Sports briefs: David Beckham cites family, loyalty in decision to stay with L.A. Galaxy | The Salt Lake Tribune
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Sports briefs: David Beckham cites family, loyalty in decision to stay with L.A. Galaxy
First Published Jan 19 2012 09:15 pm • Last Updated Apr 05 2012 11:37 pm

Soccer • David Beckham considered offers from Paris, the Premiership and beyond. He decided nothing was better than his adopted home with the Los Angeles Galaxy.

The English superstar formally returned to his MLS club Thursday with a new two-year contract, vowing to win more trophies with the Galaxy while preparing to own an MLS franchise when his career ends.

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He’ll also be free to play at the Olympics if he’s chosen for Britain’s national squad.

After the excitement died down from the Galaxy’s run to the league title last fall during Beckham’s most impressive MLS season, the midfielder made his final decision to stay in Hollywood on New Year’s Eve over a glass of wine with his wife, Victoria.

"We’ve been happy here for the last five years, and we felt, why change something that works?" Beckham asked a packed room at Staples Center.

The Beckhams’ four children are comfortable living in Southern California, and he felt his family’s well-being outweighed the intrigue of bigger offers from unnamed Premiership clubs or Paris Saint-Germain, which aggressively courted him in recent weeks.

Braun appeal of drug test begins

Baseball • Ryan Braun’s appeal of his positive drug test began Thursday before baseball arbitrator Shyam Das.

The start of the National League MVP’s appeal, first reported by the New York Daily News, was confirmed by a person familiar with the session who spoke on condition of anonymity because the proceeding was not to be made public.

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When the positive drug test was first reported by ESPN.com last month, Braun had a spokesman issue a statement saying there were circumstances supporting "Ryan’s complete innocence."

Under the joint drug agreement between baseball teams and the players’ association, Braun will have to prove "the presence of a prohibited substance in his urine was not due to his fault or negligence."



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