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Liverpool: Make An Example Of Suarez, Prove He's Not Bigger Than The Club

by Raj Bains
30 June 2014 17 Comments

In the headlines for all the wrong reasons...again, Liverpool have to make an example of him - for their sake rather than his...

Liverpool: Make An Example Of Suarez, Prove He’s Not Bigger Than The Club

Did you ever get in to so much trouble at school that your teachers actually felt it necessary to get your parents involved? If you didn’t, you’ll probably know somebody that once had. What often happened in such cases was that the children who came from poorly parented households would often reoffend, safe in the knowledge that nothing about their home life would change.

The kids that learnt from their mistakes, however, tended to actually get a bigger punishment at home than the school could hand out to them. It’s simple really, far from rocket science, and a lesson we all learn at one stage in our life or another: deviance results in punishment, and to avoid punishment, one must avoid being deviant.

The reason behind such difference in approach boils down to how the parents in question seek to be perceived by those in contact with their child - how many times have you seen a kid misbehaving and immediately, perhaps subconsciously, cast aspersions on the type of family they’ve come from? Rarely are deviants looked at insularly, and those closest to them are also asked questions of.

In the much discussed case of Luis Suárez then, it’s abundantly clear from which type of background he’s from - and that comment isn’t aimed at his family in the slightest, but more his parent club and international football association. By failing to condemn Suárez, they’ve effectively martyred him, and re-entered in to a viscous circle we’ve seen numerous times before, in which the offender fails to learn from his mistake.

Liverpool have now thrice been brought in to disrepute through the actions of one man alone and their once proud name dragged through the mud, labelled guilty by association. When their player was found guilty of racially abusing another human being, they donned t-shirts in support of him. When he bit a player for what was then the second time in his career and was handed another lengthy ban, he had given Liverpool a choice to make regarding his immediate future in their colours.

What remains begrudgingly undeniable when discussing Suárez as just a footballer is how clearly talented he is. Liverpool came within touching distance of a league title powered by his relentless goalscoring, and England were undone twice at the World Cup in a must-win game by his prowess in front of goal. A cripplingly flawed genius, Liverpool decided his ability alone was enough for them to accept his unfortunate penchant for gross misconduct and hand him a contract extension to remain at the club.

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This is, unsurprisingly, where most people’s discomfort with the situation intersects. To refer back to the loose analogy above, Liverpool - and to a less surprising extent the Uruguayan FA - haven’t done anywhere close to enough to attempt to either reprimand or even rehabilitate the man that has repeatedly brought in to question the judgement of those that preside over him.

When time came for Liverpool to release their review of how their players had performed that day in the World Cup on their official website, no mention of Suárez having bitten an opponent was even alluded to. When they finally released a statement, it was only to say that there would be no official statement at this point in time.

The only way for Liverpool to definitively save face strikes me as being overwhelmingly simple: punish the player representing you as a club on the world stage for being a deviant, and make it abundantly clear that in no way do Liverpool either condone or support his actions. Even if behind closed doors Liverpool make it clear to Suárez that this gesture is merely spin, they have to be at the very least being seen to want to distance themselves from the actions of their player.

Fine and ban him for several games additionally to what FIFA have handed out and suddenly the attitude of disgust to which people now increasingly default to when discussing Liverpool’s relationship with Suárez will change. If, unthinkably, Liverpool are seen to be supporting, and by extension, condoning and enabling the actions of their player for a third time, there is no chance that their judgement won’t again be widely scrutinised, and more worryingly, Suárez will again adopt the mentality of a victim and fail to recognise and learn from his own mistake.

The time has, yet again, come for Liverpool to decide what is more important to them: Suárez as a playing asset, or their wider integrity as a football club. The easy way out, of course, would be for Liverpool to merely sell him to the highest bidder, and quietly wash their hands of a man who may have been more trouble than what he’s worth. However, that too has its limitations, and most will look at the decision to brush the saga under the carpet in the most public way possible as cowardice and an implicit admission of guilt.

The best case scenario would be for the club to sack the player, tear up his contract and perform a thorough character assassination in order to express just how disappointed they are by being let down again by somebody they had previously publicly supported - but this is modern football of course, and morals have unfortunately become a foreign concept.

Suárez may not - despite the diagnosis of millions of amateur psychologists on twitter - be ‘beyond help’, but what remains abundantly clear is that this transgression cannot be dealt with in the same manner as his previous ones have. It’s time for Liverpool to finally take ownership of the situation, and reaffirm without doubt that no one man is bigger than the club - after all, we all know what will happen again if they fail to, don’t we?

Follow Raj on Twitter, @BainsXIII

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image descriptionCOMMENTS

James Russell 10:00 pm, 29-Jun-2014

Raj Bains, don't you think he's already been chastened enough? and did it work! what sort of example are thinking of, hung drawn and quatered if your going to write about a subject whilst not just jumping on the band wagon, but actually writing something that just pay's your bills then people may take you seroius!

Che 11:46 pm, 29-Jun-2014

Not our player. You will find him in Barcelona colours next season.what are you going to write about then.Ill make a prediction, Barca will appeal his ban & he"ll have it reduced to 2 months. All you bitchy hypocrites will have to hone in on another target, The real villans of football are FIFA. Have you all forgot about the bribes scandal before this all kicked off, oh yeah its funny how the news got buried . What about how shit england were, oh yeah we all forgot & got carried away with the lynching. Get a grip.

mano 71 9:18 am, 30-Jun-2014

lets put it this way.did scum utd offer roy keane or cantona any anger management for there disgraceful acts (both much worse than what suarez did) or was rio Ferdinand offered any drug counselling for his cocaine habit. not to mention brian robson (flashing) and clayton blackmore (rape)in the 1980"s

broadhead 9:50 am, 30-Jun-2014

Cash in, let him go, get Sanchez as part of the deal. It's that simple really. No one player is bigger than the club and he's dragged Liverpool's name through the mud three times now.

Boz Bouncer 11:03 am, 30-Jun-2014

Do shut up ... have a good look at the hypocrites on the BBC and all the documented skankiness that is endorsed by Verminchester ... keep your thinly disguised tribalism to hypoxic twitter ranting !

Frankie 11:16 am, 30-Jun-2014

I suppose everybody is entitled to an opinion, although why this bloke offers his thoughts is anyone's guess. Just one comment. Liverpool players and then manager When the Liverpool players and then manager "donned t-shirts in support of him", it was before he had been found 'guilty' of anything. What they protested about was his lack of guilt! If you bothered to read the FA kangaroo court report you would find that they found absolutely no evidence of any racial abuse, but did decide to simply believe Evra's flawed and changeable evidence, not Suarez's testimony. There was no direct or circumstantial evidence to support Evra's claims. They simply made some things up e.g. Evra claimed Suarez had used a term 10 times, Suarez said once, so the FA decided it was 7 times! You couldn't make it up, although the FA did.

Jimmy swine 11:36 am, 30-Jun-2014

Football has no morals - see Gordaon Strachans rant the other night on ITV.

thesaint 11:53 am, 30-Jun-2014

Does Suarez bite end a footballer's other than showing that he needs disciplining and help? So we are saying if you bite, you must be punished a few folds because you are a role model but sleeping with your team mate's wife, ending another players career, physically assaulting a referee,assaulting a fan in the stands or having affairs are different? And are good examples for the young fans? I am not saying this because I condone his biting tendencies, but, as a fellow human being. If a person is in trouble do we add to his trouble? It is easy to comment on Suarez when we have not worn his shoes. Why do we suddenly become moral police who decides that one act of transgression is worse than the other? Finally, you don't need rocket science to know that not all from poorly parented homes end up bad nor all from well parented homes end up good. A lot depends on the environment outside the home as well. I know because my wife teaches in a area where children staying in a slum area are raised by single parents, some abandoned by their parents and hardly have interaction with their parents. Not all end up the way you portray it. Many had issues, which when dealt dealt with in a firm yet supportive manner end up behaving better than many well parented but spoil children.

thesaint 11:54 am, 30-Jun-2014

...end a footballer's career...

Monty 12:04 pm, 30-Jun-2014

So basically Raj is rather prejudice about people from less privileged backgrounds. Nice. Arguably the stupidest article I have read about Suarez.

mano 71 3:48 pm, 30-Jun-2014

the evra affair in my opinion was the most disgraceful act ever by a footballer. that deceitful lying piece of shit targeted suarez that day bcos suarez had given him the runaround and he didn't like it one bit so he concocted a fairytale with that cheating txxt of a manager to get suarez banned and as Frankie rightly said he changed his story several times,liar"s are supposed to have good memories but that sewer rat obviously has"nt. unbelievably on the fa board was a ferguson family member and from that point onwards suarez was Fxxxxd. once the decision was announced it was picked up by the gutter press and every non supporter of LFC and thus that sick witchhunt was whipped into a frenzy. he is one evil man that Patrice evra.

broadhead 4:17 pm, 30-Jun-2014

I really can't see the correlation between alcoholism and biting someone? Yes he needs some aftercare but it's hardly like the help needed by someone who is addicted to booze, unless of course there is some sort of drug in the human skin that Luis can't get enough of. Who knows?

Pistolpete 6:18 pm, 30-Jun-2014

And these comments are why most people dislike Liverpool supporters so much and are glad they blew the title last season.

Jarhead 6:08 pm, 1-Jul-2014

I think Mano needs his 'speak and spell' upgrading... Can we drop the whole Suarez thing now... He lost his balance... End of.

Stan Dalglish 7:25 pm, 2-Jul-2014

Suarez has bitten someone again? Please tell me it's a wind up? You'll be telling me he's going to Barcelona next!

mano 71 7:57 am, 3-Jul-2014

"jughead" give it a rest now lad, getting very boring.

Bill Madrid 10:38 pm, 7-Jul-2014

Cracking article Raj, as the comments below demonstrate

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