Evra accuses Suarez of racist remarks | Suarez guilty of racial abuse

"Liverpool are currently embroiled in a race row after their star striker Luis Suarez was found guilty of racially abusing Manchester United defender Patrice Evra.

Taking this into consideration, it may not have been such a good idea for the former Kop star to dress up as Motown legend Lionel Richie, complete with black face.

The 36-year-old posted the picture on his Twitter account but later took it down after users began to complain about his choice of fancy dress.

Araapatlio wrote: 'Suarez thing going on & Robbie Fowler thinks it is a good idea to post a pic of himself ‘blacked up’ as Lionel Ritchie? Doh.'

Tweeter Louise Brown added: 'I think Robbie Fowler posting a photo of himself blacked up really isn't doing #LFC any favours right now.'
Robbie Fowler, black face. Robbie Fowler deleted the post after a series of negative tweets from other users (Picture: REXMAILPIX)

On the other hand not everyone thought it was a big deal. @GazJonessss said: '@Robbie9Fowler Anyone who took offence, they're quite simply stupid. Political correctness gone mad.'

Razorsharpe09 also thought that the incident had been blown out of proportion. 'So I take it dressin up as a black person will be banned soon after the stick @Robbie9Fowler had to take for daring to go as Lionel Richie,' he tweeted.

A friend of Fowler, who is player-manager of Thai Premier League club Muangthong United, tried to defend him.

He told the Daily Star: 'Robbie wouldn’t have meant any harm. He was taking the mickey out of himself.

'But he decided to delete it after the PC brigade got on to him and some people were guessing it was Evra.'

Suarez was given an eight-match ban after he was found guilty by an independent panel.

Read more: Robbie Fowler criticised over 'blacked up' Lionel Richie Twitter photo | Metro.co.uk"

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So making your face black means 'taking the mickey of oneself'.

Whats so funny about having a black face?
 
Remembering what a twat Fowler is, it wouldn't surprise me if it had been deliberate
 
"Liverpool are currently embroiled in a race row after their star striker Luis Suarez was found guilty of racially abusing Manchester United defender Patrice Evra.

Taking this into consideration, it may not have been such a good idea for the former Kop star to dress up as Motown legend Lionel Richie, complete with black face.

The 36-year-old posted the picture on his Twitter account but later took it down after users began to complain about his choice of fancy dress.

Araapatlio wrote: 'Suarez thing going on & Robbie Fowler thinks it is a good idea to post a pic of himself ‘blacked up’ as Lionel Ritchie? Doh.'

Tweeter Louise Brown added: 'I think Robbie Fowler posting a photo of himself blacked up really isn't doing #LFC any favours right now.'
Robbie Fowler, black face. Robbie Fowler deleted the post after a series of negative tweets from other users (Picture: REXMAILPIX)

On the other hand not everyone thought it was a big deal. @GazJonessss said: '@Robbie9Fowler Anyone who took offence, they're quite simply stupid. Political correctness gone mad.'

Razorsharpe09 also thought that the incident had been blown out of proportion. 'So I take it dressin up as a black person will be banned soon after the stick @Robbie9Fowler had to take for daring to go as Lionel Richie,' he tweeted.

A friend of Fowler, who is player-manager of Thai Premier League club Muangthong United, tried to defend him.

He told the Daily Star: 'Robbie wouldn’t have meant any harm. He was taking the mickey out of himself.

'But he decided to delete it after the PC brigade got on to him and some people were guessing it was Evra.'

Suarez was given an eight-match ban after he was found guilty by an independent panel.

Read more: Robbie Fowler criticised over 'blacked up' Lionel Richie Twitter photo | Metro.co.uk"

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So making your face black means 'taking the mickey of oneself'.

Whats so funny about having a black face?

Personally I thought it was hilarious. The PC brigade are of course out in force over this non story though.:nono:
 
:lol:

Wayne Bridge
 
Good article about Evra's past in today's grauniad:

Patrice Evra has come a long way from Marsala to Manchester via Monaco | Louise Taylor | Football | The Guardian

Patrice Evra has come a long way from Marsala to Manchester via Monaco

The man who finds himself at the heart of the controversy with Luis Suárez has dealt with a great deal more than he will face in Manchester United's FA Cup tie at Liverpool

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Manchester United's Patrice Evra at the announcement that Nicolas Anelka was being thrown out of France's 2010 World Cup squad. Photograph: Francois Mori/AP


Patrice Evra retains vivid memories of his first day as a professional footballer. He had just joined Marsala, a Sicilian club in Italy's third division, and was thrilled beyond all measure to dress in a brand new tracksuit and flip-flops before leaving the hotel for training. Manchester United's left-back recalls his 17-year-old self gazing at the reflection in the bedroom mirror with a sense of unprecedented pride and unconfined joy. "It was like paradise," he has said. "To this day, it is the best feeling I've had in football."

At the time, Evra was the only black man at a club situated in a very white city on Sicily's west coast but he came to rather relish his novelty value. The then striker or left-winger happily remembers being regularly stopped on the street so people who "had never seen a black guy" could pose for pictures with him. On other occasions, complete strangers invited the teenager into their homes for meals.

Finding himself as the centre of overwhelmingly friendly attention at what he fondly regards as "an amazing, family club" proved a most welcome interlude for a young footballer who fantasised about becoming the new Romário but had previously seemed in danger of becoming lost in the crowd.

The son of a Senegalese diplomat and a Cape Verdean mother, Evra was born in Dakar but moved to Brussels at the age of one when his father was posted to Belgium. Two years later the rapidly expanding family – Evra was one of 25 children – moved to Paris where he would grow up. It should have been a privileged upbringing but two divorces, three marriages and the arrival of a new baby virtually every year ensured Evra Sr struggled to provide for his offspring.

Despite this chaotically cash-strapped childhood in increasingly forbidding neighbourhoods, the young Patrice secured impressive grades at school, demonstrating a linguistic gift that has left him fluent in five languages and in the process of being taught Korean by his good friend and United team-mate Park Ji-sung. One of Evra's principal quintet of languages, Wolof, is widely spoken in Senegal but, despite his parents' initial determination to bring the family up in a traditional west African manner, he increasingly regarded himself as French.

A watershed occurred when, aged 10, he travelled to Dakar to be circumcised amid what seemed alien celebrations. "It wasn't a happy experience, I was too westernised," he recalled. "I haven't been back to Senegal since. I'd need a real incentive to return." Further alienation from his roots took place when Evra opted to represent France rather than Senegal and faced an angry backlash. "I was called a monkey who grovels for the white man and labelled a money-obsessed traitor to the nation," he has said, left dismayed by what he regards as a form of inverted racism.

It is hard to imagine that the expected vitriol raining down on the 30-year-old from the stands at Anfield on Saturday will prove remotely as painful. Indeed, those Liverpool fans who cannot forgive the defender for accusing Luis Suárez of racial abuse and maintain, disingenuously, that the case represents a cynical playing of "the race card" are possibly also unaware that, on two previous occasions, Evra declined to support allegations he had been racially abused.

During another game against Liverpool, in 2006, two deaf fans, both lip-readers, complained to the police that Evra had been racially insulted by Steve Finnan, Liverpool's right-back. With Evra declining to become involved in the matter and Finnan vehemently denying such suggestions, video evidence eventually cleared the Republic of Ireland international.

Then, in April 2008, the so-called Battle of the Bridge erupted. This time Evra came to blows with Sam Bethell, Chelsea's head groundsman, as he warmed down after a match at Stamford Bridge. Two members of United's coaching staff, Mike Phelan and Richard Hartis, alleged that the player had been racially abused, but Bethell successfully rebutted their claims. Once again distancing himself from the furore, Evra declined to cite racist provocation as his defence and ended up being banned for four games and fined £15,000.

A little over two years later it was his mouth rather than his fists that set Evra on a collision course with many in France when he captained Les Bleus during a disastrous, controversy-suffused, World Cup campaign in South Africa. When Nicolas Anelka was expelled from the squad for subjecting France's coach, Raymond Domenech, to a string of obscenities at half-time during a defeat against Mexico in Polokwane, Evra responded to what he calls "the fire inside me" and led a dressing room mutiny, in which Domenech's players refused to train before losing their final group game against the host nation in disappointing fashion.

With certain senior French politicians claiming that such a barrack-room lawyer should never represent the country again, Evra had succeeded in dividing a nation but, ultimately, such militancy merely resulted in a five-match international ban followed by his quiet restoration to a team now under Laurent Blanc's control.

One of Blanc's former France team-mates, Didier Deschamps, is the manager Evra credits with transforming him into a leading defender. The pair came together at Monaco, where Deschamps finally convinced Evra that while he might have enjoyed himself on the left wing at Marsala, Monza and Nice, he would never cut it as a high-calibre creator. An initially reluctant left-back soon attracted a £5.5m bid from Sir Alex Ferguson and he has rarely looked back. The Parisian schoolboy who learnt "to fight for everything" and still remembers being the subject of mocking laughter from classmates when a school teacher revealed Evra's ambition to become a professional footballer had transcended all expectations.

Not that his transition to Premier League life was entirely seamless. At first Evra, his wife, Sandra, who is white, and their son, Lenny, now six, struggled to adapt. The food seemed like rubbish, the weather "a slap in the face" and it took a little time to establish himself in the first team. The sunny, stress-free days back in Monaco when he had startled team-mates by becoming part of Prince Albert's social circle must have appeared a distant mirage.

Rather than whinge, Evra endeavoured to immerse himself in United's culture, spending his evenings reading books and watching DVDs detailing the club's history and personalties. Once fully acquainted with the Munich disaster, the Busby Bates, Bobby Charlton, Denis Law and Eric Cantona, he began to feel the sort of extraordinary pride and belonging that he suspected had been long since left behind at Marsala. "I realised what a privilege it is to play for Manchester United," he said. "I learnt to respect the shirt, to respect the legend."

Certain Liverpool fans may demur but when Evra walks out at Anfield on Saturday he will command the wholesale respect of those who believe that his stance against Suárez – at times personally costly – will do more than a thousand well-meant campaigns to help eradicate casual, unthinking racism in English football.

© 2012 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved.
 
Rather than whinge, Evra endeavoured to immerse himself in United's culture, spending his evenings reading books and watching DVDs detailing the club's history and personalties. Once fully acquainted with the Munich disaster, the Busby Bates, Bobby Charlton, Denis Law and Eric Cantona, he began to feel the sort of extraordinary pride and belonging that he suspected had been long since left behind at Marsala. "I realised what a privilege it is to play for Manchester United," he said. "I learnt to respect the shirt, to respect the legend."


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The Busby Bates?
 
Rather than whinge, Evra endeavoured to immerse himself in United's culture, spending his evenings reading books and watching DVDs detailing the club's history and personalties. Once fully acquainted with the Munich disaster, the Busby Bates, Bobby Charlton, Denis Law and Eric Cantona, he began to feel the sort of extraordinary pride and belonging that he suspected had been long since left behind at Marsala. "I realised what a privilege it is to play for Manchester United," he said. "I learnt to respect the shirt, to respect the legend."


-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The Busby Bates?

Ken-Bates-001.jpg
 
Rather than whinge, Evra endeavoured to immerse himself in United's culture, spending his evenings reading books and watching DVDs detailing the club's history and personalties. Once fully acquainted with the Munich disaster, the Busby Bates, Bobby Charlton, Denis Law and Eric Cantona, he began to feel the sort of extraordinary pride and belonging that he suspected had been long since left behind at Marsala. "I realised what a privilege it is to play for Manchester United," he said. "I learnt to respect the shirt, to respect the legend."


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The Busby Bates?

norman-bates-psycho.jpg
 
I think the way Liverpool have handled the situation is a disgrace...it is making kenny look like a complete moron too. It's even worse that the police gave had to give warnings in regards to the game on Saturday when fergie sent letters out asking people to behave in a respectable manner...kenny should have done this too...
 
If you're on twitter I recommend you take a look at the #suarezmoments hashtag. It was launched by LFC for fans to post their best Suarez moments since he was signed a year ago.

To say it's not going according to plan is an understatement. :D
 
If you're on twitter I recommend you take a look at the #suarezmoments hashtag. It was launched by LFC for fans to post their best Suarez moments since he was signed a year ago.

To say it's not going according to plan is an understatement. :D

:lol:
 
Some quality tweets, some of the funniest are actually Liverpool fans getting in a huff

Look at all the hate Suarez is getting on #suarezmoments. Makes me sick. They’re the real racists, not Luis.

#SuarezMoments When Alex Ferguson realised that #LFC had a world-class player and felt so threatened that he had to concoct a pack of lies.

:lol::lol:
 
Stumbled upon this while I was looking at twitter, seems Liverpool have admitted some mistakes apparently

Liverpool 'admit mistakes' over Suarez racism row - Channel 4 News

Gee Walker, who is now a race adviser after her 18-year-old son, Anthony, was murdered in a racist attack at a Liverpool bus stop, broke her silence to say that the football club told her they "got it wrong" on Suarez.

Their apparent comments are in marked contrast to the public stance taken over the Suarez affair by the club, which has come under fire for consistently defending the 24-year-old. Public shows of support included sporting T-shirts backing Suarez days after the Football Association banned him for eight matches and fined him £40,000 for racially abusing Manchester United defender, Patrice Evra.

But in private, Ms Walker said, Liverpool FC management have admitted that "mistakes were made" and they were prepared to learn their lesson from the matter.

"We all make mistakes," Ms Walker told Channel 4 News. "It's what we do now. We wait to see if Liverpool's promises are words or if there will be actions."

She added that the club told her they were "willing to use (Suarez) as a springboard" to address potential issues surrounding racism, and that she is hopeful they will follow through on positive statements from the club, and their manager, Kenny Dalglish. Ms Walker also defended the club, saying they had done too much good work with the black community for the Suarez incident to spoil their reputation.

Liverpool FC declined to comment on Ms Walker's statements. However the club do not dispute her account of the meeting.

Showbusiness

Ms Walker's comments were made as former England player John Barnes, who became the country's most high-profile black player when he signed for Liverpool in the late 1980s, sought to draw a line under the affair.

Speaking ahead of tomorrow's FA Cup match between Liverpool and Manchester United, Mr Barnes, who has previously spoken of racist abuse hurled at him, told Channel 4 News: "Even if Suarez is 100 per cent guilty, and Suarez scores 50 goals this season and they win the league and they win the cup, that's showbusiness, so ultimately that is all that matters."

But the matter has divided opinion since it erupted in October, with many arguing that Liverpool's consistent defence of Suarez has only ensured that the row drags on even longer.

Youth worker and Liverpool FC scout, Earl Jenkins, said: "There's a bit of a grey area now," he told Channel 4 News. "People have read into the support of Luis Suarez as the support of racism. So from that respect, I would say, yeah, I do feel sorry for the club. But I don't think that the club handled it in the way that they should have."

Old-time rivals

The Suraez affair erupted after Evra raised complaints that he had been called a "negrita" by the Uruguayan player. Tomorrow's FA Cup tie at Anfield will be the first time the long-standing rivals have faced each other since the incident.

Both sides have taken measures to try and prevent tensions from flaring, with United boss, Sir Alex Ferguson, sending a letter to ticket holders urging them to work with stewards.

Manager Kenny Dalglish said the focus should be on the football, adding: "We want to concentrate on going out and playing football, and any other sideshow is purely that, it is just a sideshow."
 
The Suraez affair erupted after Evra raised complaints that he had been called "negrita" by the Uruguayan player.

I see news outlets still have the facts wrong. Did they even bother with the report.
 
What annoys me (apart from everything else that's happened), is that Liverpool and their fans are trying to appear to be 'bigger people' and saying "Let's not let hatred get in the way of our great rivalry". As if United were the ones who started it and kept it going. I swear, after months of digging up any old shit to try to support their warped view that Suarez isn't a racist (again, he wasn't banned for being a racist, you idiots), they're now appealing for calm and that neither set of fans should 'ruin the game'.

The fecking hypocrisy of the cnuts. Victims-R-Us.
 
A friend of mine just said that Suarez is the best player ever to have played at Ajax.

Safe to say I had him checked for braindamage. His brain-scan came out empty
 
Some quality tweets, some of the funniest are actually Liverpool fans getting in a huff

:lol::lol:

#SuarezMoments When Alex Ferguson realised that #LFC had a world-class player and felt so threatened that he had to concoct a pack of lies.

So, SAF decided to concoct a pack of lies because he felt so threatened by a Suarez that scored 9 goals in his first year in a Liverpool team hanging around 7-8th, but did nothing about a Torres that got 33 goals in his first year in a Liverpool team with Alonso, Mascherano etc that were in the top four.

Hmmm, I think we should tell SAF that he's doing it wrong.
 
So, SAF decided to concoct a pack of lies because he felt so threatened by a Suarez that scored 9 goals in his first year in a Liverpool team hanging around 7-8th, but did nothing about a Torres that got 33 goals in his first year in a Liverpool team with Alonso, Mascherano etc that were in the top four.

Hmmm, I think we should tell SAF that he's doing it wrong.

Did he really do nothing ?

Where is Torres now ? clearly the work of SAF.
 
A friend of mine just said that Suarez is the best player ever to have played at Ajax.

Safe to say I had him checked for braindamage. His brain-scan came out empty

Being unfair to your friend, I think.

maybe, he meant this Ajax

3538.jpg
 
johan-cruyff.jpg

"GTFO!"