Liverpool Set A Poor Example By Making Luis Suárez Captain

Did Liverpool Set A Poor Example By Making Suárez Captain?
LONDON, ENGLAND - DECEMBER 15: Luis Suarez of Liverpool celebrates scoring their fourth goal during the Barclays Premier League match between Tottenham Hotspur and Liverpool at White Hart Lane on December 15, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Paul Gilham/Getty Images)
LONDON, ENGLAND - DECEMBER 15: Luis Suarez of Liverpool celebrates scoring their fourth goal during the Barclays Premier League match between Tottenham Hotspur and Liverpool at White Hart Lane on December 15, 2013 in London, England. (Photo by Paul Gilham/Getty Images)
Paul Gilham via Getty Images

Football is laden with myths, but few are as potent as that of the role model. This is the term used by concerned citizens nationwide when a footballer falls foul of the law on or off the pitch, as sanctimonious parents scapegoat an individual in an attempt to excuse their own shortcomings, should their child copy one of their heroes.

Luis Suárez is not, and never was, an example for children to follow because of his profession. While parents can be forgiven for encouraging their children to play like him, they should also be responsible enough to inform their offspring that other aspects of a player's game should not be replicated.

So as seemingly inconsequential a gesture it was of Brendan Rodgers to make the Uruguayan captain for Liverpool's trip to Tottenham, it was also highly questionable and, arguably, deplorable.

The importance of the armband remains a significant matter. In England, it is inexplicably championed as the symbol of the leader and the paragon. In other countries, it is borderline irrelevant and only of use when communicating with an official. Joe Hart should have been made England captain 18 months ago because it would have ended a curious fascination with the role.

Ultimately though, it holds weight on these shores. Which makes it peculiar why so few seem concerned with Liverpool rewarding a player who has racially abused an opponent, bitten another, regularly cheated, dived and wanted to leave the club in the summer with such an honour.

Arsenal used to risibly pass the captaincy between players in an effort to compensate for no silverware, and that reasoning applies with Suárez, too, to a certain extent. Only it does not tally with the ethos of a club as historic and cultured as Liverpool, and harks back to the dark days of the 2011-12 campaign under Kenny Dalglish. Glen Johnson, Martin Skrtel or Lucas Leiva would have been more suitable alternatives to Suárez.

For the first time in his three years in England, Suárez actually seemed pleasant in his post-match interview following the rout at White Hart Lane. Humble, jokey and genuinely magnanimous alongside man of the match Jordan Henderson, he finally seems lucid of how damaged his image is and is endeavouring to improve it. Although Suárez's mood was high after a superb two-goal display, which took his seasonal tally to a sensational 17 goals in 12 games. He even saw the funny side when a mascot fooled him before the game began.

They still just can't get enough of him in Anfield, despite a rap sheet longer than their title drought. Some Liverpool fans are so forgiving of their No.7 they booed Evra again on his third trip to L4 since he was racially abused by Suárez, which perhaps highlights how much of a non-event Suárez's interim promotion is for Reds.

Close

What's Hot