Luis Suarez Appreciation Thread

[quote=“ChocolateMice, post: 764808, member: 168”]Sidney[/USER] [USER=1052]Il Bomber Destro[/USER] [USER=9]Bandage Jamie Carraghers speaks out…

Jamie Carragher’s column on Luis Suarez:

It was said in the aftermath of Sunday’s game against Chelsea, firstly by Graeme Souness as he began his analysis on Sky, that nobody is bigger than the club and that Liverpool should make Luis pay the heaviest penalty by getting rid of him.

Now I am not for one moment trying to sugar-coat the incident in which Luis bit Branislav Ivanovic. It was wrong on all levels. You simply don’t expect to see a grown man bite another grown man —that is behaviour you would associate with nursery school.

But the way things are now being pitched is that Liverpool have got to do something about the rotten apple in their midst.

It is as if Luis is the only player to have represented Liverpool who has ever been embroiled in controversy.

That simply isn’t the case.

We have had it many times before, as have every other club in the country. I know this as I was responsible for one incident in January 2002. I threw a coin into the crowd at Highbury during an FA Cup tie against Arsenal after one had initially been flung at me.

Souness, who was captain of Liverpool at the time, broke the jaw of Dinamo Bucharest’s Lica Movila during a European Cup semi-final in 1984 when he punched him in an off-the-ball incident.

It was a serious incident but it is one which fans and some of his old team-mates speak almost nostalgically about.

Robbie Fowler had his scrapes, too. There was outrage after he celebrated a goal against Everton in April 1999 by mimicking drug taking. A couple of months earlier he was hugely condemned when he taunted Graeme Le Saux with a homophobic gesture.

Jan Molby was sent to jail in October 1988 for three months for a drink-driving offence.

More recently, Steven Gerrard appeared in court charged with affray but was subsequently found not guilty.

Every one of the players I mention regretted what happened and Luis is the same. More importantly, the club stood by every one of them.

Luis is normally a bubbly lad around the training ground. He tends to mix mainly with the other South Americans in the group but he is well liked all around because he has a fantastic attitude to his job and just loves playing football.

In my time at Liverpool, very few players have possessed an appetite to win the same as mine but Luis has got it. He trains well every day. When we get a day off, he will come in to do extra work and there is nothing arrogant or flash about him. He slots into the group without problem.

Yesterday, however, it was clear that events had taken a toll.

Luis knows he has done something seriously wrong, letting himself down. He has been told that a repeat of such behaviour will not be tolerated and the club’s stance has been different from how it was following his altercation with Patrice Evra.

But, rather than hounding him out of the country, shouldn’t we be helping him?

We have a top psychologist in Steve Peters who comes to the club once a week and he could have as big a role as our manager, Brendan Rodgers, for Luis.

Ian Ayre has stated that the club are not looking to sell Luis. History shows that message has always been the same. What happened when Tony Adams was released from jail in February 1991 after serving a sentence for drink- driving?

He went back to captain Arsenal and won eight major honours. Look at Eric Cantona.

Less than eight months after returning from his eight-month ban for an assault on Crystal Palace fan Matthew Simmons, he had inspired Manchester United to the Double. It is selfish but clubs need their best players.

As Martin Samuel said in his column yesterday, perhaps if a player of lesser ability had been guilty of Luis’s offence, he would have been shown the door by now. Again, a precedent at Anfield has already been set.

During the Hillsborough memorial service in 2009, Charles Itandje and Damien Plessis were caught laughing and messing around. Itandje, a third-choice keeper with a terrible attitude, was banished immediately. Plessis, who was viewed as being a player of promise, was admonished but stayed.

Morally you could say such standards are wrong but it happens in any walk of life, not just football. If someone is exceptional at what they do, many people are prepared to put up with them regardless of the hassle they may cause.

People may say this is a Liverpool-biased opinion but I don’t want to see another world-class player leave the Barclays Premier League, like Xabi Alonso, Cristiano Ronaldo and Cesc Fabregas have.

We are talking about one of the top five players in world football here.

Finally, I would like to finish by putting forward a thought from a footballer’s perspective about the incident.

The bite was shocking, no question, and everyone who has seen it was amazed. Yet was it worse than a challenge that could end someone’s career?

I know what it is like to have your leg broken by a reckless tackle. Lucas Neill cost me six months of my career in September 2003 when he played for Blackburn. Would I have preferred to have been bitten?Absolutely.

I suspect that Branislav Ivanovic, who has conducted himself with great credit in the aftermath, would agree. You can get up and carry on after a skirmish. If someone shatters your leg, you wonder whether you will play again.[/quote]

very good article

[quote=“artfoley, post: 764873, member: 179”]good to see luis smiling at melwood today

https://fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-prn1/936249_479684665433054_2060754565_n.jpg[/quote]
Why wouldnt he be smiling he’s on holiday any day now.

:smiley:

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2313071/Luis-Suarez-bites-Branislav-Ivanovic-Mum-blames-Liverpool-striker-copycat-incident.html

[SIZE=6][FONT=Arial]Mum blames Suarez after son is bitten by another child in ‘copycat’ incident[/FONT][/SIZE]

[SIZE=10px][FONT=Arial] [/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=10px][FONT=Arial][/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=10px][FONT=Arial]A mother from Wales believes Liverpool striker Luis Suarez is to blame after her son was bitten by another child at school this morning. [/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=10px][FONT=Arial]Suarez was fined ÂŁ300,000 by his club after digging his teeth into Chelsea defender Branislav Ivanovic. [/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=10px][FONT=Arial]The Uruguayan striker escaped a red card at Anfield yesterday, allowing him to remain on the pitch to score the 97th-minute equaliser against the visiting Blues. Suarez will not face criminal charges for the incident but has since been charged with violent conduct by the FA. [/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=10px][FONT=Arial]But now a concerned parent believes her son was the victim of a ‘copycat’ incident after he was bitten on the elbow while at school.[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=10px][FONT=Arial][/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=10px][FONT=Arial]She told Richard Bacon on BBC 5Live: ‘I had a phone call from the school headmistress earlier this morning saying that my son had been involved in a biting incident with another child and it appears to be a copycat of the Luis Suarez incident yesterday.’[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=10px][FONT=Arial]Although the mother did not know for certain whether the child, who has been suspended from the school, was copying Suarez, Bacon quizzed the caller about whether she blamed the Premier League top scorer for the incident at school.[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=10px][FONT=Arial]She added: ‘I think if this [Suarez biting Ivanovic] hadn’t have happened yesterday then my son wouldn’t have been bitten today.’[/FONT][/SIZE]
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[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=10px][FONT=Arial]Bacon was asked whether it was fair to place some of the blame on Suarez.[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=10px][FONT=Arial]She replied: 'He [Suarez] shouldn’t have done what he did. He is an adult. You expect biting from children in nursery not from professional players, especially somebody with the high status that Suarez has got.[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=10px][FONT=Arial]'These children are 10, 11 years old. What Luis Suarez did yestetrday, he didn’t even get sent off. He may have been fined now… but when my son was bitten this morning, that other child did not know that Luis Suarez was going to get that punishment. [/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=10px][FONT=Arial]‘So as far as this other child may perceive, Luis Suarez has bitten somebody and he’s had no comeuppance for it.’[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=10px][FONT=Arial]The child who was bitten sustained no serious injuries, but teachers told the mother that there would be bruising on his arm.[/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE=10px][FONT=Arial]

[/FONT][/SIZE]

Ah lovely.

https://fbcdn-sphotos-h-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-frc1/v/912936_10200822413750040_1929394210_n.jpg?oh=07d80f4c66d80a138fd5ac29380b04b3&oe=517C459D&gda=1367154491_4bcafbac76862254bebb25fc5a194afc

I agree.

Liverpool to make a statement on Luis shortly, expect them to be open to offers for the striker.

What a man. What strength of character. What humility. What bravery. What conviction.

Luis Suarez is god amongst men.

It must be pointed out what an utter cunt camerin has made of himself throughout this sorry saga

Maybe he’s going to make a donation to the victims of his wrong-doings.

Benitez, Ivanovic and Chelsea football club are to be highly commended for the manner in which they have treated this non-event.

Well done Louis, show other players how to behave when accepting a ban.:slight_smile:

Is it true to the ignorant cunts at the PFA awards last night booed Luis Suarez?

What a shower of pricks. English football doesn’t deserve such outrageous talent.

[quote=“The Runt, post: 766228, member: 181”]Is it true to the ignorant cunts at the PFA awards last night booed Luis Suarez?

What a shower of pricks. English football doesn’t deserve such outrageous talent.[/quote]
I believe there was booing but according to some hack on twitter it was one or two fellas who may or may not have even been footballers.

[quote=“The Runt, post: 766228, member: 181”]Is it true to the ignorant cunts at the PFA awards last night booed Luis Suarez?

What a shower of pricks. English football doesn’t deserve such outrageous talent.[/quote]

Hopefully he fucks off so.

Leave you to wave your little plastic flag in peace.

Van Persie was arrested for rape, so was Evans.
Rooney is a serial abuser of prostitutes, even paying a skanky old woman to go off with him.
Giggs carried out an affair with his brother’s wife behind his back for 8 years.

And yet a loving and caring family man like Suarez is hung out to dry by the British public just because he is a winner on the pitch and doesn’t want to relent to those who try to break him. It makes me sick.

[quote=“Il Bomber Destro, post: 766241, member: 1052”]Van Persie was arrested for rape, so was Evans.
Rooney is a serial abuser of prostitutes, even paying a skanky old woman to go off with him.
Giggs carried out an affair with his brother’s wife behind his back for 8 years.

And yet a loving and caring family man like Suarez is hung out to dry by the British public just because he is a winner on the pitch and doesn’t want to relent to those who try to break him. It makes me sick.[/quote]
Britain is a failed society.

It was coming from the QPR table, so probably not.

He’s just a cunt bomber…get on with it.you won’t give a fuck about him next year anyway when he’s play in Spain or Germany or where ever but it won’t be England

Link?