Primera Liga: Real Madrid president Ramon Calderon has criticised the club's players and its fans and said David Beckham was going to Hollywood to be "half a film star" in a speech to university students yesterday. His comments at the Villanueva University Centre were recorded without the knowledge of Real Madrid and later aired on national radio.
"There is vanity, egoism and they all think they are superstars," Calderon told the students. "Real Madrid players never pay for anything. You (students) have education and culture and that's something that they in general don't possess."
Calderon took a swipe at Beckham's decision to leave Real and sign a five-year deal worth $250 million for MLS side Los Angeles Galaxy. "He's going to Hollywood to be half a film star," he said. "Our technical staff were right not to extend his contract and that has been proved by the fact no other technical staff in the world wanted him except Los Angeles."
Calderon also went on to accuse former club president Florentino Perez of deliberately sabotaging his attempt to sign AC Milan's Brazilian midfielder Kaka in the close season. "Perez hasn't exactly given me any support," he said. "He spoke with (AC Milan president) Silvio Berlusconi so he would renew Kaka's contract and Berlusconi pressured him to sign." He added: "If I am still president in June it is very likely that Kaka will be joining us."
Perez issued a denial of the accusations, saying he had been forced to break his recent silence because of the "magnitude of Calderon's lie". "It is totally false that I spoke to Silvio Berlusconi about Kaka or any other player," the construction magnate said in a statement. "The whole suggestion is rather infantile."
The club's fans did not escape Calderon's ire with the Real chief saying the Bernabeu faithful were too hard to please. "It's a stadium where people go as if they were going to the theatre. The people don't support the team, not like in Italy and England."
Real issued a statement on their Web site www.realmadrid.com saying they were surprised and disappointed Calderon's comments had been recorded and played on national radio. "The president was only trying to help students understand the importance of management in a business as big as that of Real Madrid," the club said.
Calderon was named president last July after a narrow victory in a controversial election in which the postal votes of club members were not counted because of possible irregularities. A judge is due to make a ruling on the validity of the votes at the end of January. If they are counted Calderon could find himself replaced as president by one of his rivals.
Meanwhile, LA Galaxy coach Frank Yallop admits the prospect of Beckham sitting out the remainder of Real Madrid's season is far from ideal. Yallop is braced for the former England captain joining his club having not played a competitive match for more than six months but believes Beckham will not take long to find his feet.
Yallop said: "I would hope he would be playing first-team football at Real and we'd get him after a bit of a break with his family and get him raring to go.
"It's not ideal not playing a competitive game for five, six months but many players have gone through injuries for eight months and they come back as strong as ever.
"I think someone of David's character will soon slot straight in."