Luis Suarez's "unprecedented" four-month ban from football for biting was harsh but justified, the British press, which the striker has accused of conspiring against him, said today.
Suarez, who plays for Premier League club Liverpool, will no longer be Uruguay's star player in the 2014 World Cup after football body FIFA banned him from "football-related activities" for biting Italy's Giorgio Chiellini during a Group D game on Tuesday.
The ban will also prevent Suarez from playing or training with Liverpool until the four months are up - and the British press speculated that his notorious reputation could damage his career.
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"He'll blame other people, of course. He always does. The English media, the Italian media, the Italian players, the world and his wife," wrote the Mirror's chief sports writer Oliver Holt, saying ultimately only Suarez himself was to blame.
But Holt called the ban "desperately harsh on Liverpool" and "a brutal blow to the club's hopes of improving on the wonderful season they have just had."
The Sun speculated that the incident could knock USD 34 million off Suarez's value if Liverpool decided to sell him, while The Daily Telegraph said Suarez "paid dearly for his biting shame".