The Star Early Edition

Brand Beckham set to top the earnings league

- IAN BURRELL

TWO YEARS after quitting football, David Beckham is challengin­g Michael Jordan’s position as the world’s highest-earning retired sports star.

Beckham ranks second only to the US basketball legend in the list of best-remunerate­d retired athletes, making $75 million last year, compared with the former Chicago Bulls player’s $100m.

Now the Englishman is reconfigur­ing his business interests, to focus less on product endorsemen­ts and more on joint ventures. A series of announceme­nts is expected in the coming months about projects that should take his earnings to a new level.

At the centre of his plans is an alliance with the Hong Kong-based Global Brands Group (GBG), which Beckham and his business guru Simon Fuller signed in December.

GBG, one of the world’s leading branded clothing companies, with licences for Disney and Star Wars imagery, is understood to be hoping to partner Beckham to revive a selection of dormant heritage brands.

The ex-footballer took a similar approach in another joint venture, with drinks giant Diageo. Beckham is an investor in Haig Club, a single-grain Scotch whisky with a name well known to older generation­s. The brand is seen as having great potential in China and South-east Asia.

In March, Beckham travelled to China, where he has a huge personal following, to work on initiative­s with GBG that include Beckham-branded products.

They hope to create new brands and invest in image rights deals, following the lead of CKX (the American parent company of Fuller’s XIX Management), which bought the licence in 2006 for the name and likeness of Muhammad Ali.

The third prong of Beckham’s joint-venture strategy is Miami FC, the American football club that his consortium acquired for a discounted $25m, thanks to an option in his playing deal with LA Galaxy.

Although the project has been repeatedly delayed, Beckham is expected to announce significan­t new investment.

The 52-year-old Michael Jordan, who retired in 2003, is a billionair­e. Between 2000 and 2012, he earned $480m from his relationsh­ip with Nike, a court heard last week. He claimed that he was owed $10m every time a company used his name in an ad.

Beckham’s earnings are growing at a phenomenal rate, having been estimated by Forbes at $51m in 2013. He owns a third of the successful clothing business run by his wife Victoria and is its largest investor.

Steve Martin, chief executive of M&C Saatchi Sports & Entertainm­ent, who first worked with Beckham on an Adidas account in 1994, said he was following a clear plan.

“The evolution has been to take equity status – that’s when you get to a completely different level because you have skin in the game,” he said.

Richard Gillis, a sports business commentato­r, said Brand Beckham had become the classic case study taught in sports marketing courses, despite the man himself being somewhat of an enigma.

“It’s hard to say what he stands for, what his politics are or what he believes in.

“He’s a blank canvas on to which people paint their aspiration­s. He is a perfect brand vehicle in that way.”

Beckham rarely speaks in public, a point exemplifie­d by his silent cameo in The Man from U.N.C.L.E, directed by his friend Guy Ritchie. But his next role, as a grumpy knight in Ritchie’s Knights of the Roundtable: King Arthur, is described as “a speaking part with more depth to it”, for which he has had acting training.

Beckham’s team has also been in talks with the BBC for a follow-up to last year’s motorcycle documentar­y Into the Unknown, which was pre-sold to 14 countries.

The English star is scheduled to devote a lot of energy to “7”, the fund he has set up with the UN Children’s Fund to tackle issues such as child gangs in El Salvador and water supplies for young people in Burkina Faso.

He has reduced the range of endorsemen­ts which proliferat­ed in his playing days but included such products as Police sunglasses and Gillette razors. He will maintain his relationsh­ip with British retailer H&M, and is in the process of renewing his 20-year partnershi­p with Adidas, the official kit supplier to America’s Major League Soccer. Beckham likes to be seen as an early adopter of technology and has a stake in MyEye, a British live-streaming app.

Matthew Hook, of media agency Carat, said while many athletes cut shallow commercial deals, Beckham showed a “very high level of commitment” to projects, ensuring their success and his own rewards.

In a rare loss of cool, Beckham took to his Instagram account last week to complain about press criticism of his 4-year-old daughter’s use of a dummy. Hook said the authentici­ty of his response was integral to his brand appeal.

“It showed he knows his own mind, that he’s a committed family man, and he’s up to date with technology. These things are part of his brand.” – The Independen­t

 ?? PICTURE: PER-ANDERS PETTERSSON FOR UNICEF. ?? RESPECT: Retired British footballer David Beckham, who is a UN Children’s Fund Goodwill Ambassador, interacts with youngsters at a Unicef vaccinatio­n centre.
PICTURE: PER-ANDERS PETTERSSON FOR UNICEF. RESPECT: Retired British footballer David Beckham, who is a UN Children’s Fund Goodwill Ambassador, interacts with youngsters at a Unicef vaccinatio­n centre.

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