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'Wild nature' still hindering Suarez

Updated: 2013-12-31 07:45
By Agence France-Presse in London ( China Daily)

Mourinho believes Liverpool star could be better if he calmed down

Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho believes that Luis Suarez remains at the mercy of his "wild nature" despite the Liverpool striker's improved conduct in the Premier League season to date.

Suarez was banned for 10 games after biting Chelsea defender Branislav Ivanovic in a game last April, but he has since found the form to spearhead his side's title challenge.

However, the Uruguayan was involved in a contentious incident towards the end of Liverpool's 2-1 loss at Chelsea on Sunday when he went down under a challenge from Samuel Eto'o after losing the ball to Cesar Azpilicueta.

Referee Howard Webb ignored his appeal for a penalty, enabling Chelsea to complete a victory that moved it to within two points of league leader Arsenal and left Liverpool six points off the pace in fifth.

"Suarez lost the duel with Azpilicueta. Azpilicueta had the ball, Azpilicueta was leaving the box with the ball, and (Suarez) was doing an acrobatic swimming pool jump to try to get a penalty," said Mourinho.

"Because he's so clever, he also knew he was in the area where he has the Liverpool supporters behind (him).

"But Webb was only 10 meters away and I think the only mistake Webb did was not to give him a yellow card.

"He (Suarez) is a very nice boy, he does everything to win and Brendan (Rodgers) is doing a fantastic job on him, because he's changed.

"There's no doubt that he's changed. But when the situation is like this, and you are losing, comes the nature of the player, the wild nature of the player or the cultural nature of the player.

"Culturally, people from that area (Uruguay), they like it. But it's not only that area - there is a corner in Europe where I belong to (Portugal) that they also like it."

Liverpool manager Rodgers would not be drawn into a battle of words with Mourinho, with whom he worked as a youth coach during the Portuguese's first stint at Chelsea between 2004-07.

However, he felt Eto'o should have been sent off for a knee-high early foul on Jordan Henderson, which yielded a free kick by Martin Skrtel which put Liverpool ahead.

"Let's talk about the first Eto'o incident, when he should have been sent off," Rodgers said.

"I know we scored from it, but that was a wild challenge where he came right down his knee and right down his shin and didn't even get a yellow card."

Skrtel's close-range finish gave Liverpool a third-minute lead, but Chelsea's response was swift and decisive.

Man-of-the-match Eden Hazard curled home a fine goal to equalize in the 17th minute, before Eto'o got a toe to a low cross from Oscar that Simon Mignolet could only help into the net 11 minutes before half-time.

It was a second consecutive defeat for Liverpool after its 2-1 loss at Manchester City on Thursday, but Rodgers said he felt his side has demonstrated that it is a genuine title contender.

Already without Steven Gerrard, Daniel Sturridge and Jose Enrique due to injury, Rodgers saw Mamadou Sakho and Joe Allen hobble off at Stamford Bridge, and he said he would look to bolster his squad in the January transfer window.

"We've shown over the first 19 games this season that if we get the players back and we get some help in January with a few more players, we can be in the mix," he said.

"That was the biggest thing because Liverpool was never in the conversation for the last couple of years."

The game was also a costly one for Mourinho, who lost both Ivanovic and Frank Lampard to injury by the beginning of the second half.

(China Daily 12/31/2013 page23)

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