The Uruguayan was handed a 10-game ban for taking a lump out of Ivanovic’s elbow (Picture: Getty)

Jamie Carragher has revealed that Luis Suarez initially tried to deny he had bitten Chelsea defender Branislav Ivanovic when he returned to the Liverpool dressing room after their infamous clash.

The Uruguayan was handed a 10-game ban by the FA in April 2013 after sinking his teeth into Ivanovic’s arm, a suspension which ran into the following season causing him to miss the first five matches – though he nevertheless top-scored that year with 31 goals.

Incredibly, despite Suarez’s bite being picked up by multiple cameras during the game, the current Barcelona striker protested his innocence to his teammates in the immediate aftermath.

To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video

Asked what Suarez told the players after the incident, Carragher told Sky Sports: ‘When he came in the dressing room – I think we were starting to get things going on and things getting said to us about stuff that had gone on – Luis actually denied it at first!




‘Maybe he hoped the cameras hadn’t picked it up.

‘But I actually think that it had a massive effect on Liverpool next season. I think Suarez then got a seven or eight game ban and I think he missed the first four or five games of the following season.

‘That was the season Liverpool almost won the title, Suarez was the best player in the league. But there were two games Liverpool dropped points in, I think it was at home to Southampton they lost 1-0 and they drew away at Swansea, so there were five points dropped in the first few games and Luis Suarez didn’t play.

Suarez got away with the bite in the game but was later handed a hefty ban (Picture: Getty)

‘And the form he was in that season, you’d have to say there was a good chance that you think he would have turned one of those games. So that act and the ban that he got actually affected Liverpool much more the next season. There wasn’t too much riding on [the previous] season.’

Asked if biting another player was treated different to, say, a rash challenge, Carragher continued: ‘Well he’d actually done it before, at Ajax I think before he came, and there was a situation there that he was involved in.

‘And there was obviously a situation afterwards I think which probably pushed Liverpool to eventually move him on. I think he wanted to go anyway to Barcelona at that stage.

‘Something happened at the World Cup [where Suarez bit Italy’s Giorgio Chiellini], so that’s something where he obviously gets frustrated.

Suarez was banned again for biting Chiellini at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil (Picture: Getty)

‘I’ve played alongside him and at that time you come out and defend your players. You know it’s wrong, of course you do, but you come out and you defend your player and you try to stick together as a club and support him.

‘And as I say, I think it did affect him at that time and it was something that he went on to do again. But having watched him against Liverpool last season, I don’t think I’ve ever seen a player who wants to win so much.

Carragher recently apologised for Liverpool’s decision to wear t-shirts supporting Suarez after he racially abused Patrice Evra (Picture: Getty)

‘And he probably almost takes it to – we talk about getting as close to the line as you possibly can – but he probably crosses the line numerous times.

‘Even coming up against a former club in Liverpool last season in the Champions League, he wasn’t too worried about the Kop giving him stick and maybe trying to get Andy Robertson sent off and antagonising Liverpool players even though it was his former club.



‘Even though I was wound up watching it, in some ways I admired it as well because that’s what made him such a special player. He was a win-at-all-costs man.’

MORE: Steven Gerrard reveals why he preferred playing with Fernando Torres more than Luis Suarez

MORE: Luis Suarez gives his backing to Barcelona’s moves for Neymar and Lautaro Martinez

Follow Metro Sport across our social channels, on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

For more stories like this, check our sport page.