David Beckham Under Fire for Qatar Endorsement Deal

A big deal with big drawbacks

David Beckham

David Beckham attends the Sun's Who Cares Wins Awards 2021 at The Roundhouse on September 14, 2021 in London, England.

By Tobias Carroll

If you follow Formula 1 or the highest levels of European soccer, you’ve probably heard the phrase “sportswashing” a lot in recent years. It’s come up with the recent sale of Newcastle United as well as the addition of Qatar to the Formula 1 race calendar. The idea behind it, essentially, is that of a repressive nation using the ownership of a sports team or the hosting of a high-profile athletic event as a way to gloss over some of the less pleasant parts of the current regime.

Now, a sportswashing controversy has embroiled one of the most famous soccer players of all time. That would be David Beckham, who recently signed an endorsement deal with the 2022 World Cup — which will be held in Qatar. The event has been criticized for years already — and given that the last two men’s World Cups, in Brazil and Russia, were not without humanitarian concerns of their own, that’s saying a lot.

As The Telegraph‘s Tom Morgan reports, Beckham signed a deal to be one of the ambassadors for next year’s World Cup — all of which is “said to be worth £15 million a year,” and which could last for a decade.

Morgan’s article cites a number of branding experts who make a convincing case that Beckham’s association with Qatar — a nation where homosexuality is illegal and a copious number of migrant workers have died over the years — threatens to adversely affect Beckham’s public image. Or, as Conrad Wiacek of the analytics firm GlobalData told The Telegraph, “[B]rands may look to distance themselves from any hint of controversy.”

Beckham might be a massive presence in the world of global soccer, but he isn’t the only one — and it’s not hard to see some companies looking elsewhere in the coming years.

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