Day: November 26, 2025
Gareth Cattermole/Gareth Cattermole/Getty Images
- David Beckham says his father’s tough love helped him get through some of the low moments in his career.
- “All of those moments where my dad was hard on me as a kid, there was a reason for it,” he said.
- Beckham added that his dad only acknowledged his success when he received his 100th cap in 2008.
David Beckham, 50, says he weathered the toughest parts of his career thanks to his dad’s strict parenting style.
During an appearance on Tuesday’s episode of “This Life of Mine with James Corden” podcast, the soccer icon spoke about his upbringing and his own approach to raising kids.
Despite excelling in soccer, Beckham said he never considered himself an especially talented player when he was younger.
“No, because my dad was so tough on me as a young kid,” Beckham told host James Corden.
“I have two sisters, and we lived in a household with a lot of love in it, but my dad was so tough on me with my Sunday league football team that he very rarely turned around to me and said, ‘Well done, boy. You did well today, you played well,'” Beckham said.
“He’d say it, but then he’d say, ‘But this is what you can do better,’ and, ‘This is what you should be doing,’ and, ‘If you just did that, you would be able to score or cross those balls like that,'” Beckham said.
He added that his father’s strict feedback kept him from ever considering himself a great player.
It wasn’t until much later in his career that his father finally expressed approval, Beckham said.
“But my dad never told me I’d done well, really, until my 100th cap. That was the first time my dad turned around to me and said, ‘You’ve made it, boy,'” Beckham said. “That was the first time. Not even when I got into the United First team, not even when I won the Premiership, not even when I won the Champions League.”
In soccer, a 100th cap represents a player’s 100th appearance for their national team.
Beckham added that the compliment from his father came during dinner in Paris in 2008, after the match.
“And that was the first time he really kind of acknowledged the career that I’d had,” Beckham said.
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He also credited his father’s tough love for fueling the relentless work ethic he became known for.
Beckham added he “might not have been able to get through” some of the hardest moments in his career if his dad “wasn’t as tough” with him as he was during his youth-club days.
“All of those moments where my dad was hard on me as a kid, there was a reason for it. Those tough moments that I had in my career, all I knew was to put my head down and work hard,” Beckham said.
But as a father of four, Beckham said he is “definitely not as tough” on his own children.
“I am different with my kids. I’m a lot softer than my dad was, but there’s certain traits that I do have the same as my dad,” Beckham said, adding that he can be strict with his sons when it comes to how they play soccer.
In early November, Beckham was knighted by King Charles III for his services to sport and charity.
In today’s newsletter: As the chancellor prepares to deliver one of the most heavily briefed budgets ever, tax rises, the two-child benefit cap and a ‘mansion tax’ are all on the table
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Good morning. If you haven’t noticed, the lead-up to this year’s budget has been unusually chaotic and drawn-out, with plenty of behind-the-scenes briefings and a whirlwind of speculation about what taxes will be hiked.
The challenge facing the chancellor, Rachel Reeves, is plugging a financial hole of around £20bn and raising money to fund the services voters demand, while also keeping taxes at an acceptable level. (If you think you’ve got what it takes, try our brilliant interactive budget game). The political backdrop to this budget is also significant – the prime minister is under siege, and needs to present something that will be well received by MPs.
Budget | Rachel Reeves’s plan to cut cash Isa limits by 40% could raise mortgage rates, according to finance bosses. The chancellor is expected to cut the maximum amount people can put into tax-efficient cash individual savings accounts from £20,000 to £12,000 in Wednesday’s budget.
Politics | Three more school contemporaries who claim to have witnessed Nigel Farage’s alleged teenage racism have rejected the Reform UK leader’s suggestion that it was “banter”, describing it as targeted, persistent and nasty.
Ukraine | Donald Trump’s special envoy Steve Witkoff advised a senior Kremlin official on how Vladimir Putin should pitch a Ukraine peace deal to the president, according to a transcript of their discussion published by Bloomberg.
Criminal justice | Jury trials for all except the most serious crimes such as rape, murder and manslaughter are set to be scrapped under radical proposals drawn up by David Lammy
Media | The BBC has been pulled into a fresh row over its treatment of Donald Trump after a Reith lecturer accused the broadcaster of censoring his remarks on the US president. Rutger Bregman, a Dutch author and historian, said the BBC removed a “key line” from a flagship address it had invited him to deliver.