Home > Football > American dream or nightmare? Now David Beckham must overcome the US media setting him up to fail
by Ty Duffy on 14 July 2007
Email this Article (7) Comments
Free £10 bet when you register at
Here is the caption on ESPN.com for David Beckham's arrival in the United States:
The day MLS officials have been waiting for is here: David Beckham as front man for the LA Galaxy. The English soccer star's goal: to make soccer as popular in the US as it is everywhere else in the world. 'He will not revolutionise the sporting culture in America. What he will do is attract some who would not otherwise be interested in the sport, to see what it is all about'
The day MLS officials have been waiting for is here: David Beckham as front man for the LA Galaxy. The English soccer star's goal: to make soccer as popular in the US as it is everywhere else in the world.
Writing often indicates more about the author than it does about the subject at hand. This simple caption, coined flippantly by an anonymous writer, says much about how the US media will shift this story to conform to a pre-set narrative; that Beckham will be a disappointment and a failure.
The first part of the sentence describes this as what "MLS officials have been waiting for." The diction and tone implies that MLS has been steadily preparing for this day since its inception, and that all MLS activity has led to this pinnacle, which will make or break it (like the NASL with Pele).
MLS, in fact, has created a conservative, but most importantly, stable financial set-up. They have been steadily attracting new investment, and moving teams into soccer-only facilities. They have a nationally televised Thursday Night match on ESPN2 in HD. Though not having the media coverage, most clubs have a solid base of support, with hardcore groups like The Screaming Eagles and La Barra Brave in Washington, Section 8 in Chicago, and Raging Bull Nation in New York arising organically. Formed from nothing in a hostile environment, MLS is actually doing rather well for itself.
Beckham is neither the fruition of the league's efforts nor a bellwether for its future success. The league is doing fine for itself without him. They brought him in not out of need, but because it makes financial sense. Beckham, if not the most recognisable athlete in the world, is at least in the top five. Anytime you can bring in a person like that, you do it, without question. It's similar to Tiger Woods and the PGA Tour. The Tour does not need Tiger, but having him sure makes a lot of people a lot of money. Beckham is there to attract interest and money, not make or break the league.
Looking at that caption again, Beckham is the "front-man" for L.A. Galaxy. He is not the midfielder or leading player, but the front-man. This again implies that he is a rock-star rather than a legitimate athlete. He is a showman without any substance. The usual follow-up to this from American sportswriters is the whole "overrated" argument. Yes, his star power is greater than his playing ability, but that doesn't mean he isn't a very good player. He just won the title in La Liga (depending on one's taste, the best league in the world) with Real Madrid (arguably the biggest club in the world). Aston Villa dumpee Juan Pablo Angel is now an MVP candidate in MLS. Beckham should be able to do pretty well on the pitch and live up to some of his hype.
There is his alleged goal as well - "to make soccer as popular in the US as it is everywhere else in the world." Why has this automatically been deemed by most of the American Sports Media as the benchmark for success? Why does Beckham have to do the impossible and supplant over 100 years of sports tradition in America to be successful?
He will not revolutionise the sporting culture in America. What he will do is attract some who would not otherwise be interested in the sport, to see what it is all about. He will cause a spike in attendance, viewership, and merchandise sales. He will probably get them a better TV deal. He will most likely increase the sport's presence and highlight coverage on Sportscenter. He will bring more sponsors, and more money into the league. He has spawned scions and wannabe moguls throughout European football, so his experience might attract some more stars to come to the States and give it a go as well. Those are fairly realistic expectations. If he doesn't convert the entire nation into rabid soccer nuts, he isn't a success.
It is a self-fulfilling prophecy. If the bar for Beckham is set so high that it is completely unattainable, then he will be viewed as a failure. It will confirm their pre-conceived perceptions that soccer is somehow "abhorrent" to American values, whatever those are. This will provide great fodder for the sceptical and ignorant sportswriters like Jim Rome to pontificate about how Middle America will never accept such a foreign, femmy, and middle-class (in the US) sport and will serve their egos, allowing them to claim that they were right all along.
The reality is that most of us in the States are not "Middle Americans." We have an incredibly diverse population, which manifests itself in sporting taste. Beckham should not be perceived as a battering ram banging against the locked door of the American colossus in a zero-sum game of sports popularity. Viewing him on this macro-plane creates a self-fulfilling narrative that dooms him to failure. He should be viewed as what he is, an attraction that can increase the persona and public profile of Major League Soccer and perhaps the sport in general. If he does that, than he has been a success.
Comments (7)
by V Wilson on July 14, 2007
Poor Becks!!! Hewill beplying his trade in front of an ignorant nation where 99% of the populace have never watched nor been to a footy match. His abilities will not be valued as great because of the American obsession for excitement. This equates into goals, and lets face it, Beckham doesn't score many of them. He is a playmaker and service is his greatest asset. This will not be noticed by ignorant Americans who feel a layer with this much hype should be bulging the old onion bag at least one per game. Beckham has made a wonderful financial move for himself and his family but from a football playing perspective I would compare it to a Manchester United regular deciding to play in the 4th Division for a team like Blackpool (apologies to all Blackpool fans). This was a move to cash in on his name and image and all the licensed millions he and the league will make over his image. What he does on the pitch is pretty insignificant.
by Shawn on July 14, 2007
The article's headlines wasn't anything what I thought the content would be. The editors who think up headlines on this website need to stop misleading readers, this isn't the first time. By the way, nice article.
by hana on July 14, 2007
i love beckham!!!!
by ChrisAskey on July 16, 2007
Beckham needs to learn how to speak English to make it in America.. Over that side of the pond they are used to eloquent sports stars, not the bumbling "Yer know" morons that typify the EPL. He won't be able to make it on looks alone. The US public will realize pretty quickly that he has problems putting a decent sentence together and I think he will become a target for the media because of his lack of verbal finesse. I don't think he realizes what is in store for him, which is a pity because he had a wonderful season as a sportsman.
by Shane Robinson on July 16, 2007
Eloquent sports stars? Are you serious? Half of the NFL are from the projects and still have connections with crime lords. There are a lot of them white trash too so the vast majority of them are in fact, not eloquent. In fact, you re completely wrong. Nice to see you have turned on a player who did so much for United. Typical United turncoat
by tyduffy on July 16, 2007
Chris could you name some of these so-called eloquent sports stars in the U.S.? I don't think that Beckham is really that bumbling at all. The fact that he has a working class accent would probably actually help him if it had any affect at all in the States because it is perceived as an upper class sport. There are many unreasonable expectations that we place upon our athletes, good grammar is not one of them.
by Shane Robinson on July 18, 2007
He'll be fine, as long as he gets rid of that pouting coat stand things will be hunky dorey. She really landed on here feet there, pity really. Had Beckham not married here she could well be long gone and have left us alone. Becks has come through challenges and adversity before with flying colours. Odds on him to be banging some LA lady before Christmas??
Add your comment here
PERSONAL ABUSE WILL NOT BE TOLERATED
First Name
Last Name
Email
Heading
Display your favourite sport or football team badge with your comment.
Sport
League
Team
Comment *
Please enter the text you see in the picture into the textbox below. *
Dwight Howard ready to wave his Magic wand in the NBA
Why Arsenal kid Walcott doesn't play for England U21s and Aston Villa's Milner won't go any further...
Self-destruction time as Lewis Hamilton and Felipe Massa pay Formula One penalty in Japan
Arsenal Champions League Chelsea Cricket news Euroleague Fantasy football Football news Formula 1 Liverpool Manchester United NBA Newcastle United Premier League Sports news Tottenham Hotspur Transfer rumours Twenty20 UEFA UEFA Champions League
© SportBuzz All rights reserved 2008 Sportingo- Sports News & Sports Articles site. Sportingo delivers fresh sports news and analysis by fans-Football News, Tennis News, Rugby Union News, Rugby League, Cricket News, Cycling News, Basketball News and other Sports TV. XML Sitemap 2008.