FIFA: Suarez needs help

By News / Wire

Luis Suarez faced mounting calls to seek professional treatment as the banned Uruguay striker’s bite victim said his punishment had been too harsh.

Suarez returned home to a hero’s welcome in Montevideo after being kicked out of the World Cup for biting Italy defender Giorgio Chiellini.

It is the third time in four years that Suarez has been sanctioned for biting, and the latest incident triggered widespread outrage in the football world.

FIFA general secretary Jerome Valcke led calls for Suarez to seek help, brushing off suggestions the Liverpool star’s four-month worldwide ban from all football activity was too severe.

Valcke told reporters: “I think he should find a way to stop doing it.

“He should go through a treatment. It is definitely wrong.”

The international professional footballer’s union FIFPro said FIFA should have made mandatory treatment part of its sanction.

“Luis Suarez should receive all the support he needs to deal with any off-field issues he may be experiencing at this time,” said a FIFPro statement.

“This means that the focus should be on the rehabilitation and serious treatment of the player.

“FIFPro believes that treatment must be a part of any sanction.”

Italy defender Chiellini expressed sympathy for Suarez and criticised FIFA’s punishment, which is the heaviest ever imposed on a player during a World Cup.

“I have always considered unequivocal the disciplinary interventions by the competent bodies, but at the same time I believe that the proposed formula is excessive,” said Chiellini on his website.

But Valcke dismissed Chiellini’s comments when told of them.

“Again, it’s not just about the incident – it was seen by hundreds of millions of people,” he said.

“It is not what you want your kids, the little ones who are playing football around the world, to see in a football game at the level of the World Cup, or any level – amateur football or professional football.”

Suarez, 27, bid farewell to his team mates as they prepared for Sunday’s (AEST) last 16 game with Colombia. FIFA said the ban on football activities meant he could not stay at the team hotel and will not even be allowed in a stadium where Uruguay are playing during the four months.

The Uruguayan nation has rallied behind the shamed goalscorer.

A private jet carrying the player landed in Montevideo just before dawn on Friday. Hundreds of fans carrying banners with slogans such as “Luis, All Of Uruguay Is With You” were waiting.

“He has been treated worse than a murderer, when it was just a mistake,” one of the fans at the airport told AFP.

President Jose Mujica said he met Suarez after his return and before the footballer was driven away to his mother’s home in the southern province of Canelones.

Mujica said in his weekly radio address that FIFA’s punishment of Suarez would become an “eternal shame” for football.

“We think this will be remembered, this will remain among the worst moments in the history of football. This will be an eternal shame in the story of World Cups,” Mujica said.

Fallout from Suarez’s ban spread quickly with gambling website 888 Poker terminating its sponsorship deal with the player.

Sports equipment giant Adidas said it was halting the use of Suarez in adverts for the duration of the World Cup. The company said it “fully” backed FIFA’s ban.

British media speculated the sanctions could wipe a substantial amount off the value of Suarez if Liverpool decide to sell him. The English club has not yet commented on the case insisting it was waiting to see FIFA’s report.

The Crowd Says:

2014-06-29T11:47:35+00:00

Glenn Innes

Guest


ANTHONY- I worked in the wagering industry for much of my life and you have fallen for the classic sucker punch...thinking that knowledge of the game will help you win - it will not. Some people did win but "knowledge of the game in the conventional sense of the word has nothing to do with it.What you need is data and the ability to analyse it mathematically and weight the variables involved so you can see what variables people with "a knowledge of the game" under and over estimate and you would be suprised how esoteric some of those variables can be. If you want to make money betting on football forget about watching football and learn all you can about statistics and data base programming (if you can't work with SQL forget it) and get ready to work hundred hour weeks - also specialise on one particular league.

2014-06-29T11:33:34+00:00

magila cutty

Guest


While i deplore Suarez's action i gotta say he's got nothing on the meatheads at nrl. Carney pisses in own mouth. What?? Yeah, and posts picture on line. Genius!

2014-06-29T08:28:16+00:00

BES

Guest


“We think this will be remembered, this will remain among the worst moments in the history of football. This will be an eternal shame in the story of World Cups,” Mujica said. He's absolutely right - but not because of the ridiculous reason he is citing. A life ban would certainly not be out of order.

2014-06-29T07:58:22+00:00

Cadfael

Roar Guru


I hear there's an opening for an advertising job for an actor for the "Feed the man meat" commercial.

2014-06-29T04:53:51+00:00

nordster

Guest


Lol you're kidding :) ...People bleed themselves thru gambling....personal responsibility. Have seen folks at both ends of the punting spectrum...treating them like victims and 'vulnerable' just makes them worse.

2014-06-29T03:04:51+00:00

abbis maal

Guest


Help? a kick up the backside more like

2014-06-29T02:49:56+00:00

Anthony Ferguson

Guest


Ha ha touché. I tried to turn a profit gambling on football using my vast knowledge of the game. It's practically impossible. It was gonna be my part time job. Suarez does need help. He has a psychological problem.

2014-06-28T22:53:13+00:00

Lachlan Doyle

Roar Pro


+1 well said.

2014-06-28T15:08:36+00:00

Dalgety Carrington

Guest


"Fallout from Suarez’s ban spread quickly with gambling website 888 Poker terminating its sponsorship deal with the player." ...yeah, cause bruising someone's shoulder with your teeth is much worse than bleeding vulnerable people of their hard earned cash through gambling.

Read more at The Roar