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April 14, 2011

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Beckham's US adventure ending with a whimper

AFTER five years of false starts David Beckham will finally make his Toronto Major League soccer debut when the Los Angeles Galaxy make an early season visit to play the Toronto FC.

But Beckham's Canadian MLS unveiling might also be his swan song as the former England captain's five-year North American adventure is set to conclude at the end of the season.

"I'm happy to be back in Toronto, I've been here a few times and really enjoyed it," a smiling Beckham told reporters on Tuesday. "The few times I've been here I enjoyed myself."

When Beckham announced his signing with the Galaxy in 2007, it sent shivers of excitement throughout hockey-mad Canada and triggered a spike in season ticket sales for a Toronto soccer franchise that had yet to play a game.

Within hours of the announcement that Beckham joined the Galaxy in a US$250 million deal, Toronto FC said they received thousands of calls and sold hundreds of season tickets.

Now, in the last year of his contract, Beckham will finally play his first MLS game in Toronto but likely not before the same adoring crowd that greeted him during the 2008 MLS All-Star game in Toronto when Beckham-mania was at its peak.

Vanished

In the half-decade since leaving Spanish giants Real Madrid to conquer the MLS, much of the Beckham buzz has vanished.

The hundreds of media, many from around the globe, that had flocked to Toronto in 2007 to watch the celebrity midfielder sit at the end of the Galaxy bench in a designer suit in an injury-aborted MLS debut, have not returned.

The special accreditation and presidential-type security in place for Beckham's massive media briefing five years ago had slimmed down on Tuesday to one handler, a half-dozen television cameras and a handful of local media in a small conference room in the basement of a downtown hotel.

What impact Beckham has had on growing the sport is less certain as MLS attendance and television ratings have remained flat over his first four years.

Still, Beckham did not hesitate to label his MLS stint a success, pointing to franchises in Vancouver, Seattle, Montreal and Portland that sprouted up during his stay and the trickle of big names to North America like France's Thierry Henry.

"The (level of play) has definitely gone up," said Beckham. "If you look at how improved team performance is and the way the league has gone, the way franchises that have come into the league.

"Things have improved the last few years, especially when you've got players like Thierry Henry coming into the league it can only do good for the sport in this country."

 

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