Suarez will keep on believing
Liverpool manager Brendan Rodgers may have challenged referees over their treatment of Luis Suarez but the striker is trying to take it all in his stride.
The Reds boss yesterday revealed he had spoken to Mike Riley, head of Professional Game Match Officials Ltd, about decisions going against them.
In particular he referenced legitimate penalty claims by Suarez which had been turned down with, on one occasion, the Uruguay international being booked for diving.
Suarez, however, insists he has to accept that mistakes happen.
āThere are times when the referee gets it right and others when he doesnāt but thatās all part and parcel of the game,ā he said.
āItās happened in the last few games, like against Manchester United when the penalty shout on me wasnāt given and then the one on (Antonio) Valencia was.
āBut talking about it doesnāt solve anything ā the referee has a split second to see an incident.
āLetās just hope that it doesnāt happen again in the future.ā
Suarez is Liverpoolās leading scorer this season with three and that lack of goals ā the team have just four in five Barclays Premier League matches ā has contributed to a winless start and a place in the bottom three.
Their early fixtures have been a baptism of fire for new boss Rodgers but Suarez is confident the goals and results will come.
āIt makes it more difficult when your opening fixtures of the season are against strong teams like Arsenal, Manchester City and Manchester United ā they are not easy games,ā he told liverpoolfc.com.
āAt the moment, we are not in the position where Liverpool Football Club has to be, which is battling it out at the top end of the league.
āBut weāve been a bit unlucky and I still believe ā and will continue to believe ā that we have a lot of quality here and a manager who is giving everyone the confidence to believe in their opportunities.ā
Suarez returns to Carrow Road, scene of his brilliant hat-trick last season, to face Norwich tomorrow looking to rediscover his best form.
āAs a striker, you always want to be scoring goals or making assists, and helping the team however you can,ā said the Uruguayan, who has scored 24 goals in 59 appearances since moving from Ajax in January 2011.
āI know myself that I can still up my game that little bit and maybe enjoy a little bit more luck in front of goal, because itās a strikerās job to score goals.
āI donāt think that you can compare my goalscoring record at Ajax (111 in 159 games) with here.
āFirstly, because the Premier League is a very tough league to play in and, secondly, at Ajax I went through a period where the goals were flying in from wherever I shot ā Iād get rebounds going in off my shoulder.
āIām not getting that sort of luck at the moment. Sometimes Iām doing the hard part by getting away from the defender, but then Iām not finishing well.
āBut thatās what you work on in training and sometimes thereās a bit of luck involved as well, but by practising hard Iām sure that the goals I want to score will come.ā




