Beckham to continue quest for membership of 100 club
LONDON: David Beckham has vowed to continue his quest to win a century of caps for England under whomever succeeds Steve McClaren as head coach.
The 32-year-old midfielder made his 99th international appearance as a second-half substitute in England's 3-2 loss to Croatia on Wednesday night, and his decision to linger on the pitch after the final whistle suggested he was aware that he may have graced the Wembley turf for the final time.
But afterwards, the LA Galaxy star insisted he still believed he could continue until the 2010 World Cup finals in South Africa and made it clear he had no intention of retiring from the international stage.
"Without a doubt, I'm not retiring," Beckham said. "I said that the moment I was taken out of the team and the moment I came back into the team. I'm not stepping down."
Beckham's international obituary has been written before. There appeared to be no way back for him when, in the wake of the 2006 World Cup, McClaren decided that his first significant act as England manager would be to drop the country's biggest star.
Many players would have opted to retire at that stage but Beckham swallowed the blow to his pride and his subsequent form for Real Madrid forced McClaren to recall him at the end of last season.
A lack of match fitness - which was evident in his hour-long appearance in a friendly in Austria on Friday - ensured Beckham started Wednesday's match on the bench.
But having been introduced at the start of the second half, he underlined his continuing value to any team he plays for by delivering an exquisitely precise cross for Peter Crouch to level the score at 2-2 with 25 minutes left.
At that stage it appeared Beckham was set to grab a share of the plaudits for helping to lift England off the floor, but it was denied the point it needed to qualify by Mladen Petric's long-range winner for the Croatians.
The loss resulted in McClaren being sacked yesterday and Beckham's bid for 100 caps will now be left in the hands of Martin O'Neill, Jose Mourinho or whomever emerges as the successor to the former Middlesbrough boss.
"We are disappointed as a team and obviously the nation will be disappointed about not qualifying," Beckham said. "There's not much more you can say. If you don't win games you don't qualify."
AFP
(China Daily 11/23/2007 page24)