Fans cheer arrival of Becks and Real ( 2003-07-26 08:23) (Xinhua)
David Beckham and his Real Madrid teammates landed on Friday in China,
greeted by folk dancers with elephants and cheering fans hoping for a glimpse of
the Spanish soccer powerhouse's newest player.
Real Madrid's David Beckham prepares to hit a high ball
during the first training session in Kunming, southern China, on July 25,
2003. Beckham arrived with his new teammates to kick off an Asian tour.
[Reuters]
The team is due to work out in
Kunming, in the mountains of China's southwest, before launching an Asian
promotional tour with a match on August 2 against an all-star Chinese team. The
game will be Beckham's first with Real Madrid.
About 400 fans lined the
street to the training camp as Beckham and his teammates, looking tired after a
flight from Madrid and wearing garlands of flowers presented by a Chinese
welcoming committee, arrived by bus from the airport.
Madrid's 25-player
lineup also includes international stars such as Ronaldo, Zinedine Zidane, Luis
Figo, Raul Gonzalez and Roberto Carlos.
The festivities included folk
dancers, musicians playing drums and cymbals and four elephants. Fans waved
signs saying "Beckham I Love You!'' and "Figo Crazy For You'' and red flags with
the logo of Madrid's Asian tour.
"I am so excited. I have no words to
(describe) how I felt when I saw Beckham today,'' said Liao Wending, a
22-year-old factory worker who took the day off to see the team arrive. "I'm so
moved, I was screaming and shouting as he walked by.'' Fans in white Real
Madrid T-shirts reached out toward the players as they approached the training
camp. Some players stopped to shake hands, but the increasingly press-shy
Beckham, surrounded by a dozen Chinese photographers, just gave a slight
smile.
"He's so handsome and he has so much class and breeding,'' said
Deng Fang, 26, a tobacco factory employee and cheerleader for the Kunming soccer
team.
"He was so calm,'' she said. "But I'm really sad I didn't get to
shake his hand.'' Soccer is hugely popular in China, with tens of millions of
fans following 15 teams in the country's top league and dozens of smaller
clubs.
China has sent players to British teams. And though few have spent
time in China, Beckham -- known in Chinese as "Beikehanmu'' -- and other foreign
stars are already celebrities here.
He Yajing, a 16-year-old fan from
Chongqing who traveled hundreds of kilometres to Kunming to see Beckham, blushed
as she listed all the Beckham memorabilia she owns -- posters, T-shirts, dolls,
books.
"The pile is pretty big,'' she said.
Ji Shuai, a
20-year-old cheerleader for Kunming's Hongta soccer team, names Ronaldo as her
favourite player.
``I didn't dare believe it when I heard they were
coming,'' says Ji, widening her eyes to illustrate her surprise. ``It's a very,
very rare opportunity for us to be this close to international soccer
stars!''
Ji and Niu both belong to the Kunming Soccer Fan Association,
which has about 2,000 members. Only 10 were allowed to attend a welcoming
ceremony for the team.
A sign on one busy road in Kunming, a city of
about 3.5 million people dotted with lakes and surrounded by lush mountains,
said "Warmly welcome Real Madrid.''
Advertisements for the team's arrival
were posted on public buses. A Kunming newspaper last week featured Beckham and
his wife, the former Spice Girl Victoria Beckham, on its front page.
The
tour is expected to boost Madrid's income through merchandising and marketing
and is aimed at helping the club widen its global appeal. The club will earn a
reported US$3 million in match fees.
Real Madrid meets FC Tokyo in Tokyo
on August 5 and plays China in Hong Kong three days later.
Madrid's final
game against Malaysia scheduled for August 10 in Kuala Lumpur was canceled after
the country's soccer federation balked at an appearance fee for the Spanish team
that was reported to be US$2.9 million.