David BeckhamDavid Beckham

David Beckham has revealed he would be ‘proud’ to have some role with England in the future.

The 39-year-old earned his 115th and final cap for the Three Lions in 2009 and his only duties with the national team off the pitch were when he served as a ‘player liason’ as part of Fabio Capello’s backroom staff at the 2010 World Cup.

Since then, England have departed Euro 2012 in the quarter-finals and exited this summer’s World Cup in Brazil at the group stage, with last week’s lacklustre 1-0 win over Norway in front of a record-low new Wembley crowd doing little to restore public faith in Roy Hodgson’s men.

Beckham retired from football in the summer of 2013, and while he was not asked to be part of Football Association chairman Greg Dyke’s England Commission which was launched in September of that year, he would be happy to help his country in any other way he can.

“I only retired just over a year ago and obviously I’ve been busy with stuff I’ve been doing but, if I can help in any way for the future of England and the future of English football, I will,” he said.

“That’s one of the things I’m very proud of.

“To actually come to the end of my career and be an ambassador for my country around the world.

“If there was any way in the future, when I’m not as busy, that I can help then I would be very proud of that.”

It appears that help would not come on the training pitch, however, with Beckham showing little intention of going into coaching.

“If I was to do it in the future, I would do it in the right way. Like Scholesy, Giggsy, Butty, Gary, Phil. That’s the way you have to do it.

“I have no plans to do it in the next 10 years.”

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