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Luis Suarez may have bitten off more than he can chew this time. Already banned twice in
his career for biting an opponent, the Uruguay striker was seemingly at
it again in his country's key World Cup victory over Italy.
Just before Uruguay's
winning goal, the striker was embroiled in an off the ball incident with
Italy defender Giorgio Chiellini with both men falling to the floor.
Television pictures
showed Suarez dipping his head towards Chiellini, and when the Italian
defender eventually got up, he pulled down his shirt and appeared to
furiously indicate that he had been bitten on the shoulder.
"Suarez is a sneak and he
gets away with it because FIFA want their stars to play in the World
Cup," Chiellini told Sky Sports Italia.
"I'd love to see if they
have the courage to use video evidence against him. The referee saw the
bite mark too, but he did nothing about it.," added the Juventus
defender.
The 27-year-old Suarez
will now face a nervous wait to find out if football's world governing
body FIFA will take action retrospectively -- given it was missed by the
match officials - and punish him.
But Uruguay coach Oscar Tabarez insists he did not see the incident when he addressed the press in his news conference.
"I'd like to see the images," he said.
"I didn't see that. And
if it happened the referee probably didn't see it. So no I don't have
any more comments to make. We had more important things than this in a
football match."
Diego Godin's 81st
minute header secured victory for Uruguay against an Italian team which
played the final half hour with 10-men after Claudio Marchisio was sent
off.
The defeat led to
Italian coach Cesare Prandelli offering his resignation in his news
conference after the game -- but all eyes were still on Suarez.
The Uruguayan, who plays his club football with Liverpool, was banned for 10 games in April 2013 after being found guilty of biting Chelsea defender Branislav Ivanovic.
He was also guilty of
biting during his time in the Netherlands with Ajax where he was banned
for seven games after leaving a scar on the collarbone of Otman Bakkal.
Suarez's rap sheet is lengthy.
At the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, he deliberately handled the ball on the goal-line to deny Ghana a place in the semifinals of the World Cup.
He was sent off for his troubles but Ghana missed the penalty and Uruguay went on to finish third in the tournament.
The following year after his move to Liverpool, Suarez was found guilty of racially abusing Manchester United's Patrice Evra. He was fined $63,000 and banned for eight matches.
Last week, after scoring
both goals in his side's 2-1 victory over England, Suarez hit out at
the British media after claiming he had been unfairly treated over his
transgressions.
"Before the game people in England laughed about my attitude over the last few years," he told reporters following the game.
"I want to see what they think now. I have dreamed of this moment."
Suarez enjoyed a sensational season with Liverpool -- scoring 31 league goals to help his club qualify for the Champions League.
He was voted Player of
the Year by his fellow colleagues and also named as the journalists'
Player of the Year too -- awards that reflected a feeling that Suarez
had put behind him his troubled past.
His participation in the World Cup had looked in danger when he suffered a knee injury in Liverpool's final game of the season.
He was forced to undergo
keyhole surgery and missed Uruguay's opening game defeat by Costa Rica
before making a near miraculous return in time to face England just five
weeks after his operation, scoring both goals in the South American
side's 2-1 win.
Uruguay's next game is likely to be against Colombia on Saturday in Rio de Janeiro. In the group's other game, Costa Rica sealed top spot with a goalless draw against England. Los Ticos, which won both of its previous games, will play its next game in Recife on Sunday.
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