‘The devil himself’: Ghana target World Cup revenge against Luis Suarez and Uruguay

Suarez reflected on his notorious handball 12 years ago against Ghana and the perils of revenge, as the Black Stars eye progress to the last 16

Richard Jolly
Doha
Friday 02 December 2022 04:14 EST
Comments
Suarez features in Uruguay training after loss to Portugal

Your support helps us to tell the story

From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging.

At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story.

The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it.

Your support makes all the difference.

Luis Suarez has been known to lose his temper but he sat there calmly and listened as he was told people in Ghana consider him the devil. Lest there was any scope for misunderstanding, it was translated into his native tongue: El Diablo.

A dozen years on, El Diablo remained unapologetic for one of his more notorious deeds. It is Uruguay against Ghana, the rematch, on Friday and if the stakes are high now, with the loser certain to go out of the World Cup, they were bigger still in 2010. It was the 120th minute of the quarter-final when the forward who is now Uruguay’s record goalscorer turned goalkeeper, handling to prevent Dominic Adiyah’s header from making Ghana Africa’s first World Cup semi-finalist. Exit Suarez, sent off, only for him to celebrate enthusiastically when Asamoah Gyan ballooned the resulting spot kick over the bar.

Suarez’s stance has remained consistent. “I don’t apologise about that,” he said. “I take the handball but the Ghana player misses a penalty, not me. Maybe I can say apologise if I take a tackle and injure a player and take a red card but in this situation, I take a red card and the referee says penalty. It is not my fault because I don’t miss the penalty. It is not my responsibility to shoot the penalty.”

And while Uruguay’s victory in the subsequent shootout and Suarez’s evident glee scarcely encouraged feelings of forgiveness in Ghana, he may have had a point. Suarez was suspended for the semi-final. His punishment involved missing Uruguay’s biggest match for 50 years. Now, with his side goalless, winless and, at times, aimless, given the passiveness of some of their football so far, there is unlikely to be another semi-final. If Ghana defined Suarez’s World Cup career, Ghana could end it. Suarez was told that a nation of Ghanaians want to retire him. He accepted that.

On the scale of Suarez’s many misdemeanours, a deliberate handball that brought a punishment ranks fairly low. His 2014 World Cup, for instance, ended in more disgraceful fashion and, unprompted, he brought it up. Giorgio Chiellini is the third opponent he has bit on the pitch. Suarez can seem fuelled by grudges but part of his idiosyncratic code involves letting some bygones be bygones. “I played against Chiellini afterwards,” he reflected. “I made a mistake with what I did and then we shake hands and play. You can’t just keep thinking about the past and revenge because that can be counter-productive.”

All of which sounded uncharacteristic, coming from Suarez. And yet, bluntly as the message was conveyed by his Ghanaian inquisitors, there was a truth to their message. As far as the World Cup is concerned, this could be the end. Not just for Suarez, either, but for Edinson Cavani, Diego Godin and Martin Caceres, the other survivors of 2010. Uruguay finished fourth then. Suarez scored three goals. He has seven in World Cups, one short of Uruguay’s national record. None have come in 2022. Suarez’s tournament to date has been an anti-climax: he had just 18 touches in the stalemate against South Korea and was substituted. He was a substitute in defeat to Portugal. “I did have a goalscoring opportunity, my finish wasn’t great and I wasn’t happy about that,” he said.

He is 35 now, back playing in his homeland, apparently coveted by Gremio. He admits he isn’t the player he was when his pace helped make him irrepressible. “Darwin [Nunez] and Maxi [Gomez] can run those longer distances like I used to in the past,” Suarez said. His race is almost run.

Luis Suarez handled in the quarter-final against Ghana 12 years ago
Luis Suarez handled in the quarter-final against Ghana 12 years ago (Getty Images)

The eventual verdict may be that Suarez’s best performance of this World Cup came in the press conference theatre, not on the pitch. His appearance was a surprise though, in the context of his career, it was scarcely the first time he has walked headlong in a storm. “We are facing challenging times and I wanted to take on the responsibility of being here,” he said.

Certainly it deflected attention, and perhaps pressure, from his team-mates. Their potential exit was demoted to a subplot. For perhaps the last time on the global stage, the spotlight lingered on Suarez. It is a sign of his magnetism, of the extraordinary nature of a controversial career, of how resonant a moment 12 years ago remains.

Luis Suarez looked a shadow of his former self in Uruguay’s draw with South Korea
Luis Suarez looked a shadow of his former self in Uruguay’s draw with South Korea (PA Wire)

“I don’t know what people are saying, if they are saying it is revenge,” he reflected. “But the players who might play tomorrow were what eight years on back then. Some people may say it is the devil himself.”

But now the devil could be retired by the nation he tormented most.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in