One nutter stands with another ...
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Yeah. And the president of Uruguay sounds as mad as the rest of them. It gives me a whole new sense of respect for Wales.
One nutter stands with another ...
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I remember reading about this in respect of international rugby once. As I remember, at that level it's 12 to 24 weeks depending on the severity of the particular incident. In exceptional cases the ban can be for more than 24 weeks. Not sure how different national associations deal with it.
Yeah. And the president of Uruguay sounds as mad as the rest of them. It gives me a whole new sense of respect for Wales.
Cheers. So somewhere in the same ball park. It's a little more "normal" to do it in rugby, and rugby tends to be known for being pretty fair.
Given that, I'm not sure how we can really can complain.
He got a 7 match ban for the Ajax bite (plus 1 match that he had suspended).
Yeah. And the president of Uruguay sounds as mad as the rest of them. It gives me a whole new sense of respect for Wales.
I know, I meant in terms of punishment from FIFA.
Who seem to be pretty relaxed these days with violent conduct punishment.
There are any amount of posts in this thread from posters offering up other incidents as better or worse 'acts' than Suarez's. LTW's post yesterday with the fucking 'Top 10' worse things you could do being one of those. Why bother? Why not just focus on the actual issue at hand? That this cunt has let us down again.
But not, people want to look to half-arsed precedents.
The law is more important. Tyson lost his licence to box in the one state where the incident happened, there's a very good reason why he wasn't banned from all boxing because that interferes with his right to earn a living.
Suarez can use the EU laws on human rights, as suspending him from all football worldwide is simply ridiculous. When you bite someone at work, they don't fire you from ever working again. When you get thrown out of uni, they don't ban you from ever going to university again. It's because those things interfere with your human rights.
The situations where you are not entitled to those rights are extremely rare. Taking anabolic steroids or match-fixing for example. Biting someone? This has got to go to court because FIFA are just asking for it.
He is the most marketable player on the planet if done right.
Vinnie Jones got a Hollywood career from his bad boy image. Luis is the most famous player in the world right now.
Not so sure it is the image we want though.
@Buddha
I had pretty much the exact same view of this the last time he bit another man - http://www.sixcrazyminutes.com/index.php?threads/keep-suarez.30938/page-38#post-916099
Just in case you think I'm being "a tit" for the sake of it.
I'd put it a little differently, in that I don't think Uruguay can really complain. LFC's position is rather different IMHO.
Another point to notice is that in rugby the incidents are sometimes more severe, resulting in severance of fingertips, earlobes etc.
I dunno, the punishment is against the player, it just happens to affect the teams he plays for too. He chose to sign a player that's capable of biting someone. Just like an employer loses out if one of their employees gets sent to jail.
We can probably sue him all right, but we can't really complain about the decision of the disciplinary body.
That's about right. The only part I'm unsure about - and where we may be able to challenge - is whether the disciplinary body's sanctions have gone beyond the scope of their coverage. I read the FIFA Disciplinary Code (2011 - latest one I think), and I'm unsure that the scope extends beyond (a) games under FIFA's direct jurisdiction and (b) games not under anyone's jurisdiction (I suppose that's charity games, testimonial games, etc.). Does that include domestic games under country FA jurisdiction? I'm not really sure - it's not clear to me, and I suppose that's where we might be able to contest. Here's the scope of the application of the Disciplinary Code:
2 Scope of application: substantive law
This code applies to every match and competition organised by FIFA. Beyond this scope, it also applies if a match official is harmed and, more generally, if the statutory objectives of FIFA are breached, especially with regard to forgery, corruption and doping. It also applies to any breach of FIFA regulations that does not fall under the jurisdiction of any other body.
Now, I'm talking about contesting not because we want to defend Suarez - he deserves all the shit he gets - but because we want to defend the club's interests. Whether he can play club games has to have some impact on his price in the event that we want to dump him. If the legal suits look at the rules and decide that we've no case to fight, then it's too bad.
As I say just give him a muzzle and the butting will stop. Problem stopped. Easy. But that may not stop him from breaking somebody's legs or gauge their eyes out. But that is no problem. They will ban him only for 3 matches.
That will be one match ban. I would prefer him breaking someone's legs. especially Man Utd or Chelsea or City or Arsenal or Everton players.But what if he takes off his boots and throws them in someone's face? Fucker does unorthodox.
Adidas are also reviewing their sponsorship.
Beat me to it. Agree entirely. Get top quality advice - I'd hope we seek it from Lord Grabiner or someone at that level - and abide by it.
That's not the way I remember it, Ports. As I recall it, the reason we couldn't take the Evra decision to court was that the FA's rules, which we had (presumably knowingly) signed up to, precluded our doing so. In this case I'd be interested to get proper advice on whether, in making their ban cover what Suarez would otherwise be doing in this country, FIFA thereby brought their decision within the jurisdiction of the English courts. As you suggest, the CAS in Switzerland may also be a possibility. Either way, we should absolutely be guided by what our advice says.
The FA basically said in the report that, should we appeal, the ban would be for longer.