Previous Thread
Next Thread
Print Thread
Page 1 of 3 1 2 3
#75354 01/11/07 03:01 PM
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 5,659
Hurst66 Offline OP
world cup
OP Offline
world cup
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 5,659


Kids play sports because they find it fun. Eliminate the fun and soon you eliminate the kid.
Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 322
corner kick
Offline
corner kick
Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 322
Hurst,
Could be showing Real Madrid he has other options. Here the ESPN link:

http://soccernet.espn.go.com/index?cc=5901

Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 108
C
goal kick
Offline
goal kick
C
Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 108
No ?, it is done!! What a great opportunity for MLS and US soccer. What a package, it is reported to be $250M over 5 years!!!WOW...

Last edited by Crabb; 01/11/07 06:08 PM.
Joined: Dec 2005
Posts: 190
T
goal kick
Offline
goal kick
T
Joined: Dec 2005
Posts: 190
Coming to America
Beckham will play for MLS' L.A. Galaxy in $250M deal
Posted: Thursday January 11, 2007 10:19AM; Updated: Thursday January 11, 2007 11:08AM

LONDON (AP) -- David Beckham agreed to a five-year deal with the Los Angeles Galaxy of Major League Soccer, leaving the Real Madrid club at which he enjoyed worldwide popularity but experienced disappointment on the field.

Beckham, the former English captain who also starred for Manchester United, will join the Galaxy after his contract with Real Madrid expires on June 30. Los Angeles opens its season April 8 in Houston.

"I am proud to have played for two of the biggest clubs in football and I look forward to the new challenge of growing the world's most popular game in a country that is as passionate about its sport as my own," he said in a statement released Thursday.

The move was announced following the end of talks on extending the 31-year-old English midfielder's contract with the Spanish club. MLS recently changed its rules on salary caps, clearing the way for Beckham to sign a lucrative deal. British news reports put the Galaxy deal at $250 million.

"This week, Real Madrid asked me to make a decision regarding my future and the offer to extend my contract by a further two seasons," Beckham said in the statement. "After discussing several options with my family and advisers to either stay here at Madrid or join other major British and European clubs, I have decided to join the Los Angeles Galaxy and play in the MLS from August this year."

Beckham has soccer academies in London and Los Angeles. His wife Victoria, a former Spice Girl, was recently photographed househunting in Los Angeles.

"David Beckham will have a greater impact on soccer in America than any athlete has ever had on a sport globally," said Timothy J. Leiweke, president & CEO of Anschutz Entertainment Group, which owns the Galaxy. "David is truly the only individual that can build the bridge between soccer in America and the rest of the world."

Beckham joined Real Madrid in 2003 after a hugely successful run with Manchester United, where he won six league titles, two FA Cups and the Champions League title. But Beckham did not win a single major trophy with the Spanish club, and his spell coincided with Madrid's worst slump since the early 1950s.

Real Madrid has had six different coaches and three club presidents during Beckham's stay, but the club has made a fortune -- in part because of the star's position as a cultural icon for soccer fans and non-fans alike, including men, women and children of different ethnic and racial groups.

His marketability was emphasized by the hit movie "Bend It Like Beckham," even as his skills deteriorated with age.

Beckham's contract included a clause in which half his image rights would go to Real Madrid. That helped earn the club millions, allowing the Spanish team to overtake Manchester United as the biggest earner in world soccer.

Beckham led England to the quarterfinals of the World Cup last summer, scoring from a free kick in the second round to beat Ecuador 1-0. But he was taken off the field early in the second half against Portugal with ankle and Achilles tendon injuries, and then watched as his team was eliminated in a penalty shootout.

A day after the game, Beckham stepped down as captain of the team -- a post he had held for 58 of his 94 international appearances. Then, on Aug. 11, England coach Steve McClaren dropped Beckham from the team altogether, signaling the end of his international career.


-Attitude reflects leadership-
Joined: Jun 2002
Posts: 212
C
corner kick
Offline
corner kick
C
Joined: Jun 2002
Posts: 212
I don't think Beckman will carry the overall punch to soccer popularity that Pele carried but it is a good shot in the arm for soccer in America.

Joined: Jun 2002
Posts: 212
C
corner kick
Offline
corner kick
C
Joined: Jun 2002
Posts: 212
Here's another article http://news.skycom/skynews/article/0,,30000-13561369,00.html

Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 441
B
goal
Offline
goal
B
Joined: Feb 2003
Posts: 441
If he raises the profile of soccer in this country then $250 million will be a bargain...To me the difference between Beckham and Pele is that Beckham will appeal to the LA glitterati and hopefully LA Galaxy games will be the trendy place to be seen by aspiring Hollywood types much like a Lakers Game is now.

Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 2,427
coach
Offline
coach
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 2,427
Just what we needed - a Brit to save American soccer

http://www.nbcsports.com/sports/817777/detail.html

Joined: Feb 2002
Posts: 4,768
World Cup
Offline
World Cup
Joined: Feb 2002
Posts: 4,768
We'll take anybody seeing how we can't do it ourselves.

Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 1,147
H
brace
Offline
brace
H
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 1,147
with that type of money i wonder who will follow?

Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 104
goal kick
Offline
goal kick
Joined: Jan 2005
Posts: 104
This is a really good thing for soccer in America, the world cup result from 2002 caught peoples eye but then the disappointment from 2006 made the non-soccer players take their eye off of soccer again. Now that Beckham has come to America it will be another reason for the non-soccer players to get their eye back on soccer.


Liverpool are magic, Everton are tragic.
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 2,427
coach
Offline
coach
Joined: Mar 2004
Posts: 2,427
http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/news/breaking_news/16439472.htm

I think their will be more eyes on Victoria...........
It will just be a few glitzy years in LA for Beckham. I can't see any lasting effects on American soccer with just one star way out in LA. The fans in midwest and the east really won't care too much. It will be a big deal for a few years for MLS, and some soccer naysayers will see the salary and glitz and may be attracted to soccer for a while, but it will not last.

Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 306
Corner Kick
Offline
Corner Kick
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 306
Pele came to the US to a fledgling league. A new soccer city. A more niave fan base. We got something that baseball could not give us anymore. A romantic legendary hero in the likes of Mickey Mantle and Ted Williams. Man above men. The TV coverage most of us saw was Jim McKay and Wide World of Sports 3 minutes of video once a month.
Beckham will come to a MLS that is almost a teenager and endured the Adu frenzy. His role in LA may be very close to how Gretzky came to LA.
The bigger comparison is the Giorgio Chinaglia/Landon Donovan interplay.

Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 349
K
corner kick
Offline
corner kick
K
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 349
Do non-soccer fans really know/care about Beckham? We need Michael Jordan or Deion Sanders to come out of retirement and play soccer--or get a current dual sport athlete to play soccer in addition to their sport--Kobe Bryant, Vince Young, Randy Johnson, who knows...


History is a nightmare from which I am trying to awake.--James Joyce I don't care about history...cuz that's not where I wanna be--Joey Ramone
Joined: May 2005
Posts: 222
S
corner kick
Offline
corner kick
S
Joined: May 2005
Posts: 222
must be nice making a million dollars a year


formally known as the swanseawinger07
Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 1,457
F
Hat-Trick
Offline
Hat-Trick
F
Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 1,457
Swansea....go back and read again....1,000,000 per WEEK

Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 5,659
Hurst66 Offline OP
world cup
OP Offline
world cup
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 5,659
Bazza.....is that you?

Quote from article on espn soccernet:

Back in London, not everyone was impressed by Beckham's move.

"He's rubbish," said Steve Didcott, a consultant mulling the deal from a pub. "And if you're rubbish, you go to the States."


Kids play sports because they find it fun. Eliminate the fun and soon you eliminate the kid.
Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 322
corner kick
Offline
corner kick
Joined: Jul 2006
Posts: 322
More to read about the Beckham salary:


Debunking the myths behind Beckham's contract
Jen Chang, ESPNsoccernet
Archive

In the furor following the announcement that global soccer icon David Beckham has agreed to what appears to be a record-breaking $250 million, five-year contract with the L.A. Galaxy, most of the questions have centered quite rightfully on what Beckham will do for the league and how Major League Soccer will fund the deal (and perhaps bankrupt itself in the process).


Jun Sato/WireImage
The Beckham brand extends globally to places such as Japan.

The simple answer is that MLS and AEG won't actually pay for the contract -- at least not the bulk of it. AEG, a subsidiary of the Anschutz Company, helps ensure MLS' financial backing and owns the Chicago Fire, Houston Dynamo and Los Angeles Galaxy; when the league was founded, AEG owned most MLS teams.

On first glance, Beckham's deal appears to be the biggest contract in sports history (reportedly paying Beckham $50 million for 2007), dwarfing that of the heavy hitters and trendsetters in other major sports (MLB's Alex Rodriguez made $25 million in 2006 and the NBA's Kevin Garnett is making $21 million over the course of the '06-'07 season).

However, on closer inspection, one can see that the reported contract estimates have been carefully worded. AP reported that the Galaxy, citing industry experts, said the Beckham deal "is worth more than $250 million in salary and commercial endorsements." The key phrase to note here are the words "commercial endorsements" and not the word "salary." It's actually more an estimate of what people think he could potentially earn as opposed to what he will receive annually in paychecks from MLS and the Galaxy.

The reality is this: The salary portion of Beckham's deal is relatively minuscule compared to the huge figures being bandied around and is well in line with what most top soccer players around the world currently earn. Bear in mind also that Beckham probably decided only on Thursday to sign with MLS after Real Madrid's contract offer almost certainly would have required him to take a pay cut (this is conjecture, though, since the details of his negotiations with Real Madrid have not been made public).

A league source confirmed to ESPNsoccernet's Kristian Dyer two weeks ago that the offer on the table from MLS to Beckham was a four-year deal worth $36 million (at $9 million annually). Reuter's Michelle Nichols reported Thursday that MLS sources say his annual playing income is only in the "single figure millions." Even if MLS upped its original annual salary offer, the logical assumption is that it would only be by a few additional million or so per year.

Since Beckham is reportedly making $6 million to $7 million per year with Real, paying anywhere from a $2 million to $4 million premium to land him is just smart business.

This being the case, remember this: According to the Designated Player Rule, MLS is on the hook for only $400,000 of Beckham's salary, with AEG and the Galaxy stumping up the remaining $8 million to $10 million of Beckham's annual salary.

So where exactly is the remaining $39 million to $40 million a year coming from?

The simple answer is endorsements and creative clauses stemming from Beckham agreeing to play in MLS. It's rumored that adidas will be paying an additional $5 million to $6 million a year just to sponsor the Galaxy's jersey, ironic since they already manufacture them. If that doesn't tell the story of Beckham's endorsement appeal, nothing else will -- and presumably Beckham will get a cut of that fee.

"Most of the value is from David's worldwide endorsement," MLS deputy commissioner Ivan Gazidis told Reuters on Thursday. "That's a separate deal. That's his deal with CAA [Creative Artists Agency] and 19 Entertainment. That's not something we're involved in."

19 Entertainment, for those of you who don't know, is Simon Fuller's company. The same Simon Fuller who created and owns the rights to the "American Idol" and "Pop Idol" phenomenon. He's also the one-time guiding mentor behind the success of the Spice Girls and the former Posh Spice herself, Victoria Beckham.

It doesn't take a genius to figure out that as part of the lure to draw Beckham to MLS, one can assume the Beckhams will be given a varied array of choices in film and TV with which to conquer America. Whether this will result in the much-mooted talk show for Posh, a "Beckhams" reality TV show or Victoria's addition to the "American Idol" judge panel, one can only wonder. However, it's clear that a large portion of that additional $40 million or so annually factors in the prospective TV and film platforms.

Endorsement-wise, the figure also probably contains the values of any proposed deals that Beckham will sign pending his arrival in MLS. Again, it's pretty safe to conclude that certain domestic U.S. brands will only have agreed to use Beckham as an advertising spokesman if he's actually here in MLS.

The exact parameters of his deal are still undisclosed and MLS has so far been unwilling to comment specifically, but there might also be language in the contract about Beckham's percentage of gate receipts or commission from shirt sales.

There's no doubt there are clauses about Beckham's image rights, the source of much contention with Real Madrid who wanted to retain 50 percent control over his rights in any new deal. Presumably the Galaxy agreed to take a lesser portion of his image rights, or even ceded Beckham total control over his image rights. Perhaps AEG has lined up additional investors willing to invest in Beckham's soccer academy project.

It's hard to put an exact dollar amount on all of this without knowing the specifics, but it's clear at this point that the bulk of his $250 million deal factors in external elements outside of MLS and AEG that are contributing to the total valuation. Clearly the $250 million figure being bandied about is just another example of the clever marketing machine behind the Beckham brand, designed to raise the profile of Beckham and the MLS deal even further.

Case in point: When the NBA's Cleveland Cavaliers signed high school phenom LeBron James in 2003, they signed him to a three-year deal that paid him $12.96 million. If James' advisors used the same creative license that Beckham's advisors have done, they could easily have factored in James' reported $90 million shoe deal with Nike at the time and other various endorsements (such as Sprite) and reported that James had signed a deal "estimated to be worth up to $120 million-plus, richest ever for a teenager in sports history."

This being the case, the naysayers can stop panicking about the inevitable ruination of MLS finances. Yes, MLS will continue to pursue other high-profile players in the wake of the Beckham deal, but as in the case of the Beckham deal, they'll proceed with fiscal prudence and won't break the bank to get them.

"The league will continue to operate on a sensible stage," said Jon Oram of Proskauer Rose, one of the two lawyers who worked on the Beckham contract. Mention the possibility of player unrest and any potential labor dispute as a result of Beckham's salary, and it's something the league has already taken into account.

"Our labor lawyers have consulted with MLS, and [Beckham's contract] has been thoroughly vetted in that respect," said Brad Ruskin, who also worked on the deal.

So what does it all mean? No doubt there may be a jealous player or someone out to make his name who could choose to take an in-game swipe at Beckham, but it's hardly a situation Beckham hasn't already faced elsewhere in the world. The reality is that most MLS players are smart enough to realize that in the long run, the Beckham deal will probably mean more money for them all. As for MLS? Given the true rationale behind the figures, it's safe to assume the league or the Galaxy won't be bankrupting themselves anytime soon over this deal.

Jen Chang is the U.S. editor for ESPNsoccernet. He can be reached at: armchairsweeper@gmail.com.

Joined: May 2005
Posts: 222
S
corner kick
Offline
corner kick
S
Joined: May 2005
Posts: 222
my mistake thats what i meant


formally known as the swanseawinger07
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 417
goal
Offline
goal
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 417
Looks a lot like Becks will be far busier off the field than he will be on it. How the MLS can say that Beckham will be a "jolt in the arm" of their sport is beyond me when they are bringing in the likes of Beckham for silly money when they are selling their own young talented players like Clint Dempsey, DeMarcus Beasley and Freddy "35 years old" Adu, who was recently on a trial with Manchester United. These are the players who are the future of your league NOT European "stars" who are only there for a final pay-day in the sun and to copperfasten massive support for their camps!!


Andrew Foley Head Coach Mens Soccer National University of Ireland, Maynooth
Joined: Mar 2005
Posts: 427
S
goal
Offline
goal
S
Joined: Mar 2005
Posts: 427
And then the MLS gets crap for not allowing their young stars to play on the biggest stage. The MLS is trying to secure the future of their league. This will give the MLS a so called crossover attraction from non-soccer fans with the hope that they will become true soccer loving fans and spend their dollars. The players mentioned above all desire to change leagues to improve themself both competitively and financially. The hope is that because of the Beckham deal future home grown stars such as those will make bigger bucks here at home at want to stay at home. The MLS is improving the brand recognition while protecting themselves against catastrophic financial collapse as the Cosmos.

Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 417
goal
Offline
goal
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 417

Do you really think that he's going to attract very many new fans to the game? He hasn't been able to get a shirt for Madrid in I don't know how long and he's been binned from the England team... player in decline moves to league in denial. Send us Terrell Owens or Tom Brady, see if it improves the EFL... eh... I don't think it would!!

You MUST keep your young talent at home, the next stage of this argument is Americans who love the game and have supported the MLS and its predecessors are left wondering why they have to travel to Europe to watch the cream of American talent ply their trade.


Andrew Foley Head Coach Mens Soccer National University of Ireland, Maynooth
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 16
M
bench
Offline
bench
M
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 16
Sure Beckham will put butts in the stands the first season or so.... But the game will still get little coverage by national media...Why not put $250 million into youth soccer and in 10 years we could have a REAL chance at a World Cup?


You are so beautiful, you should be guarded by Monkeys.
Joined: Mar 2005
Posts: 427
S
goal
Offline
goal
S
Joined: Mar 2005
Posts: 427
Is it the MLS's job to win the world cup? You are really comparing apples and oranges when comparing the $250 for Beckham and investing in youth sports. When you get down into the numbers most of his money comes from endorsements. He should be able to raise the awareness of soccer thus hopefully solidifying the MLS for years to come. I am not saying that the MLS will be able to compete with the big 3 sports in the USA but they will be a league that is able to sustain it self. If I am not mistaken the league is just starting to allow the club teams to sponsor/build youth teams. So the investment in youth soccer will come in a more planned way than dropping $25 a year into youth sports.

Joined: May 2003
Posts: 16
M
bench
Offline
bench
M
Joined: May 2003
Posts: 16
The MLS will never be a league respected worldwide if we become a "rest home" for Europe's players. And as mentioned earlier, bringing in big names has been tried. All I am saying is he is not going to be the Savior the American soccer establishment hopes for. Deveolping good home grown players and keeping them...that is where the $ is needed and a difference can be made.


You are so beautiful, you should be guarded by Monkeys.
Page 1 of 3 1 2 3

Link Copied to Clipboard
Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.5
(Release build 20201027)
Responsive Width:

PHP: 5.4.45 Page Time: 0.098s Queries: 64 (0.028s) Memory: 3.3650 MB (Peak: 3.7053 MB) Data Comp: Off Server Time: 2024-05-03 01:16:00 UTC
Valid HTML 5 and Valid CSS