
It's also bad form to post a link/ article without any comment on it. What was the point of posting that, what does it add to the discussion?
Sorry but that is bollocks. Players intentionally hurt opponents ALL THE TIME. What does it matter how they do it? Headbutting, biting, elbowing, kicking, punching... what's the difference? The intention and end result is the same - to hurt the victim.Thanks for your rational and well reasoned comment. Perhaps he should be strung up by his balls and put on public display for the baying masses too?
Who's rational and reasoned now?
It's one thing when a player gets hurt by an especially hard tackle, it is a competitive and physical sport where players attack each other for posession of the ball.
Running up to someone and biting him has nothing to do with the sport, it is intentionally harming a person in a sport whose aim is to score goals.
This aint boxing or martial arts where you aim to win either by points or beating the other into submission/knocking them out.
Suarez should be severely punished and i would also condone a lifelong ban because it's not the first time he did this. He clearly shows that he has poor to no control over himself and such players have no right to compete.
Period.
Sergio Ramos has been red carded around 20 times in his career for some of the worst fouls ever seen. Why does nobody call for him to be banned for life? He's only done it 20 times. Suarez is a saint compared to that thug.
Suarez is a scumbag. No rational adult human being bites another human being, regardless of anything else. Attempting to argue that it's no worse than any other kind of onfield foul is just bizarre.
The less said about the Uruguayan claims that the bite is actually an existing scar (that just happened to be in the exact same place Suarez made contact), was photoshopped (in real time and on live TV, no less) and that poor Suarez is the victim of an international smear campaign, the better.
Anyway...
The last 16 are more or less sorted and I'm still hoping Portugal bomb out. I've just seen another replay of Messi's second goal against Nigeria and the bloke is simply brilliant - every bit as good as (and in my irrelevant opinion, much better than) Ronaldo and without the grotesque ego. Quite an entertaining match all 'round.
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It's also bad form to post a link/ article without any comment on it. What was the point of posting that, what does it add to the discussion?
It's not bollocks because there's a difference in my opinion.
Shoving, hard tackling, elbowing and such all fall under the physicality of the sport. There are limits to this and if you go past them your opponent gets the ball, you get warned or sent off the field. While some fouls are needlessly hard (such as charging at the opponent feet first) they fall under the rules of the game which everybody accepts as part of the game and you don't see lawsuits for assault.
What Suarez did went way past the game. This was not fighting for the ball.. he intentionally walked up to a player and just bit him.
Try to justify it any way you want by citing other rough behaviour but this one went far outside of the game.
And a 4 month ban that will also affect his club.
And a 4 month ban that will also affect his club.
Be interesting to see if anyone such as Barcelona will still want to buy him knowing he won't play before October?
Sooo... USA vs. Germany!
In that case I sure hope FIFA severely punish the next footballer to pinch an opponent. And a lifetime ban for any player found guilty of pulling another players hair. These 'deviant' acts are way more sinister than an elbow or headbutt to the face, which result in far softer punishment as already evidenced at this World Cup.^^
I agree, it's not about biting being more violent than breaking someone's leg, but it's more deviant in the context of the game.
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