christmas 2004, with the team
sitting in second league spot, García Remón was gone as Vanderlei Luxemburgo
became the new head coach. However, the well-traveled Brazilian failed to
inspire the team to the title as Real again finished the season in the runner-up
spot.
On 3 December 2005, Beckham was
sent off for the third time that season in a league match against Getafe CF. One
day later Luxemburgo got the axe and was replaced with Juan Ramón López Caro. By
the end of that season, Beckham led La Liga in number of assists.
During the season, Beckham
established football academies in Los Angeles and east London and he was named a
judge for the 2006 British Book Awards.[67] Real Madrid finished second to
Barcelona in the 2005–06 La Liga, albeit with a large 12-point gap, and reached
the last 16 only in the Champions League after losing to Arsenal. The season
also marked the end of an era for the club as Pérez resigned his president post
in January 2006 with Vicente Boluda named as replacement on interim basis until
the end of the season.
The summer 2006 off-season marked a
turbulent time as club president elections were held. Ramón Calderón became the
new Real president. As expected, none of the club officials that served under
the previous president were kept, including head coach López Caro.
Initially out of favour with newly
arrived head coach Fabio Capello, Beckham started only a few games at the
beginning of the season, as the speedier José Antonio Reyes was normally
preferred on the right wing. In the first nine matches Beckham started, Real
lost seven.
On 10 January 2007, after prolonged
contract negotiations, Real Madrid's sporting director Predrag Mijatović
announced that Beckham would not remain at Real Madrid after the end of the
season. However, he later claimed that he was mistranslated and that he actually
said that Beckham's contract had not yet been renewed.[68]
On 11 January 2007, Beckham
announced that he had signed a five-year deal to play for Los Angeles Galaxy
beginning 1 July 2007. On 13 January 2007, Fabio Capello said that Beckham had
played his last game for Real Madrid, although he would continue to train with
the team.[69] A few days later while speaking to the students at Villanueva
University Center in Madrid, club president Calderón said that Beckham is "going
to Hollywood to be half a film star", adding "our technical staff were right not
to extend his contract, which has been proved by the fact that no other
technical staff in the world wanted him except Los Angeles".[70]
However, about a month later,
Capello backtracked on his earlier statement, allowing Beckham to rejoin the
team for the match against Real Sociedad on 10 February 2007. The player
immediately repaid his head coach's trust by scoring the equalising goal from a
27-yard free kick as Real Madrid eventually recorded a 2–1 victory.[71] In his
final UEFA Champions League appearance for the club, Real Madrid were knocked
out of the competition by Bayern Munich at the round-of-16 stage (on the away
goals rule) on 7 March 2007. The return leg against Bayern was Beckham's 103rd
match in the Champions League, at the time placing him third on the all-time
appearances list in the competition.
On 17 June 2007, the last day of
the La Liga season, Beckham started in his final match for the club, a 3–1 win
over RCD Mallorca, which saw them clinch the title from Barcelona. With Real
down 0–1 Beckham limped off the field and was replaced by José Antonio Reyes who
scored two goals leading the team to that season's La Liga title, their first
since Beckham had signed with them and 30th overall in club's history. Although
Real and Barca both finished level on points, Madrid took the title because of
superior head-to-head record, capping a remarkable six-month turnaround for
Beckham. With his wife and children along with celebrity friends Tom Cruise and
Katie Holmes watching from a luxury box at Bernabeu Stadium, it was only
Beckham's second piece of silverware since he joined the famous club.
Towards the end of the season, as
Beckham was getting back into Capello's good books after successfully fighting
his way back into the first team, Real Madrid announced they would try to untie
his transfer to LA Galaxy, but were ultimately unsuccessful.[72] Several weeks
before Beckham's scheduled arrival to the United States, Real's management
contacted LA Galaxy's ownership group about reacquiring the player, but were
quickly turned down.[73]
A month after the conclusion of
Beckham's Real career, Forbes magazine reported that he had been the party
primarily responsible for the team's huge increase in merchandise sales, a total
reported to top US$600 million during Beckham's four years at the club.[74]
Los Angeles Galaxy
Beckham's involvement with Major
League Soccer began while he was still a Real Madrid player when it was
confirmed on 11 January 2007 that the world's most famous footballer would be
leaving Madrid in six months in order to join MLS' Los Angeles Galaxy. The
speculation about his new contract in Madrid was thus put to an end and the
following day Beckham's official press conference was held in conjunction with
the 2007 MLS SuperDraft.[76]
Predictably, the announcement made
top news all across the globe. Though many worldwide media outlets reported the
deal to be worth US$250 million,[77] the astronomical figure was soon revealed
to be something of a PR stunt engineered by Beckham's media handlers (British
representative agency 19 Entertainment).[78] In order to maximise the media
effect, in the press release they decided to list the potential sum that Beckham
could make over the 5-year period from all his revenue sources, which in
addition to his Galaxy pay also include his personal endorsements. Beckham's
actual deal with the Galaxy was a 5-year contract worth US$32.5 million in total
or $6.5 million per year.[79] The cost of his signing was spread evenly among
the then 14 MLS teams rather than picked up just by LA Galaxy because the goal
was to boost the standing in America of professional soccer as a whole, against
the country’s indigenous sports.[80]
The high-profile acquisition paid
immediate financial dividends for Galaxy long before Beckham joined the team. On
the strength of the signing and the media frenzy it created, the club was able
to pull off a new 5-year shirt sponsorship deal with Herbalife nutrition company
worth US$20 million. The gate revenue peaked as well with 11,000 new season
tickets holders and sold-out luxury suites (each one of the 42 inside the team's
home ground, the Home Depot Center).[81] Even the LA Galaxy owners Anschutz
Entertainment Group (AEG) saw an immediate spike in business. Involved on many
business fronts worldwide, AEG was already leveraging its Beckham association in
places such as China, where the company had been working aggressively in
Shanghai and Beijing for years to receive clearance to build arenas and
stadiums. The company's CEO Tim Leiweke put it as follows: "Suddenly, we're
known as the company that owns the team that David Beckham is going to play for,
so our world changed".[82]
In the months following the
announcement, the additional terms of Beckham's contract became public
knowledge. One unique contract provision was giving him the option of buying an
MLS expansion franchise at a fixed price whenever he stopped playing in the
league – an allowance that the league's owners had never given to a player
before. Another provision was the opt-out clause after the 2009 season, meaning
that should he decide so, Beckham was free to leave the club after completing
year three of his 5-year contract.[81]
In April 2007, he and wife Victoria
bought an $18.2 million home on San Ysidro Drive in Beverly Hills.[83]
Beckham's contract with LA Galaxy
took effect on 11 July, and on 13 July, the famous Englishman was officially
unveiled as a Galaxy player at the Home Depot Center to much fanfare and world
media interest in front of more than 5,000 gathered fans and some 700 accredited
media members.[84] Beckham chose to wear number 23. It was announced that Galaxy
jersey sales had already reached a record figure of over 250,000 prior to this
formal introduction.[85]
In parallel, Beckham's handlers at
19 Entertainment succeeded in putting together an unprecedented US media rollout
designed to expand his carefully crafted personal brand in America. He made the
cover of Sports Illustrated, a few weeks earlier Adidas launched the extensive
13-part ad campaign "Fútbol meets Football" starring Beckham and NFL running
back Reggie Bush, and W magazine published a racy photo spread featuring David
and wife Victoria. Meanwhile, ESPN sports network was running "Hello, Goodbye"
promotional campaign and it also agreed to air David Beckham: New Beginnings
documentary produced by 19 Entertainment before the friendly match versus
Chelsea, which was expected to be Beckham's American debut. In addition to
popularising soccer, Beckham's arrival was used as platform for entertainment
industry endeavours. Since both Beckham's and his wife's often overlapping
careers were handled by 19 Entertainment that's owned by Simon Fuller, who in
turn has a business relationship with the Creative Artists Agency (CAA), one of
Hollywood's most powerful talent agencies, it was important also for CAA that
the Beckhams made as big a splash as possible upon their arrival in the United
States. On 16 July, CAA had hosted a welcoming bash for David at its new
eight-storey, $400 million headquarters in Century City with CAA employees
reportedly instructed beforehand to line the staircase and clap for Beckham upon
his arrival.[86] That night Victoria's reality show prime-time special Victoria
Beckham: Coming to America aired on NBC, drawing terrible reviews in the
American press and poor US viewership ratings.[87]
On Saturday afternoon, 21 July,
despite still nursing the injured left ankle that he picked up a month earlier
during the final match of La Liga's season, Beckham made his Galaxy debut,
coming on for Alan Gordon in the 78th minute of a 0–1 friendly loss to Chelsea
as part of the World Series of Soccer.[88] With a capacity crowd, along with a
long Hollywood celebrity list featuring Tom Cruise, Katie Holmes, Eva Longoria,
Mary-Kate Olsen, governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, Jennifer Love-Hewitt, Alicia
Silverstone and Drew Carey among others, present at the Home Depot Center, the
match was broadcast live on ESPN's main network. However, the proceedings on the
field of play completely took a back seat to the Beckham spectacle, and despite
the presence of worldwide football stars Andriy Shevchenko, Didier Drogba,
Michael Ballack, Frank Lampard, and John Terry, the US television cameras were
firmly focused on Beckham who spent most of the match on the bench. The match's
added time featured a scare for already injured Beckham when he got tackled by
Steve Sidwell whose cleats struck Beckham's right foot, sending him airborne
before he crumpled hard to the ground. Though the existing injury was not
aggravated too much, Beckham's recovery process was set back by about a week.
ESPN's presentation of Beckham's debut earned a 1.0 TV rating, meaning it was
seen in an average of 947,000 television homes in the US – a disappointing
figure given the national media buzz and two weeks of constant promotion by
ESPN. For comparison ESPN2's weekly MLS broadcasts on Thursdays drew a
consistent 0.2 rating on virtually no promotion while Freddy Adu's MLS debut
televised on ABC back in 2004 earned a 1.3 rating.[83] As far as sporting events
that were televised that weekend in the United States, Beckham's much publicised
debut drew less TV viewers than British Open golf tournament, a regular-season
national baseball game, and even the Indy Racing League's Honda 200 motor
race.[83]
The day after the made-for-TV debut
was reserved for the welcoming party for the Beckhams at LA's Museum of
Contemporary Art, formally billed as being hosted by Tom Cruise, Katie Holmes,
Will Smith, and Jada Pinkett Smith though in actuality a CAA-organized event.
Attended by many Hollywood A-listers, the lavish bash was big news in the US
celebrity tabloid media, including daily entertainment TV magazines such as
Entertainment Tonight and Access Hollywood.[89]
Back on the soccer front, Beckham
missed the next four Galaxy matches – three in the North American SuperLiga and
an MLS game away at Toronto FC though he still made the trip with his teammates,
sitting on the bench in street clothes. It was in Toronto on 5 August that the
team got its first taste of what life would be like on the road with Beckham on
the roster. Due to security concerns, it was the first time the team flew on a
charter for a road match, rather than flying commercial (MLS normally forbids
charter flights for away matches, claiming they provide competitive advantage,
but in this case they made an exception due to the frenzy created around Beckham
and resulting security issues). Also, instead of the usual MLS-mandated modest
hotels, LA Galaxy stayed at the five-star Le Méridien King Edward in downtown
Toronto (an expense paid for by the local Toronto promoter), while the glitz and
glamour continued with the velvet rope, red carpet party at the Ultra Supper
Club with Beckham as the centerpiece guest.[90]
Two weeks after his 12-minute
appearance vs. Chelsea, still not fully healed Beckham finally made his league
debut as a substitute on 9 August away versus DC United in front of the sellout
crowd of 46,686 (nearly three times the average DC United home crowd) at the RFK
Stadium, coming on for Quavas Kirk in the 71st minute.[91] Coming into the
nationally televised match on ESPN, played under a heavy downpour with his team
down a man and down a goal, even if only 70% fit, Beckham left a mark during the
remaining twenty plus minutes. He hit a long free kick that Carlos Pavón failed
to finish on for the equalizier, and then in the final minutes Beckham served a
weighted through ball into Donovan's path that United's keeper Troy Perkins
managed to break up in the last moment – the Galaxy lost 1–0. The next match on
the road trip was at New England Revolution and Beckham decided to sit it out,
fearing further aggrivating his ankle on the Gillette Stadium's artificial
surface.
Beckham returned to the pitch the
following week, again facing DC United, in the SuperLiga semi-final on 15
August. During this game he had many firsts with the Galaxy; his first start,
first yellow card and first game as team captain.[92] He also scored his first
goal for the team, from a free kick, and also made his first assist, for Landon
Donovan in the second half. These goals gave the team a 2–0 victory, and a place
in the North American SuperLiga final versus Pachuca on 29 August.
During the SuperLiga final against
Pachuca, Beckham injured his right knee, with an MRI scan revealing that he had
sprained his medial collateral ligament and would be out for six weeks. He
returned to play in the final home match of the season. The Galaxy were
eliminated from playoff contention on 21 October, in the final MLS match of the
season, a 1–0 loss to the Chicago Fire. Beckham played as a substitute in the
match, bringing his season totals to eight matches played (5 league); one goal
scored (0 league); and three assists (2 league).
Beckham trained with Arsenal from 4
January 2008 for three weeks, until he returned to the Galaxy for pre-season
training.[93] Beckham scored his first league goal with the Galaxy on 3 April
against the San Jose Earthquakes in the 9th minute.[94] On 24 May 2008, the
Galaxy defeated the Kansas City Wizards 3–1, giving the Galaxy their first
winning record in two years and moving the club into first place in the Western
Conference. In the match, Beckham scored an empty-net goal from 70 yards out.
The goal marked the second time in Beckham's career that he had scored from his
own half, the other being a 1996 goal from the half-way line against Wimbledon
at Selhurst Park.[95] Overall, however, the Galaxy had a disappointing year,
failing to qualify for the end-of-season play-offs.
Loan to Milan
In 2008, Beckham's success in the
England national team under Fabio Capello led to speculation that he might
return to Europe in order to retain match fitness for the World Cup qualifying
matches in 2009. On 30 October 2008, Milan announced that Beckham was to join
them on loan from 7 January 2009.[96] Despite this and other speculation,
Beckham made it clear that the move in no way signalled his intent to leave MLS
and announced his intent to return to the Galaxy in time for the start of the
2009 season in March.[97] Many at Milan both within and outside of the club
expressed serious reservations about the transfer, with it considered by some
players no more than a marketing move.[98] At Milan, he chose the number 32
shirt previously worn by Christian Vieri, as both the number 7 and 23 shirts
were already used by Alexandre Pato and club captain Massimo Ambrosini,
respectively. After his physical, Beckham was reportedly told by a club doctor
that he believed he can continue playing football for another five years, when
he will be 38.[99]
Beckham made his Serie A debut for
Milan against Roma on 11 January 2009 and played 89 minutes of the 2–2
draw.[100] He scored his first goal in Serie A for Milan in a 4–1 victory over
Bologna on 25 January, his third appearance for the club.[101] Though Beckham
was expected to return to L.A. in March, after impressing at the Italian club,
scoring two goals in his first four matches and assisting on several more,
rumours began to swirl that Beckham would stay in Milan, with the Italian club
reportedly offering to pay a multi-million dollar fee for him. The rumours were
confirmed on 4 February, when Beckham stated that he was seeking a permanent
transfer to Milan, in a bid to sustain his England career through the 2010 World
Cup. However, Milan failed to match Galaxy's valuation of Beckham, in the
US$10–15 million range.[102]
Still, negotiations continued
during a month of speculation.[103] On 2 March, the Los Angeles Times reported
that Beckham's loan had been extended through mid-July.[104] This was later
confirmed by Beckham, revealing what was described as a unique "timeshare" deal,
in which Beckham would play with L.A. from mid-July till the end of the 2009 MLS
season.[105]
Return to Galaxy
After his return from Milan, many
LA fans showed dislike and anger towards him as he missed the first half of the
season and several held up signs saying "Go home fraud", and "Part time
player".[106] However, the Galaxy had a much more successful season than in
previous years, rising from third to first in the Western Conference during
Beckham's time with them. He remained a key part of the squad which saw Galaxy
win the 2009 Western Conference final after a 2–0 overtime victory over the
Houston Dynamo.[107] In the final on 22 November 2009, the Galaxy lost to Real
Salt Lake by 5–4 in a penalty shoot-out after a 1–1 draw. Beckham also scored in
the shootout.[108]
Second loan spell at Milan
In November 2009, after the end of
2009 MLS season, it was confirmed that Beckham would return to Milan for a
second loan period beginning in January 2010.[109] On 6 January 2010, Beckham
made a winning return in a Milan shirt, playing 75 minutes of a 5–2 victory over
Genoa.[110] On 16 February 2010, Beckham played against Manchester United for
the first time since he left the club in 2003. He played 76 minutes of the match
at the San Siro – which ended 3–2 to Manchester United – before being
substituted for Clarence Seedorf.[111]
Beckham returned to Old Trafford
for the second leg of the tie on 10 March 2010; he did not start the match, but
was brought on for Ignazio Abate in the 64th minute to a positive reception from
the Manchester United fans. The score was 3–0 for United at that point and the
tie was all but decided. The match was the first time Beckham had played against
Manchester United at Old Trafford and saw him create several scoring
opportunities via crosses and corner kicks, but Manchester United dominated
Milan and beat them 4–0, winning the tie 7–2.[112] Following the final whistle,
he aroused a bit of controversy by draping the green-and-gold scarf around his
neck that was given to him by the Manchester United supporters protesting
against club owner Malcolm Glazer. As the fan protests against Glazer by the
people gathered around Manchester United Supporters' Trust gained steam in 2010,
the green-and-gold scarf had come to be seen as an anti-Glazer symbol, and by
extension many saw Beckham's decision to publicly put it on as gesture of
support. However, when asked about it later Beckham responded that protests are
not his business.[113]
In Milan's next game, against
ChievoVerona, Beckham suffered a torn left Achilles tendon,[114] causing him to
miss the World Cup as well as the MLS season due to the injury, which took him
out of action for the next five months. Doctor Sakari Orava performed surgery on
Beckham's tendon in Turku, Finland, on 15 March 2010.[115] After the operation,
Orava affirmed that "it went quite fine. The prognosis is he needs a
rehabilitation for the next few months, and the plaster cast is the next six to
eight weeks. I would say that [it will be] maybe four months before he's
running, but six months before he's jumping and kicking."[116]
Second return to Galaxy
On 11 September 2010, after
recovering from his Achilles tendon injury, Beckham returned to the game as a
substitute in the 70th minute in the Galaxy's 3–1 win over Columbus Crew.[117]
On 4 October, Beckham scored a trademark free kick in a 2–1 win over Chivas to
mark his first goal in 2010.[118] On 24 October, Beckham scored his second goal
of the season in the Galaxy's 2–1 win over Dallas which secured them their
second successive Western Conference title and first MLS Supporters' Shield
since 2002.[119]
During January and February 2011,
ahead of the 2011 MLS season, Beckham trained with Tottenham Hotspur. Rumours in
the media claimed that the club were in talks with the Galaxy to sign the player
on loan, but, according to Spurs manager Harry Redknapp, the move was blocked by
Galaxy, who wanted a full final season from their number 23.[120] As a result,
he ended up only training with the club as he had done with Arsenal three years
earlier. With Beckham playing in the centre of midfield, the Los Angeles Galaxy
won the 2011 MLS cup.
MLS Cup Champion
On 15 May, Beckham scored his first
goal of the season for the Galaxy from a 30-yard free kick, in a 4–1 victory
over Sporting Kansas City.[121] On 9 July, Beckham scored directly from a corner
in a 2–1 win over Chicago Fire, repeating a feat he also achieved while playing
for Preston North End.[122]
After having his best season with
the Galaxy to date and finishing second in the league in assists, Beckham
finished his fifth MLS season on a high. On 20 November 2011, he joined an elite
group of players to have won three league titles in three different countries,
when Los Angeles won their third MLS Cup against Houston Dynamo, winning 1-0 on
a goal by captain Landon Donovan, with assists from Beckham and fellow
designated player, Robbie Keane.[123][124] Had it been Beckham's final match for
the Galaxy, it would have been the third time he has won a league championship
in his final match for a club, repeating the feat he accomplished with
Manchester United in 2003 and Real Madrid in 2007.[123]
Following the 2011 season, in which
the Galaxy won their second consecutive Supporters' Shield, having the second
most points in MLS history, Beckham's five-year contract with the Galaxy expired
on 31 December 2011. Despite being 36, he stated that he did not intend to
retire. Beckham was heavily linked with Paris Saint-Germain, but on 18 January
2012, Galaxy announced Beckham had signed a new two-year contract to remain in
Los Angeles.[125][126][127][128][129]
International career
Beckham made his first appearance
for the England national football team on 1 September 1996, in a World Cup
qualifying match against Moldova.[130]
Beckham had played in all of
England's qualifying matches for the 1998 World Cup and was part of the England
squad at the World Cup finals in France,[131] but the team's manager Glenn
Hoddle publicly accused him of not concentrating on the tournament,[132] and he
did not start in either of England's first two matches. He was picked for their
third match against Colombia and scored from a long-range free kick in a 2–0
victory, which was his first goal for England.
In the second round (last 16) of
that competition, he received a red card in England's match against
Argentina.[133] Beckham, after having been fouled by Diego Simeone, kicked
Simeone whilst lying on the floor, striking him on the calf muscle. Simeone
later admitted to trying to get Beckham sent off by over-reacting to the kick
and then, along with other members of his team, urging the referee to send
Beckham off.[134] The match finished in a draw and England were eliminated in a
penalty shootout. Many supporters and journalists blamed him for England's
elimination and he became the target of criticism and abuse, including the
hanging of an effigy outside a London pub, and the Daily Mirror printing a
dartboard with a picture of him centred on the bullseye. Beckham also received
death threats after the World Cup.[135]
The abuse that Beckham was
receiving from English supporters peaked during England's 3–2 defeat by Portugal
in Euro 2000, a match where Beckham set up two goals, when a group of England
supporters taunted him throughout the match.[136] Beckham responded by raising
his middle finger and, while the gesture attracted some criticism, many of the
newspapers that had previously encouraged his vilification asked their readers
to stop abusing him.[137]
On 15 November 2000, following
Kevin Keegan's resignation as England manager in October, Beckham was promoted
to team captain by the caretaker manager Peter Taylor, and then kept the role
under new manager Sven-Göran Eriksson. He helped England to qualify for the 2002
World Cup Finals, with their performances including an impressive 5–1 victory
over Germany in Munich. The final step in Beckham's conversion from villain to
hero happened in England's 2–2 draw against Greece on 6 October 2001. England
needed to win or draw the match in order to qualify outright for the World Cup,
but were losing 2–1 with little time remaining. When Teddy Sheringham was fouled
eight yards (7 metres) outside the Greek penalty area, England were awarded a
free-kick and Beckham ensured England's qualification with a curling strike of
the kind that had become his trademark. Shortly afterwards, he was voted the BBC
Sports Personality of the Year for 2001. He once again finished runner-up, to
Luís Figo of Portugal, for the FIFA World Player of the Year award.
Beckham was partially fit by the
time of the 2002 World Cup and played in the first match against Sweden. Beckham
scored the winning goal of the match against Argentina with a penalty, causing
Argentina to fail to qualify for the knockout stage. England were knocked out of
the tournament in the quarter-finals by eventual winners Brazil. The following
month, at the opening ceremony of the 2002 Commonwealth Games in Manchester,
Beckham escorted Kirsty Howard as she presented the Jubilee Baton to the Queen.
Beckham played in all of England's
matches at Euro 2004, but the tournament was a disappointment for him. He had a
penalty saved in England's 2–1 defeat to France and missed another in a penalty
shootout in the quarter-final match against Portugal. England lost the shootout
thus going out of the competition.
Beckham became a UNICEF Goodwill
Ambassador in January 2005 and was involved in promoting London's successful bid
for the 2012 Olympic Games.[138] In October 2005, Beckham's sending off against
Austria made him the first ever England captain to be sent off and the first
player to be sent off twice while playing for England. He captained England for
the 50th time in a friendly international against Argentina the following month.
In England's opening game at the
2006 World Cup, against Paraguay on 10 June 2006, Beckham's free kick led to an
own-goal by Carlos Gamarra as England won 1–0. In England's next match, played
against Trinidad and Tobago on 15 June 2006, Beckham's cross in the 83rd minute
led to a Peter Crouch goal, which put England into the lead 1–0. Beckham gave
another assist to Steven Gerrard. In the end they won 2–0. He was named Man of
the Match by tournament sponsor Budweiser for this game.
During England's second round match
against Ecuador, Beckham scored from a free kick in the 59th minute, becoming
the first ever English player to score in three separate World Cups,[139] and
giving England a 1–0 victory and a place in the quarter-finals. He was sick
before the game and vomited several times as a result of dehydration and illness
after he scored the winning goal.
In the quarter-final against
Portugal, Beckham was substituted following an injury shortly after half time
and the England team went on to lose the match on penalties (3–1), the score
having been 0–0 after extra time. After his substitution, Beckham was visibly
shaken and emotional for not being able to play, being in tears at one point.
A day after England were knocked
out of the World Cup, an emotional Beckham made a statement in a news conference
saying that he had stepped down as England captain,[140] saying, "It has been an
honour and privilege to captain my country but, having been captain for 58 of my
95[141] games, I feel the time is right to pass on the armband as we enter a new
era under Steve McClaren." (Beckham had actually won 94 caps up to that point.)
He was succeeded by Chelsea captain John Terry.[142]
Having stepped down as captain
after the World Cup, Beckham was dropped completely from the England national
team selected by new coach Steve McClaren on 11 August 2006. McClaren claimed
that he was "looking to go in a different direction" with the team, and that
Beckham "wasn't included within that." McClaren said Beckham could be recalled
in future. Shaun Wright-Phillips, Kieran Richardson, and the World Cup
alternative to Beckham, Aaron Lennon, were all included, although McClaren
eventually opted to employ Steven Gerrard in that role.
On 26 May 2007, McClaren announced
that Beckham would be recalled to the England squad for the first time since
stepping down as their captain. Beckham started against Brazil in England's
first match at the new Wembley Stadium and put in a positive performance. In the
second half, he set up England's goal converted by captain John Terry. It looked
as though England would claim victory over Brazil, but newcomer Diego equalised
in the dying seconds. In England's next match, a Euro 2008 qualifier against
Estonia, Beckham sent two trademark assists for Michael Owen and Peter Crouch,
helping England to prevail 3–0.
Beckham had assisted in three of
England's four total goals in those two games,[143] and he stated his desire to
continue to play for England after his move to Major League Soccer.
On 22 August 2007, Beckham played
in a friendly for England against Germany, becoming the first ever to play for
England while with a non-European club team.[144] On 21 November 2007, Beckham
earned his 99th cap against Croatia, setting up a goal for Peter Crouch to tie
the game at 2–2. Following the 2–3 loss, England failed to qualify for the Euro
2008 Finals. Despite this, Beckham said that he has no plans to retire from
international football and wanted to continue playing for the national
team.[145] After being passed over by new England coach and Beckham's former
manager at Real Madrid, Fabio Capello, for a friendly against Switzerland which
would have given him his hundredth cap; Beckham admitted that he was not in
shape at the time, as he had not played a competitive match in three
months.[146]
On 20 March 2008, Beckham was
recalled to the England squad by Capello for the friendly against France in
Paris on 26 March. Beckham became only the fifth Englishman to win 100 caps.
Capello had hinted on 25 March 2008 that Beckham had a long term future in his
side ahead of crucial qualifiers for the 2010 World Cup.[147] On 11 May 2008,
Capello included an in-form Beckham in his 31 man England squad to face the
United States at Wembley Stadium on 28 May before the away fixture with Trinidad
and Tobago on 1 June. Beckham was honoured before the match by receiving an
honorary gold cap representing his 100th cap from Bobby Charlton, and was given
a standing ovation from the crowd. He played well and assisted John Terry on the
match-winning goal. When substituted at half-time for David Bentley, the
pro-Beckham crowd booed the decision.[148] In a surprise move, Capello handed
Beckham the captaincy for England's friendly against Trinidad and Tobago on 1
June 2008. The match was the first time since the 2006 World Cup that Beckham
had skippered England and marked a dramatic turnaround for Beckham. In two
years, he had gone from being dropped completely from the England squad to being
reinstated (though temporarily) as England captain.[149]
During the 2010 World Cup Qualifier
against Belarus in which England won 3–1 in Minsk, Beckham came off the bench in
the 87th minute to earn his 107th cap making him England's 3rd highest capped
player in history, over-taking Bobby Charlton in the process. On 11 February
2009, Beckham drew level with Bobby Moore's record of 108 caps for an English
outfield player, coming on as a substitute for Stewart Downing in a friendly
match against Spain.[150] On 28 March 2009, Beckham surpassed Moore to hold the
record outright when he came on as a substitute in a friendly against Slovakia,
providing the assist for a goal from Wayne Rooney in the process.[151]
In all, Beckham had made 16
appearances out of a possible 20 for England under Capello until his ruptured
Achilles tendon of March 2010 ruled him out of selection for the 2010 FIFA World
Cup in South Africa.[13] His last game for England before injury had been on 14
October 2009 as a substitute in England's last World Cup qualifying game, which
ended England 3 – 0 Belarus.[13] While unable to play, Beckham still went to the
tournament as part of the England back-room staff, acting as a mediator between
management and the players.[152]
After a poor performance from
England at the World Cup Capello remained as manager, but was under pressure to
revamp the England squad for the imminent UEFA Euro 2012 qualification campaign.
He unveiled a new team at the next England match, a home friendly game against
Hungary on 11 August 2010, with Beckham still unavailable for selection but
aiming for a return to playing in the MLS by the following month.[13] In the
post-match interview, Capello said of the prospect of the now 35-year-old
Beckham playing any future competitive matches for England, that "I need to
change it. David is a fantastic player but I think we need new players for the
future", referring to the new players that play in Beckham's right midfield
position, including Theo Walcott and Adam Johnson, adding "This is the future of
the team under Fabio Capello or another manager".[13] He said that Beckham may
be selected for one last friendly game, stating, "If he is fit, I hope we will
play one more game here at Wembley so the fans can say goodbye". In response to
the comments, Beckham's agent released a statement reiterating Beckham's
position that he had no desire to retire from international football, and would
always be make himself available for selection for England if fit and if
needed.[13]
Due to an injury suffered to his
torn left Achilles tendon, Beckham was forced to miss the 2010 FIFA World Cup as
a player. On 14 May 2010 it was announced that Beckham would work as a mediator
between management and the players, and as an English member of the coaching
staff for the England national football team at the tournament.[152] As an
agreement between Beckham, his representatives, his club, Los Angeles Galaxy and
Fabio Capello, the former England captain was on the plane to South Africa on 2
June.
Discipline
Former manager Alex Ferguson said
that he "practised with a discipline to achieve an accuracy that other players
wouldn't care about."[170] He maintained his training routine at Real Madrid and
even when his relationship with management was strained in early 2007, Real
Madrid president Ramón Calderón and manager Fabio Capello praised Beckham for
maintaining his professionalism and commitment to the club.[171][172]
Beckham was the first England
player ever to collect two red cards and the first England captain to be sent
off.[173] Beckham's most notorious red card was during the 1998 FIFA World Cup
after Argentina's Diego Simeone had fouled him, Beckham lashed out with his leg
and the Argentine fell.
He amassed 41 yellow cards and four
red cards for Real Madrid.[174]
Honours
Club
Manchester United
Premier League (6): 1995–96,
1996–97, 1998–99, 1999–2000, 2000–01, 2002–03
FA Cup (2): 1995–96, 1998–99
FA Community Shield (4): 1993,
1994, 1996, 1997
FA Youth Cup (1): 1992
UEFA Champions League (1): 1998–99
Intercontinental Cup (1): 1999
Real Madrid
La Liga (1): 2006–07
Supercopa de España (1): 2003
Los Angeles Galaxy
MLS Supporters' Shield (2): 2010,
2011
MLS Cup (1): 2011
International
England
Tournoi de France: 1997
FA Summer Tournament: 2004
Individual
Premier League Player of the Month
(1): August 1996
PFA Young Player of the Year (1):
1996–97
FWA Tribute Award: 2008
Sir Matt Busby Player of the Year
(1): 1996–97
UEFA Club Footballer of the Year
(1): 1998–99
UEFA Club Midfielder of the Year
(1): 1998–99
Premier League 10 Seasons Awards
(1992–93 to 2001–02):
Domestic & Overall Team of the
Decade
Goal of the Decade (vs. Wimbledon,
17 August 1996)
BBC Sports Personality of the Year
(1): 2001
FIFA 100[175]
ESPY Award – Best Male Soccer
Player: 2004[176]
ESPY Award – Best MLS Player:
2008[176]
English Football Hall of Fame: 2008
BBC Sports Personality of the Year
Lifetime Achievement Award (1): 2010[177]
MLS Comeback Player of the Year
Award (1): 2011[178]
Major League Soccer Best XI: 2011
Orders
and special awards
Officer in the Order of the British
Empire by Queen Elizabeth II: 2003
England Player of the Year: 2003
United Nations Children's Fund
(UNICEF) Goodwill Ambassador (2005–present)
Number 1 on the list of the 40 most
influential men under the age of 40 in the UK[181] – Arena, 2007
Time 100: 2008[182]
Gold Blue Peter Badge winner, 2001
Statistics
Statistics accurate as of 31 December 2011
Club
Season
League
Cup
League Cup
Continental
Other1
Total
Apps
Goals
Assists
Apps
Goals
Assists
Apps
Goals
Assists
Apps
Goals
Assists
Apps
Goals
Assists
Apps
Goals
Assists
Manchester United
1992–93
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1993–94
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Preston North End (loan)
1994–95
5
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
–
0
0
0
5
2
0
Manchester United
1994–95
4
0
0
2
0
0
3
0
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
10
1
0
1995–96
33
7
–
3
1
–
2
0
–
2
0
–
0
0
0
40
8
–
1996–97
36
8
–
2
1
–
0
0
0
10
2
–
1
1
–
49
12
–
1997–98
37
9
1
4
2
–
0
0
0
8
0
–
1
0
–
50
11
1
1998–99
34
6
–
7
1
–
1
0
–
12
2
2
1
0
–
55
9
2
1999–00
31
6
2
–
0
0
0
12
2
0
5
0
0
48
8
2
2000–01
31
9
1
2
0
–
0
0
0
12
0
–
1
0
–
46
9
1
2001–02
28
11
0
1
0
–
0
0
0
13
5
3
1
0
–
43
16
3
2002–03
31
6
9
3
1
0
5
1
0
13
3
2
0
0
0
52
11
11
Total
265
62
13
24
6
–
12
1
–
83
15
7
10
1
–
394
85
20
Real Madrid
2003–04
32
3
0
4
2
0
–
7
1
1
2
1
1
45
7
2
2004–05
30
4
2
0
0
0
–
8
0
3
0
0
0
38
4
5
2005–06
31
3
10
3
1
0
–
7
1
2
0
0
0
41
5
12
2006–07
23
3
6
2
1
0
–
6
0
0
0
0
0
31
4
6
Total
116
13
18
9
4
0
–
28
2
6
2
1
1
155
20
25
Los Angeles Galaxy
2007
5
0
2
0
0
0
–
–
2
1
1
7
1
3
2008
25
5
10
0
0
0
–
–
0
0
0
25
5
10
Milan (loan)
2008–09
18
2
5
0
0
0
–
2
0
0
0
0
0
20
2
5
Los Angeles Galaxy
2009
11
2
3
0
0
0
–
–
4
0
1
15
2
4
Milan (loan)
2009–10
11
0
1
0
0
0
–
2
0
0
0
0
0
13
0
1
Total
29
2
6
0
0
0
–
4
0
0
0
0
0
33
2
6
Los Angeles Galaxy
2010
7
2
1
0
0
0
–
–
3
0
2
10
2
3
2011
26
2
15
0
0
0
–
–
4
0
4
30
2
19
Total
74
11
31
0
0
0
–
–
13
1
8
87
12
39
Career total
489
90
68
33
10
0
12
1
0
115
17
13
21
3
9
674
121
90
[183] [184] [185] [186] [187]
1Includes other competitive
competitions, including the FA Community Shield, UEFA Super Cup,
Intercontinental Cup, FIFA Club World Cup, Supercopa de España, SuperLiga and
the MLS Cup Playoffs
England
national team
Year Apps Goals
1996 3 0
1997 9 0
1998 8 1
1999 7 0
2000 10 0
2001 10 5
2002 9 3
2003 9 4
2004 12 2
2005 9 1
2006 8 1
2007 5 0
2008 8 0
2009 8 0
Total 115 17
David
Beckham Academy
In 2005, Beckham founded the David
Beckham Academy football school, operating from two sites: in London and in Los
Angeles, California. It was announced in late 2009 that both would close.[188] A
mobile academy is being developed by Beckham, to travel around the UK and
further afield.[189]
Personal life
In 1997, Beckham started dating
Victoria Adams, after she attended a Manchester United match. She was famously
known as "Posh Spice" of the pop music group Spice Girls, one of the world's top
pop groups at the time, and his team was also enjoying a great run of success.
Therefore, their relationship instantly attracted a great deal of media
attention. The couple were dubbed "Posh and Becks" by the media. He proposed to
her on 24 January 1998 in a restaurant in Cheshunt, England.
On 4 July 1999, David and Victoria
married at Luttrellstown Castle in Ireland. The wedding attracted tremendous
media coverage. Beckham's teammate Gary Neville was the best man, and the
couple's infant son, Brooklyn, was the ring bearer. The media were kept away
from the ceremony, as the Beckhams had an exclusive deal with OK! Magazine, but
newspapers were still able to obtain photographs showing them sitting on golden
thrones.[190] 437 staff were employed for the wedding reception, which was
estimated to have cost £500,000.[191]
In 1999, David and Victoria Beckham
purchased their most famous home in Hertfordshire, unofficially dubbed
Beckingham Palace, estimated to be worth £7.5 million. David and Victoria
Beckham have four children: sons Brooklyn Joseph (born 1999 in London), Romeo
James (born 2002 in London), and Cruz David (born 2005 in Madrid; the word "cruz"
is Spanish for "cross"); and daughter Harper Seven (born 2011, in Los
Angeles).[192][193] Elton John is godfather to Brooklyn and Romeo Beckham; their
godmother is Elizabeth Hurley.[194]
In April 2007, the family purchased
their current main residence, an Italian villa in Beverly Hills, to coincide
with Beckham's transfer to the Galaxy that July. The mansion, priced at $22
million, is near the homes of Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes, and talk-show host
Jay Leno, in an exclusive gated community in the hills overlooking the city.
In September 2011, Beckham was
rumored in Tweeter tweets to have died in a car crash. It was said that the
36-year-old lost control while driving a friend's vehicle on Interstate 80 and
rolled the vehicle several times killing him instantly. Since, in November, he
assisted in the winning Los Angeles Galaxy drive to capture the 2011 Major
League Soccer Cup, reports of demise are premature.
Affair claims
In April 2004, the British tabloid
News of the World carried claims by Beckham's former personal assistant Rebecca
Loos that he and Loos had an extramarital affair.[195][196] A week later, the
Malaysian-born Australian model Sarah Marbeck claimed that she had slept with
Beckham on two occasions. Beckham dismissed both accusations as
"ludicrous".[197] In an interview with W Magazine, Victoria Beckham told a
reporter, "I'm not going to lie: it was a really tough time. It was hard for our
entire families. But I realised a lot of people have a price."[198]
Legal issues
In December 2008, Beckham and his
bodyguard were sued by paparazzi photographer Emicles da Mata, who claimed that
he was assaulted by them when attempting to take a picture of Beckham in Beverly
Hills. Da Mata is seeking unspecified damages for assault, battery, and
intentional infliction of emotional distress.[199]
In September 2010 Beckham announced
that he was pressing charges against prostitute Irma Nici and several others
over claims in the magazine In Touch that he had had sex with her.[200]
Beckham's court application was dismissed.
Fame beyond football
Beckham's fame extends beyond the
pitch; in much of the world his name is "as instantly recognisable as that of
multinational companies like Coca-Cola and IBM."[201] Beckham's relationship and
marriage to Victoria, who has been famous in her own right as part of the
musical group Spice Girls, contributed to David's celebrity beyond football. So
gilded has been the career of Beckham that Victoria revealed her nickname for
her husband to be "Golden Balls",[202] an epithet he shares with an obscure
mediaeval Anglo-Norman knight whose French name was Latinised to de Aureis
Testiculis.
Beckham became known as a fashion
plate, and together with Victoria, the couple became lucrative spokespeople
sought after by clothing designers, health and fitness specialists, fashion
magazines, perfume and cosmetics manufacturers, hair stylists, exercise
promoters, and spa and recreation companies. One recent example is a new line of
aftershave and fragrances called David Beckham Instinct.[203] In 2002 Beckham
was hailed as the ultimate "metrosexual" by the man who invented the
term[204][205] and has been described as such by numerous other articles since.
The Beckhams were reportedly paid $13.7 million in 2007 to launch his fragrance
line in the US. In the world of fashion, David has already appeared on the
covers of many magazines. U.S. covers have included the men's magazine Details,
and with his wife for the August 2007 issue of W.[206] According to Google,
"David Beckham" was searched for more than any other sports topic on their site
in 2003 and 2004.[207] The search engine Ask Jeeves named Beckham in December
2009 as the third most online searched person in the last decade. The findings
are based on online activity by British users of the search engine.[208]
Upon their arrival in Los Angeles
on 12 July 2007, the night before Beckham's formal introduction, Los Angeles
International Airport was filled with paparazzi and news reporters.[209] On the
next night, Victoria appeared on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno to talk about
the their move to LA, and presented Leno with a number 23 Galaxy jersey with his
own name on the back. Victoria also talked about her NBC TV show Victoria
Beckham: Coming to America.[210] On 22 July, a private welcoming party was held
for the couple at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. A-list
celebrities attending included Steven Spielberg, Jim Carrey, George Clooney, Tom
Cruise, Katie Holmes, Will Smith, Jada Pinkett Smith, and Oprah Winfrey.[211]
Beckham's many endorsement deals
make him one of the most recognisable athletes throughout the world. On 31
December 2008, it was announced that Pepsi Co. was ending its endorsement deal
with the player after a 10-year collaboration.[212] Beckham has several
eponymous video games, including Go! Go! Beckham! Adventure on Soccer Island, a
platform game for the Game Boy Advance, and David Beckham Soccer, a football
game for the Xbox.[213][214] In August 2010, Beckham signed an endorsement deal
with EA SPORTS to become brand ambassador for EA SPORTS Active 2.[215]
Beckham visited Afghanistan in May
2010 for a morale-boosting visit to British troops fighting the Taliban
insurgency.[216][217][218] The appearance of Beckham as well as British Foreign
Secretary William Hague and Defence Secretary Liam Fox was believed to have
prompted a Taliban attack on Kandahar airfield. [219][220]
Charitable work
Beckham has supported UNICEF since
his days at Manchester United and in January 2005, the English national team
captain became a Goodwill Ambassador with a special focus on UNICEF's Sports for
Development program. More recently Beckham has pledged his support for the
current Unite for Children, Unite against AIDS campaign.
On 17 January 2007, Rebecca
Johnstone, a 19-year-old cancer patient from Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, received
a surprise phone call from Beckham. After the conversation, he sent her a Real
Madrid jersey with his signature on it. Rebecca died on 29 January 2007.[221]
Beckham is a spokesman for Malaria
No More, a New York City-based non-profit launched in 2006. Malaria No More's
mission is to end deaths caused by malaria in Africa. Beckham appears in a 2007
public service announcement advertising the need for inexpensive bed nets. The
TV spot currently airs in the U.S. on Fox Networks, including Fox Soccer
Channel, and can also be seen on YouTube.[222]
Since joining Major League Soccer,
Beckham has been a very public advocate in the U.S. for related charities such
as "MLS W.O.R.K.S." On 17 August 2007, he conducted a youth clinic in Harlem,
along with other current and former MLS players. This was in advance of his
first New York City area match the following day against the New York Red Bulls.
That team's Jozy Altidore and Juan Pablo Ángel were also with Beckham, teaching
skills to disadvantaged youth to benefit FC Harlem Lions.[223]
Appearances in films
Bend It Like Beckham
Beckham never personally appeared
in the 2002 film Bend It Like Beckham, except in archive footage. He and his
wife wanted to make cameo appearances, but scheduling proved difficult, so the
director used lookalikes instead.[224]
The Goal! Trilogy
Beckham makes a cameo appearance
with Zinedine Zidane and Raúl, in the 2005 film Goal!: The Dream Begins.
Lookalike Andy Harmer, who played him in Bend It Like Beckham, also appears here
in one party scene as Beckham.[225] Beckham himself appears in the sequel Goal!
2: Living the Dream...[226] in a larger role, when the film's lead character
gets transferred to Real Madrid. This time the story centres around the Real
Madrid team, and besides Beckham, other real life Real Madrid players also
appear on and off the pitch, alongside the fictional characters. Beckham
appeared in Goal! 3: Taking on the World, which was released straight to DVD on
15 June 2009.[227]
Despite moving to Los Angeles,
California, Beckham has expressed no personal interest in pursuit of acting
roles, saying he is too "stiff".[228]
Records
Beckham has captained England 59
times,[229] the fourth highest after Bobby Moore (90), Billy Wright (90) and
Bryan Robson (65).
With his free kick goal against
Ecuador in the second round of the 2006 FIFA World Cup, Beckham gained
membership into two of football's exclusive clubs: he became the only English
player – and the 21st player regardless of nationality – to score in three world
cups; Real Madrid teammate Raúl also achieved this feat a few days earlier.[230]
It also made him only the fifth player in World Cup history to score twice from
a direct free kick; the other four were Pelé, Roberto Rivelino, Teófilo
Cubillas, and Bernard Genghini (Beckham had previously scored this way against
Colombia in the first round of the 1998 FIFA World Cup). All three goals were
against South American teams (Colombia, Argentina, and Ecuador) and from set
pieces (the two aforementioned free kicks and a penalty against Argentina).
Tattoos
Beckham has at least 20
tattoos adorning his body, including recent black-and-white image of Christ
drawn on his right side, based on a painting called "The Man Of Sorrows" by
Catholic artist Matthew R. Brooks done after the death of his grandfather in
2009.[231] There are also names of his sons Romeo, Cruz and Brooklyn, name of
his wife Victoria, written in Hindi, because Beckham thought it would be "tacky"
to have it in English. On his right shoulder, there's an angel with the text 'In
the face of adversity'.[231] Another tattoo is a Bible verse written in Hebrew,
reads אנילדודיודודיליהרעהבשושנים,
translated into: "I am my beloved's, and my beloved is mine, that shepherds
among the lilies." In 2004 Beckham added the four-by-six-inch "winged cross"
neck tattoo prior to England's three-nation tournament soccer match against
Japan in the City of Manchester Stadium.[231][232] In his autobiography "David
Beckham: My Side", Becks reveals some of his thoughts on tattoos: "The idea came
to me much later, a little while after Brooklyn was born. I was talking to Mel B
and her then-husband, Jimmy Gulzar, and the subject of tattoos came up. I ended
up going to this Dutch guy who'd done all of Jimmy's. I'd finally realised what
I wanted a tattoo to represent. Mine are all about the people in my life, my
wife and sons, who I want with me always. When you see me, you see the tattoos.
You see an expression of how I feel about Victoria and the boys. They're part of
me."[232]
See
also
Franchise player
List of current MLS players
References
Books
Beckham, David (2002). David
Beckham: My Side. HarperCollinsWillow. ISBN 0-00-715732-0).
Beckham, David; Freeman, Dean
(2001). Beckham: My World. Hodder & Stoughton Ltd. ISBN 978-0-340-79270-4).
Beckham, David; Watt, Tom (2003).
Beckham: Both Feet on the Ground. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-06-057093-4).
Crick, Michael (2003). The Boss –
The Many Sides of Alex Ferguson. Pocket Books. ISBN 978-0-7434-2991-7).
Ferguson, Alex; McIlvanney, Hugh
(1999). Managing My Life – My Autobiography. Hodder & Stoughton. ISBN
978-0-340-72855-0).
Wahl, Grant (2009). The Beckham
Experiment: How the World's Most Famous Athlete Tried to Conquer America. Crown.
ISBN 978-0-307-40859-4).
Internet
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2008.
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Sport. 13 June 2003. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/2988104.stm.
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3.^ "David Beckham – Rise of a
footballer". BBC. 19 August 2003. http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/h2g2/A1138600.
Retrieved 9 September 2008.
4.^ a b "Beckham reaches new caps
landmark". BBC Sport (British Broadcasting Corporation). 28 March 2009. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/7970172.stm.
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5.^ a b c d "Los Angeles Galaxy:
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BBC Sport. 18 September 2003.
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2008.
7.^ "Beckham bows out with Liga
title". BBC Sport. 17 June 2007.
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September 2008.
8.^ Bandini, Paolo (11 January
2007). "Beckham confirms LA Galaxy move". The Guardian (London).
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9.^ "MLS Cup - Landon Donovan's
goal powers Galaxy to third MLS title - ESPN". Espn.go.com. 2011-11-21.
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11.^ "Beckham quits as England
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2007). "Beckham rejected Milan and Inter to take Galaxy millions". The
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20.^ "Britain's rich list – David
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2009.
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22.^ "Blame yourself Posh,
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2007). "Beckham launches into the Galaxy". The Guardian (London).
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2007.
28.^ Jewish funeral for Beckham's
grandfather, By Jessica Elgot, 10 December 2009
29.^ Births England and Wales
1837–2006
30.^ Beckham, David; Watt, Tom (21
October 2004). Beckham: Both Feet on the Ground. ISBN 9780060570941.
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32.^ "Second leg" refers to the
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matches are added together to determine the winner.
33.^ "Beckham's pride at OBE". BBC
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34.^ The most famous comment was
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Beckham scored United's goal (his first for them in the league) from a distance
of around 30 metres.
35.^ "Euro 96 stars going strong".
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36.^ Sky Sports' commentator Martin
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was voted Premier League Goal of the Decade in 2003.
37.^ "Beckham's Golden Boots".
rediff.com. 27 April 2004.
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40.^ "Fixture List for 1997/98
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sport/football/593905.stm. Retrieved 6 October 2005.
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43.^ Harris, Nick (6 September
2007). "Ferguson will never talk to the BBC again". The Independent (UK).
http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/football/news-and-comment/ferguson-will-never-talk-to-the-bbc-again-401487.html.
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44.^ "Did "hatchet man" target
Beckham?". ESPN Socernet, 2 April 2002.
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45.^ "Beckham signs new contract".
BBC News. 12 May 2002.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport3/worldcup2002/hi/team_pages/england/newsid_1976000/1976699.stm.
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46.^ "Man Utd play down Arsenal
rift". BBC News. 19 February 2003.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/football/teams/m/man_utd/2778985.stm.
47.^ Channel4.com 21 December
2008[dead link]
48.^ Goal.com 28 April 2009,
accessed 27 August 2009
49.^ Metro 28 April 2009 accessed
27 August 2009
50.^ Sport.co.uk
51.^ walesonline.co.uk
52.^ The Sun 27 March 2008
53.^ Roach, Stuart (18 February
2003). "Will Becks give Man Utd the boot?". BBC News.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/teams/m/man_utd/2775269.stm. Retrieved
6 October 2005.
54.^ "Beckham's pride at OBE". BBC
News. 13 June 2003. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/2988104.stm.
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55.^ Taylor, Daniel (11 June 2003).
"Beckham to stay in Spain". The Guardian (London).
http://football.guardian.co.uk/News_Story/0,,974864,00.html. Retrieved 24 May
2006.
56.^ Marcotti, Gabriele (12 June
2003). "Barcelona's bid for Man Utd star begs questions". CNNSI.com (London).
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Retrieved 3 March 2011.
57.^ Equivalent to, at the time,
£25 million or US$41 million.
58.^ "Beckham joins Real Madrid".
BBC. 18 June 2003. http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport2/hi/front_page/2998868.stm.
Retrieved 25 July 2010.
59.^ "Real unveil Beckham". BBC. 2
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60.^ Bolton, Sally (3 June 2003).
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2007.
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Leave behind for Asia?". China Daily. 215 August 2003.
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62.^ The Beckham Experiment, Grant
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European | Beckham bags Watford man". BBC News. 31 October 2003.
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2010.
64.^ 2003–04 Real Madrid
65.^ "Intruder alert for Victoria
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66.^ "FA wants explanation from
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Further
reading
Wahl, Grant (October 31, 2011).
"Beckham's Last Stand: In the fifth and final year of his MLS contract, he's
back at the top of his game at last. Now, as the 2011 playoffs begin, he and the
Galaxy look to stamp his American experiment a success by winning a
championship". Sports Illustrated. http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/vault/article/magazine/MAG1191594/index.htm.
Retrieved 2011-10-28. "'In [Major League Soccer] his ability to hold the ball in
that position and pass makes him unique,' says [coach Bruce] Arena. 'He's right
in the middle of things. In every game, he touches the ball the most of any
player.'"
* * * *
The
above biography has been copied in part or in whole
from an article on
Wikipedia.org
"The Free Encyclopedia." It has been modified under
the GNU Free Document License Section 5 in the
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