David and Victoria Beckham make another public call to their son Brooklyn to break the distance
The former soccer player and the fashion designer shared family images on Instagram as a peace offering to their eldest son, who cut ties with them.
David and Victoria Beckham took advantage of the global celebration of Father's Day to send a new and unequivocal public message of reconciliation to their eldest son, Brooklyn, 27, with whom they have maintained a tense estrangement since the beginning of this year.
Despite the young model's strict no-contact stance, both the 51-year-old former soccer player and the 52-year-old fashion designer used their official Instagram accounts to share photos of the memory chest with Brooklyn.
In the images you can see a younger David enjoying the sea with his four children: Brooklyn, Romeo (23), Cruz (21) and Harper (14).
"Being a dad is my most important job. I love you all and thank you mom for giving me our beautiful family," wrote the former captain of the English team on his Instagram profile.
For her part, the former Spice Girl dedicated a message to her husband calling him “the best dad” and stating that his “greatest achievement has always been his beautiful children.”
This subtle but obvious rapprochement occurs in the midst of the Beckhams' worst family crisis. The dispute broke out publicly last January, when Brooklyn broke the silence with an incendiary statement on social media.
The young man directly accused his parents and their public relations teams of “trying to ruin” his relationship with his wife, model and actress Nicola Peltz, since before their wedding in 2022.
At that time, Brooklyn claimed that moving away from her family had made her chronic anxiety disappear and she drastically stated: “I do not wish to reconcile with my family.”
While his brothers Romeo and Cruz published loving tributes to David on this special date, Brooklyn opted for a cold silence on social media towards his father.
Instead, the first-born recently attracted attention by appearing in an advertisement for the 2026 World Cup, where he joked that he was watching the tournament from home and that not attending the games “was a long story,” which the British press interpreted as a dig at his father's contacts at FIFA.
Despite the nagging and physical distance, David and Victoria seem determined to keep the door open, using the most significant dates on the calendar to remind Brooklyn that, for them, family still comes first.

