Monday 13 February 2012

Suarez begins the end of his Liverpool career

Countdown begins on Uruguayan's exit from English football

Luis Suarez does not get it. It really is as simple as that. As fine a footballer as he is, the Liverpool number seven does not comprehend the behaviour expected from a professional footballer, especially one in England, and that is why only a year after he made the move to Merseyside the countdown to the end of his Liverpool career has begun.

His racist comment to Patrice Evra at best showed ignorance of English culture. That could and should have been written off as a misunderstanding. Liverpool's defiance was repulsive to common decencies, their unwillingness to accept the punishment and move on a mistake, and Kenny Dalglish's victim playing disgraceful. The Scotman's stance went beyond the kind of partisan attitude that we normally expect from tribal football - it was just plain wrong.

How much Suarez was involved in Dalglish's comments is hard to say. The former Ajax man felt hard done by but whether Suarez compelled his manager to speak out on his behalf or whether it was a misguided attempt from Dalglish to support his man, we cannot know. What we can do is examine Suarez's behaviour since the first Evra incident and it does not flatter the Uruguayan.

Predictably Suarez faced a certain amount of abuse from Fulham fans at the game at Craven Cottage on December 5th. Suarez reacted by showing the finger at the Fulham fans as he departed the pitch. He then escaped the spotlight during his eight game ban, only to return against Tottenham with a kick to Scott Parker's midriff and the kind of histrionics that we come to expect from the South American. And then there was the game against United.

Not shaking Patrice Evra's hand saw any sympathy or understanding for Suarez completely evaporate. There was also a petulant boot into the dugouts after the half time whistle was blown. While Suarez later apologised (apparently under pressure from the club's owners) one has to wonder why Suarez felt Evra was to blame for the eight match ban the Liverpool player received, and why Suarez did not draw a line under the episode from Anfield in November.

I cannot see a way back for Suarez. Clearly he feels no personal responsibility or wrong doing. His apologies have not gone far enough nor to the right people. His initial attempt amounted to the classic non-apology apology ('I'm sorry its your fault you are angry') while his latest admission of guilt has mainly confined itself to the damage he has done to Liverpool FC rather than Patrice Evra.

The lack of respect for the opposition, as shown by the biting of a PSV player while he was playing for Ajax, his constant diving and play acting, complaining and gestures, the joy when Uruguay overcame Ghana after Suarez handballed on the line, and the incidents with Evra, does not look like changing anytime soon. The pressure from players, managers, pundits and fans will only increase, and everything Suarez does will be under the microscope. Suarez is unlikely to change and eventually he will move on. He might blame Liverpool's lack of Champions League football, trophies, cup finals, or the old favourite unworthy wages, but he will move on.

Suarez does not get English football culture and I doubt he ever will. Only when he seals a move away will we start to understand just how uncomfortable he found his time here. The clock is ticking on his time in England and although Suarez may blame everyone but himself, we all know who is to blame.

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