Beckham on Loan to Milan: Two Views

By: Laurie | October 22nd, 2008


The latest rumor coming from the AC Milan camp is that David Beckham will be coming to Milan on loan in January — not just to train with the club, but to play with them competitively for several months. There are some rumors that Milan would like to make this a permanent move.

So what is this? A shrewd (and temporary) way to stoke the Beckham flame again? Or an admission of failure? Or bits of both?

Two Offside views:


From Daryl:

David Beckham joining AC Milan on loan is a win-win-win situation.

David Beckham wins because he gets to play in a big European league again, if only for a short time. Assuming Beckham does OK (and his set pieces alone should guarantee some sort of impact) it’s a chance for him to prove he can still do the business, as well as prove to Fabio Capello that he’s still worth his place in the England squad.

AC Milan wins because the club gets a quality (if no longer top quality) footballer on loan for free. The club will probably make a tidy profit on shirt sales by signing a superstar, but Carlo Ancelotti won’t be under pressure to start Beckham if he doesn’t feel it’s necessary. As Beckham’s proved with England, his temperament and impact from the bench (again, set pieces) make him a very useful squad player.

Finally, LA Galaxy and MLS win. You’d think these are the two organizations with the most to lose, but (provided Becks doesn’t get injured) they have plenty to gain. And it’s mostly to do with Beckham’s reputation. The shine has dulled a little now that Goldenballs has settled LA, and the idea of Beckham being semi-retired in California doesn’t help MLS’s reputation at all. But seeing Beckham in Serie A will re-invigorate the footballing department of Brand Beckham (which is still the most important part, whatever anyone says). And a stronger Brand Beckham means a stronger Brand MLS when he plays in the league.


From Laurie:

The MLS DP Experiment Crashes and Burns

Remember, about year and a half ago, when David Beckham was going to save American soccer? It was going to happen. Everybody swore. He would use his skills and celebrity to take the game to the next level, and all we fans had to do was sit back and watch it happen.

The rules were changed to bring him in. The salary cap was jettisoned, at least for one player per team. (Or two, if you were the LA Galaxy.) Tournament rules were bent or created on the fly to benefit Becks and Co. And hundreds of thousands of jerseys and seats were sold. MLS was on its way to credibility and legitimacy!

But…not so fast.

The Beckham-to-Milan loan is at heart a recognition that MLS can’t cut it yet. Bringing Beckham to MLS has been a bit like bringing a Ferrari to a city that only has unpaved, potholed roads. How can you take advantage of the power it offers when the infrastructure isn’t there?

Start with the salary cap that’s prevented the Galaxy from surrounding Beckham with players who could make the most of his skills. Add in the single entity ownership that made making changes akin to steering the Titanic. Toss in the league’s refusal to recognize that international games exist, let alone that they should break for them…

The league’s reach exceeded its grasp.

And so Milan is standing in the wings, waving provocatively, cooing, “David, they don’t appreciate you. They can’t love you the way we will. Come to us. We’ll treat you right.” (Because all those other past-their-prime superstars — Ronaldo! Shevchenko! Ronaldinho! — haven’t provided quite enough luster or sold quite enough tickets. Maybe Beckham will be the one.)

And what about Beckham? Even healthy and fit, he couldn’t guide the Galaxy to the playoffs this year. Yes, appalling management decisions played into it, but in the end Beckham didn’t get the job done. Like the rest of the team, he started strong and flamed out.

I suppose we can’t blame him for wanting to go to a solid team in a solid league, to prove that, at 33, he’s still got it.

It’s just that I expected more.

(Thanks to The Mirror, via Football Fashion for the photoshopping creativity.)



The Offside Soccer ForumsTeam/International ResultsBet on Soccer games Buy Soccer TicketsTravel to soccer games


Category Category: MLS, World Football

Subscribe
 

rss_icon The Offside RSS Feeds

Print
Print article
Share
del.icio.us:Beckham on Loan to Milan:  Two Views digg:Beckham on Loan to Milan:  Two Views reddit:Beckham on Loan to Milan:  Two Views fark:Beckham on Loan to Milan:  Two Views Y!:Beckham on Loan to Milan:  Two Views stumbleupon:Beckham on Loan to Milan:  Two Views

Comments  

  • mele419 |  October 22nd, 2008 at 3:22 pm

    cornercorner

    Absolutely not. It would be horrible for Milan as a team and it would show that the MLS really can’t cut it.

    Posted from United States United States

    cornercorner
  • Nolan |  October 22nd, 2008 at 3:28 pm

    cornercorner

    Wouldn’t a midfield of Pirlo, Beckham, and Ronaldinho be like the slowest thing ever?

    Posted from Canada Canada

    cornercorner
  • Wayne |  October 22nd, 2008 at 3:34 pm

    cornercorner

    Milan have a horrible habit lately of buying the oldies. But Becks is still a good player, he’s as slow as Christmas but can still do a job. I do think that although it’s not necessarily a sign that the MLS experiment has crashed and burned, the MLS simply isn’t enough for Becks. He, Milan and Cappelo know that he’s too good for the MLS. I can see this being a permanent deal.

    Posted from

    cornercorner
  • Rob |  October 22nd, 2008 at 3:37 pm

    cornercorner

    Its not as if Milan are short on FK and CK takers really with Pirlo and The Dinho. Having said that, I do think i agree more with Daryl here – though I can totally understand Laurie’s worry, if I was an MLS fan I would probably be worried he’d leave for good. I don’t think he will though, he’ll probably just come on loan every winter for the next few years.

    Unless the MLS changes its calender to fit the rest of the world, so Beckham can’t do that sort of thing…

    Posted from

    cornercorner
  • areallaticfromthesouth |  October 22nd, 2008 at 4:31 pm

    cornercorner

    Yep its true. As the MLS season finshes on Sunday DB has to do something to keep in himself fit and in the England frame, especially Mr Capello.

    Who will pay his wages though?

    Posted from United Kingdom United Kingdom

    cornercorner
  • roberto |  October 22nd, 2008 at 4:36 pm

    cornercorner

    Beckham doesn’t make any sense. So he went to MLS in the first place just for the money for sure now, right Becks?

    Posted from

    cornercorner
  • MoMONEY |  October 22nd, 2008 at 5:05 pm

    cornercorner

    Ladies and gentlemen the truth is the MLS cant cut it… Its a joke to even call if soccer if you watch any games… No flow no tempo or creativity… Some decently trained players but no one who is a pure footballer (De Rosario is the closest)… Despite its best efforts and those of the media the MLS is still third rate soccer… Beckham gave it its moment in the spotlight but everyone is now realizing what the league is…

    Posted from United States United States

    cornercorner
  • gianfranco |  October 22nd, 2008 at 5:49 pm

    cornercorner

    Just a few points to make, Becks has always been slow as XMAS and his age has not really changed that fact. MLS is not a failure or third rate and it is views like that which keep this league in the shadows. If DB leaves then this experiment is not a failure, it is just step in contuing to build the league stronger each and every year. Can we say the millions of Galaxy jerseys sold, or the thousands of asses in seats was a failure, NO! With the inclusion of Barcelona and now linking Milan to MLS to Becks to the Galaxy can only continue to grow the MLS in the right diretion.

    Being an American soccer fan and saying the league is second rate is only keeping the league down, take a minute, be a fan and see how quickly your view changes when you vest some interest in your local club, favorite player, heck just stroll over to the MLS pages here at the offside and see just how passionate this league can become…

    Posted from United States United States

    cornercorner
  • MoMONEY |  October 22nd, 2008 at 6:07 pm

    cornercorner

    I have definitely tried man but it is no good pretending is it? The truth is that the quality of soccer in America is very poor. I would venture to say that its in the best interest of the other sports that it stay that way so I think there could be some intricacies to the reasoning but in the end its not good soccer… For the league to become successful the quality of the game needs to improve, then the players will be more well known then we can compete on a international level. I have no doubt that there are tons of diehard fans in the MLS but it is annoying when these fans start to believe all the media BS about how good the league is… Lets se some action instead of all of this talk… And I dont mean just signing one big name from europe

    Posted from United States United States

    cornercorner
  • Andersen |  October 22nd, 2008 at 7:13 pm

    cornercorner

    Bad for MLS. He isn’t going to be fit for the beginning of MLS in April/May (whenever he comes back) to play the marathon 1.5 years straight.

    Posted from United States United States

    cornercorner
  • BC |  October 22nd, 2008 at 8:29 pm

    cornercorner

    Considering he trained with Arsenal during last off season, I don’t think this is much different. He wants to maintain a place (as supersub) in the England squad, and Capello flat out said he needed to be playing actively to do that or he would not be chosen. Milan has shown interest and appreciation before and may allow him some playing time as well. Doesn’t seem much different than last year except that he may get some time on the pitch in. This seems a lot better for him than sitting around this winter thinking about how bad the last Galaxy season was.

    Anyway, unless this becomes permanent, it seems like he just wants to stay relevant in international football.

    Posted from United States United States

    cornercorner
  • Chubby |  October 23rd, 2008 at 5:49 am

    cornercorner

    Maybe they will change some rules in Italy too, to accommodate Beckham, like 5 subs or a designated sub. LOL

    Posted from

    cornercorner
  • travis |  October 23rd, 2008 at 8:25 am

    cornercorner

    I don’t think it’s fair to dub it a failure upon the MLS. The league has made major strides – just look at how good the finishing is becoming. It is by no means a top league, but I think it isn’t fair to call it a third rate league. Second rate? Definitely. Beckham probably didn’t realize he had much of a future with the England side when he made the move – now he must be kicking himself for moving, because the November-March break that the MLS takes is killer. The real problem here is the scheduling, due to the fact the MLS would be dead in the water if it was trying to compete with the NFL, and to a lesser extent, college football. Those two bigger sports prevent it from having a similar calender as the rest of the major soccer leagues do. And the fact that a team like AC Milan, one of the best known and well respected in the world, wanted a player like him, even after a season and a half in LA, speaks a bit to the league – if NO one wanted him, then you’d call it a failure, sucked away his skill, etc.

    Posted from United States United States

    cornercorner
  • Gianfranco |  October 23rd, 2008 at 7:29 pm

    cornercorner

    Travis a team like the Revs couldnt play in February in Boston…they would freeze.

    Posted from United States United States

    cornercorner

Comments are closed


World Cup 2010 News
Offside RSS Feeds

Search The Offside


 

rounded_corners









Categories


rounded_corners

Send Your Tips!

Found a great story, photo or video that's perfect for The Offside?
Email tips[at]theoffside[dot]com

Related Links


Write for The Offside

LATEST COMMENTS


Archives