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‘Beckham must deliver’

Los Angeles: Now that the glitz, glamour and red-carpet reception is out of the way, David Beckham needs to show he can deliver the goods on the football field, America’s newspapers have said.

An explosion of confetti and booming rock music greeted Beckham’s unveiling at the LA Galaxy’s Home Depot Center stadium, where about 5,000 fans packed stands to witness what officials described as a “historic” day.

Beckham’s introduction made the front page of the Los Angeles Times and was the splash story on the sports pages.

“At heart, Beckham is still a kid from a working class family in London’s east side and marvels at his good fortune every day,” the Times wrote.

“He is insistent about teaching his three sons to say please and thank you ... he’s serious about succeeding at this business of getting Americans to embrace his sport.”

Coverage in the Times ran over two pages under the main banner: “Beckham dives right in”.

‘Biggest star’

Beckham, who helped lead Real Madrid to a Spanish league title in June, has signed a $5.5 million deal with the Galaxy which could potentially reach $250 million over five years in profit-sharing and sponsor deals.

The Orange County Register headlined with “Biggest star in the Galaxy” while the Long Beach Press Telegram triumphed “Thousands greet Beckham in Carson”.

The Press Telegram compared Beckham’s arrival to that of Fab Four in the 1960s, calling it a “Beatleseque invasion of America”.

Many U.S. papers mentioned Beckham’s uneasiness with using the American term soccer instead of football. USA Today said the verdict was still out on whether Beckham was indeed a soccer saviour who could transform football in A merica from a marginal sport to major league status.

“Whether the ticket and jersey-buying public will be as interested as the media to take notice of Beckham’s entry into the American soccer scene will ultimately determine whether this move was a watershed moment for a once-struggling professional sports league or just another failed attempt to get Americans on the soccer bandwagon,” wrote USA Today.

Meanwhile, the selling of David Beckham in America got off to a brisk start on Friday with fans snapping up his new soccer jersey and his first game already sold out.

Adidas has shipped 250,000 of Beckham’s No. 23 jersey to stores in the last few days.

“They’re a little surprised,” said Tim Leiweke of AEG, the Los Angeles Galaxy’s parent company. “They knew it would be good, they didn’t think it would be that good.”

Beckham gets an undisclosed percentage of every $80 (euro58) jersey sold, with Major League Soccer also sharing in the profits. The Galaxy only makes money if jerseys are bought at its team store at Home Depot Center.

 
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