Beckham focus on beating Man Utd

Champions League last 16 first leg
Venue: San Siro Date: Tuesday 16 February Kick-off: 1945 GMT Coverage: BBC Sport website, Final Score, BBC Radio 5 live and live on Sky Sports 2

**AC Milan midfielder David Beckham will put emotion to one side and focus on beating former club Manchester United in the last 16 of the Champions League.**Beckham, 34, spent 12 years with United before joining Real Madrid in 2003 and hopes to play in Tuesday’s first leg.

“It’s going to be emotional but, as a United fan, it’s the first time I am going to want them to lose,” he said.

“As an AC Milan player I want to beat United - it is important we win the game and progress to the next stage.”

Beckham’s Old Trafford career ended amid reports that his relationship with manager Sir Alex Ferguson had become strained.

Sir Alex will always be a father figure to me

David Beckham

However, the former England captain shook hands with his old mentor before United’s Champions League clash with Inter Milan at the San Siro last season.

Beckham, who is on loan from Los Angeles Galaxy, rejected the idea that his motivation to beat United has anything to do with Ferguson and, instead, heaped praise on the 68-year-old Scot.

“Sir Alex will always be a father figure to me,” said Beckham. "He always has been and he always will be.

"No matter what has been said in the past, whether good or bad, I only remember the good times.

"He was the man who gave me my chance to play for club I had always dreamed of playing for.

"For me they were only good times. Sir Alex is respected throughout football all around the world.

“Clubs move forwards and it was my time to leave Manchester United in 2003, and I moved on. I definitely hold nothing against the manager, he’s an incredible man.”

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Beckham has been forced to settle for a place on the substitutes’ bench for Milan’s last two league league matches and his presence at Monday’s pre-match press conference on does not necessarily suggest he will start.

“His appearance here (at the press conference) is important for us and I had asked him personally to come,” explained Milan coach Leonardo.

"He is somebody who represents this club and he is here because of his experience and charisma. He’s a very smart guy, a polite guy and an incredible player.

“If you look at his career you can see that he has done everything in football, not only on the field. He’s a complete personality and he proves every day why he’s so important for us.”

Leonardo acknowledged the importance of Milan keeping a clean sheet at home but vowed not to curb his side’s attacking instincts.

“Not conceding is always an objective, but we are also a team who try to score goals and to change our identity gets complicated,” said the Brazilian World Cup winner.

“This desire to score goals is inherent; it is our identity. To try and find the balance between not conceding and to hurt them I believe is ideal.”