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Why Fifa’s disciplinary committee was always going to ground Luis Suárez | Why Fifa’s disciplinary committee was always going to ground Luis Suárez |
(about 4 hours later) | |
For a man not much given to modesty, Fifa’s president Sepp Blatter has kept a low profile so far in Brazil. | For a man not much given to modesty, Fifa’s president Sepp Blatter has kept a low profile so far in Brazil. |
He has attempted to keep out of shot so as not to provoke mass outbreaks of booing, but whenever he has been glimpsed he has worn a thin smile of satisfaction that the classy, breathless action on the pitch has – for now – banished all talk of Fifa corruption, protests and the venality of the modern game. | He has attempted to keep out of shot so as not to provoke mass outbreaks of booing, but whenever he has been glimpsed he has worn a thin smile of satisfaction that the classy, breathless action on the pitch has – for now – banished all talk of Fifa corruption, protests and the venality of the modern game. |
Even more than usual, Fifa has used this World Cup as a platform to project its simplistic, brazen moral mission to the world. It can be seen around the perimeter of pitches, in advertising breaks during matches and most strikingly in the bizarre paean to world peace that now precedes every match. | Even more than usual, Fifa has used this World Cup as a platform to project its simplistic, brazen moral mission to the world. It can be seen around the perimeter of pitches, in advertising breaks during matches and most strikingly in the bizarre paean to world peace that now precedes every match. |
The message: racism is bad, fair play is good and Fifa is working for a better world. So when Luis Suárez sank his teeth into the shoulder of Giorgio Chiellini, Blatter knew that it was an incident that could undermine the carefully constructed rhetoric that he has honed in his scandal-hit years as Fifa president. | The message: racism is bad, fair play is good and Fifa is working for a better world. So when Luis Suárez sank his teeth into the shoulder of Giorgio Chiellini, Blatter knew that it was an incident that could undermine the carefully constructed rhetoric that he has honed in his scandal-hit years as Fifa president. |
Even more so than when Zinedine Zidane headbutted Marco Materazzi in the final in 2006, he would have known that outrage around Suárez’s latest bite threatened to derail the narrative of a World Cup that has so far exceeded his wildest dreams. | |
Although it has been continually reiterated that the disciplinary committee is separate from the Fifa executive, its chairman, Claudio Sulser, – a former Switzerland striker and long‑standing Blatter ally – will have known what was expected of him. | |
The first priority was to get Suárez out of this World Cup, and most pressingly Uruguay’s match against Colombia, and the second to make some sort of statement about Fifa’s commitment to fair play. In explaining the rationale behind the nine-match international ban and unprecedented four-month suspension from any football-related activities – including even entering a stadium – he achieved this. “Such behaviour cannot be tolerated on any football pitch, and in particular not at a Fifa World Cup when the eyes of millions of people are on the stars on the field,” Sulser said. | |
His statement, though, takes Fifa into potentially interesting waters – essentially offering a moral standpoint as well as a disciplinary verdict. | |
Fifa made clear on the eve of the verdict that it was up to the disciplinary committee to set the parameters of its remit and decide whether to take Suárez’s long list of previous crimes into account. | Fifa made clear on the eve of the verdict that it was up to the disciplinary committee to set the parameters of its remit and decide whether to take Suárez’s long list of previous crimes into account. |
In some ways, the pantomime villain Suárez represents a convenient target for Fifa. It is tempting to wonder what it would have done had the offender been Neymar or Lionel Messi. | In some ways, the pantomime villain Suárez represents a convenient target for Fifa. It is tempting to wonder what it would have done had the offender been Neymar or Lionel Messi. |
But the point, surely, is that it was – depressingly, inevitably – Suárez. With all his history, a ban that exceeded the six matches prescribed as the sanction for spitting was surely inevitable. | But the point, surely, is that it was – depressingly, inevitably – Suárez. With all his history, a ban that exceeded the six matches prescribed as the sanction for spitting was surely inevitable. |
And the four-month ban from all football that arguably hits Liverpool as hard as it hits his nation’s hopes at this World Cup may be unprecedented for a player, but is also hard to argue with. | |
It obviously will not be a popular verdict among the embattled Uruguay camp here or in Montevideo, where the bewildering sense of burning injustice seems genuine if misguided. | |
Yet for once, and not necessarily for all the right reasons, it seems as though Fifa has got this one right. Move along. Nothing to see. On with the show. | Yet for once, and not necessarily for all the right reasons, it seems as though Fifa has got this one right. Move along. Nothing to see. On with the show. |
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