Connect with us

Barcelona

Suárez: Why his Liverpool peak felt like his best football

Luis Suárez insists his Liverpool 2013-14 form was superior to his Barcelona period, he said. again.

Published

on

Luis Suárez has offered a stark assessment of his own career, arguing that the best version of himself arrived at Liverpool rather than during his trophy-studded years at Barcelona. After a turbulent start on Merseyside that included a ban over an incident involving Patrice Evra, Suárez grew into a dominant figure by his second full season in England. That rise followed further controversy when he was retrospectively banned for biting Branislav Ivanović, and a failed move to Arsenal added to the turmoil around him.

“The Suárez at Liverpool in 2013 or 2014, when everything was going his way—because everything was going his way—was special,” the man himself told SPORT . “It’s a streak, a moment, when everything clicks and you enjoy it.“

WhoScored figures underline how influential he was in 2013–14: 31 Premier League goals (1st), four counterattacking goals (1st), 181 total shots (1st), 81 shots on target (1st), 12 assists (2nd), 88 chances created (3rd), 237 dribbles attempted (1st) and 93 dribbles completed (2nd). Suárez scored 31 goals in 33 top-flight appearances that season, equalling what was then a competition record, and he did so without taking a single penalty.

A late-season collapse cost Liverpool the title and cleared the path for Suárez’s move to Barcelona in search of trophies. At Barcelona he joined a frontline that already contained Neymar Jr. and Lionel Messi and adopted a different role.

Advertisement

“The Suárez at Barcelona was completely different from the Suárez at Liverpool because of the space and the role he had to fulfil,” he outlined. “I always explained it: at Barcelona, I learned to play in a 10×10 meter space with one touch, something I didn’t do at Liverpool. At Liverpool, I had 40 metres to run on my own, and I had to trick myself and fight for the ball. It was the same in Uruguay. At Barcelona, no matter where I looked, I had to get used to passing accurately.”

Even with that positional shift, Suárez produced his most prolific European seasons at Barcelona. The standout campaign came in 2015–16 when he combined 54 goals with 23 assists, 40 of those goals coming in La Liga. Across 2009–19 he also broke a dominant scoring duopoly to claim the European Golden Shoe.

Barcelona

When Player-Manager Relationships Fractured: Five Dressing-Room Explosions

Five high-profile player-manager bust-ups that fractured teams: Keane, Beckham, Ibrahimović, Anelka, Pogba,

Published

on

Few ruptures destabilise a team like a public falling-out between player and manager. Across international tournaments and club dressing rooms, such confrontations have reshaped squads and careers.

The 2002 Saipan incident remains one of the most notorious cases, so notorious a film was made about it starring Steve Coogan. Roy Keane publicly confronted Republic of Ireland manager Mick McCarthy over pre-tournament preparations in Saipan. The argument spilled out in a team meeting and exploded into a venomous outburst: “Mick, you’re a liar … you’re a f—– w—–,” Keane barked. “I didn’t rate you as a player, I don’t rate you as a manager, and I don’t rate you as a person. You’re a f—– w—– and you can stick your World Cup up your a—. The only reason I have any dealings with you is that somehow you are the manager of my country!” Keane did not play at that World Cup and did not return to international duty until McCarthy’s dismissal.

At Manchester United tensions between David Beckham and Sir Alex Ferguson reached a physical flashpoint in February 2003 after an FA Cup fifth round defeat to Arsenal. Ferguson kicked a boot that struck Beckham above the eye, leaving a cut. Beckham wore a small plaster on his eyebrow at his next public appearance. The season ended with Beckham leaving Old Trafford for Real Madrid.

Zlatan Ibrahimović’s time at Barcelona collapsed after a dressing-room confrontation with Pep Guardiola following a Champions League semi-final defeat to Bayern Munich. “Guardiola was staring at me and I lost it,” Ibrahimović said. “I thought, ‘there is my enemy, scratching his bald head!’ “I yelled: ‘You haven’t got any b—-!’ and worse than that I added: ‘You can go to hell!’ I completely lost it, and you might have expected Guardiola to say a few words in response, but he’s a spineless coward.” Ibrahimović moved on loan to AC Milan and later completed a permanent transfer.

Advertisement

France’s 2010 World Cup campaign also featured a midgame bust-up. At halftime of the group defeat to Mexico, Nicolas Anelka allegedly told manager Raymond Domenech: “Go f— yourself, you son of a w—-.” He was substituted and subsequently sent home.

Finally, the Pogba-Mourinho relationship at Manchester United deteriorated after public disagreement over the team’s approach in 2018–19. Mourinho reportedly told Pogba he would never captain the Red Devils and later labelled him a “virus” that “kills the mentality of good, honest people.” Pogba was left out of a squad and Mourinho was sacked following a defeat to Liverpool.

Continue Reading

Barcelona

Rashford Declines to Choose in Messi v Ronaldo Debate

Rashford refused to pick between Messi and Ronaldo, calling one a playmaker and the other a finisher

Published

on

Marcus Rashford was unable to give a definitive answer when asked to pick between Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo in the debate over the game’s greatest. Put on the spot by ESPN, he opted for balance rather than a verdict. “I think it’s Messi and Ronaldo,” Rashford said with an uneasy smile creeping across his lips. “It’s difficult.”

In the same quick-fire sequence the England international praised both men’s strengths. Ronaldo earned the status of “best finisher of all time” while Messi was deemed to be the “best playmaker.” Rashford was clear that Messi remains “the greatest La Liga player of all time,” but he also refused to overlook Ronaldo when the discussion expanded beyond Spain’s top flight.

Rashford has previously described Ronaldo as an influence on his early development at Manchester United, recalling the Portuguese forward’s work ethic and ambition. “When Cristiano Ronaldo came to United, he was the one who everyone looked up to,” the boyhood Red Devils fan revealed shortly after breaking into the first team. “The thing that impressed me the most was the fact he was only young when he came into the side and he wanted to be the best player in the side. He worked hard every single day, you saw him in the gym every single day and the results came on the pitch. He openly wanted to be the best player in the world .

“You have to have an approach like that—all the best players in the world do. It’s not arrogance or anything like that, it’s the mindset you need to achieve things.”

Advertisement

There’s no suggestion that a member of Barcelona ’s media department were looming menacingly behind the camera during Rashford’s interview. Still, ex-Blaugrana midfielder Kevin-Prince Boateng has spoken about internal pressure at Barcelona. He told Rio Ferdinand’s podcast back in 2023: “I remember that when I arrived in Barcelona they immediately asked me who the best player in the world was. I had to say it was Lionel Messi, I lied. It was one of the biggest lies of my life.”

Continue Reading

Barcelona

Deco: Why Marcus Rashford Regained Form After a Troubled United Spell

Deco: Rashford ‘suffered’ at United, is ‘happy’ at Barcelona after loan revival and versatility ’25

Published

on

Barcelona sporting director Deco has outlined why Marcus Rashford found a fresh start at Camp Nou after a difficult period at Manchester United. Deco said the England forward “suffered” early in his career at United and now “He’s happy with us,” Deco explained in an interview with The Times, hinting that Rashford had become the opposite with his life at United.

Rashford enjoyed a standout 2022–23 season under Erik ten Hag, becoming the only United player since Sir Alex Fergusion retired 10 years earlier to score 30 goals in a single season. The draft records that his form had otherwise been inconsistent since 2021, and he was pushed to the fringes by Ruben Amorim within weeks of the Portuguese coach’s appointment last November.

Rashford finished 2024–25 with Aston Villa and moved to Barcelona for the 2025–26 season on loan. The loan has produced an immediate impact: 17 goals and assists in 18 appearances so far. Deco highlighted Rashford’s adaptability as a key reason for signing him. “Marcus is a fantastic player. He faced the responsibility of becoming an important player at Man Utd—United, like us, are one of the biggest clubs in the world—too young. He suffered a bit with this change of generation at United too. If you see United in the last five years, they had difficulties rebuilding the team, to become stronger again. He was there. So, it’s not easy for a player [from whom] people demand a lot. When you are an important player, you have a lot of responsibility.”

Deco added: “We were looking for a player like him on the market. A player that could play in the three positions up front. We were able to sign Marcus on loan now because of his desire to play for Barcelona . He waited a lot. He knew that we were dealing with financial rules. But he was patient. He waited and we’re happy to have him.”

Advertisement

Aston Villa declined a £40 million option to sign Rashford permanently last season. Barcelona’s option is reportedly lower, at around £28 million, and is likely to expire when the loan ends on June 30. Deco suggested they are unlikely to decide on the option before the end of the season. Barcelona’s ongoing financial constraints and recent registration timing issues remain part of the background to the deal.

Continue Reading

Trending