Does Luis Suarez deserve to be named as one of the Premier League’s best ever players?
| Suarez takes a bite at Ivanovic |
After another flash of controversy in the 2-2 draw against
Chelsea, does the Uruguayan international deserve a title that has been used
for players such as Thierry Henry and Alan Shearer?
Luis Suarez despite his brilliant performances throughout
the fifteen months he’s been at Liverpool in carrying the side to victories
time and time again always seems to get the attention for different reasons,
whether it was his eight game ban for racially abusing Manchester United
captain Patrice Evra, or his unsportsmanlike handball for Uruguay against Ghana
in the dying moments of extra time in the 2010 World Cup before Kenny Dalglish
even signed him.
This season though, Suarez has shone in nearly every
Liverpool game he’s played in. There’s no doubt he puts in 100% to every game
and this has seen him become the one of the league’s top goal scorers but
Suarez has been somewhat controversial so far this term. His stamp earlier on
in the season in the Merseyside derby on Sylvain Distin overshadowed his
performance of scoring two and having one chalked off for offside.
The most recent chapter in Suarez’s book of cheating has
come at a cost though, he appeared to bite the right arm of Chelsea’s Serbian
defender Branislav Ivanovic out of the blue. Referee Kevin Friend did not seem
to see the incident but spoke to both players after they clashed, with Ivanovic
trying to show the official a mark on his upper arm. Could this incident be Suarez’s
last antic as a Liverpool player as he has been handed a 10 game ban for this
assault? The morning of the game though, Suarez expressed his desire to stay at
Liverpool and see out his contract with the Reds, so why would he go and bite a
player and risk his career with the club he loves, maybe he wasn’t thinking
straight? But then again, if he was all the time then this controversial figure
would not be the man he is and the Premier League would not have major talking
points nearly every match he plays.
Another incident involving the Liverpool striker against Blue
Square Premier minnows Mansfield Town in the third round of the FA Cup in
January just shows how far he will go to cheat himself, his team and the
footballing world in general. Maybe it is his desire, his integrity or maybe it’s
just being a total menace to society.
At the time this caused
major headlines and controversy as he appeared to handle the ball on his way to
scoring what turned out to be the winner against Mansfield Town who are 93
places below Liverpool in the FA cup third round. Mansfield manager Paul Cox though
was one of the first managers who has not criticised Suarez after being on the
receiving end of the incident, had this to say, “What Suarez did was
instinctive and we should embrace him as a football talent rather than have a
go,” Cox said. “He did what any striker would have done. I can’t be two-faced
on that. If Matt Green [Mansfield striker] had done it, I’d have accepted
it" . It's not the first time Suarez has been in a handball incident this
season of course, he appeared to attempt to score with his hand against
Southampton in the Premier League in game week 15, only for the officials in
this match to spot the offence straight away and give him a deserved yellow
card.
Before then he had scored on countless occasions but in the
middle of these outstanding displays Suarez was again been accused on stamping
on Wigan midfielder David Jones in their 3-0 win at Anfield on game week 12, a
game which saw the striker score two again for his club.
Wigan manager Roberto Martinez, who would of managed Suarez
if he had taken the Liverpool job in the summer was outraged at the fact the
Uruguayan stayed on the pitch for this cynical challenge said "He was very
fortunate because there was a stamp on David Jones that the referee didn't see,
that wasn't the sign of a top player. He was fortunate today. He was
lucky." Suarez who has also been the victim of a stamp this season in
Liverpool’s 0-0 draw at home to Stoke on Sunday 7th October was swiftly
defended by his manager Brendan Rodgers who said ‘I find it incredible that in
nearly all the coverage about Luis Suarez this weekend, very little focus has
been placed on the fact that he was the victim of a stamping incident within
the first five minutes of the game. There seems to be one set of rules for Luis
and another set for everyone else’.
Although in that same match Suarez became the centre of
attention again after appearing to dive to try and win a penalty. Diving has
been one of the most contested debates in football this season and only
neutrals can reason with both sides of the argument and come to a conclusion
but there is a line and Suarez has crossed that, don’t get me wrong I can see
that he does it for his team but there is no way football can stay free flowing
game if players like Suarez are prepared to cheat to win. Tony Pulis, the stoke
manager reiterated his point he made earlier in this season about diving
saying, "I've been on about and banging the drum about people who fall
over, It's an embarrassment. The FA should be looking at this”.
And look at it they must after players like Gareth Bale,
Suarez and Ashley Young are going down left right and centre to cheat to win
games. Bale for example going down from a 'challenge' from Aston Villa goalkeeper
Brad Guzan on the 7th of October with replays showing that Guzan didn't even
attempt to challenge the Welsh winger. If referee at the match Neill Swarbrick
had believed that Guzan had taken Bale out then he would of had to award
Tottenham a free kick in a very dangerous position and would of had to send the
American off.
Diving has no place in football and if players dive they
should be dealt with, not straight away but the FA should review the incidents
after the game and use replays to decide whether the offender intended to dive
as then a ban can be issued as football stamps out one of its ongoing and major
problems which is diving. if this rule was in place then I feel that Luis
Suarez would have missed most of the games he actually scored in and Liverpool
would not be sitting in an as comfortable position as they are if they didn't
have their Uruguayan talisman.
I feel that Luis Suarez is one of the Premier League’s
hottest properties at this moment in time, but there is no way I would even
think about using his name in the same sentence as other greats like Shearer,
Henry and Bergkamp as them three won games by pure brilliance and skill, not
cheating.