Luis Suarez says he felt under attack from the English media ahead of Uruguay's 2-1 World Cup win against England on Thursday.
Suarez proved to be the difference in the Group D clash, scoring two goals to knock the Three Lions out of the tournament.
The Liverpool striker claimed after the game that "too many people in England laughed about [his] attitude over the last few years" -- apparently referring to incidents that saw him found guilty of racially abusing Patrice Evra and banned for biting Branislav Ivanovic.
And Suarez, who was voted PFA Player of the Year and Football Writers' Association Player of the Year last season, has now said that criticism from the media in the build-up to the England game had also angered him.
"What happened before the match‚ I did not want to attack anybody, only some of the media started making fun of me and you are in the media. You should know what happened and why they did that to me," he was quoted as saying by the Guardian.
"You should know what happened and I think it was nothing more than the papers -- because everybody knows that I was elected the best player of the year, even the people in the Premier League voted for me."
It is unclear exactly what Suarez was referring to with his latest comments, with criticism from the English media having waned last season as he put his past troubles behind him.
Having completed a 10-match suspension last September for biting Ivanovic, Suarez scored 31 goals as Liverpool finished runners-up to Premier League champions Manchester City, while he claimed the two major domestic Footballer of the Year awards.
The 27-year-old has recovered from a knee injury to make a significant impact at the World Cup, making his return against England.
"I was not really 100 percent fit [against England] and sometimes this turns around," Suarez said. "I was the other day really at the limits of my physical capacity. And for the last match at Liverpool, I was full of cramps and I was tired. But of course you have a certain experience and you can build yourself up for the next assignment. This is what I am doing.
"The knee feels good. I think it's in perfect shape but when you have surgery, you need some time to see the reaction. Having played so much of the England game and been the object of so much attention‚ if the knee didn't feel good, I would have told the coach. But I am cool right now.
"We know what is at stake and we know that we have to qualify. Both teams will want to win and it will be a lovely game to play. We are ready to face the best possible Italy team [on Tuesday] and then we will play the way Uruguay play when we want to reach something."
Latest Stories
-
‘Misreporting happens frequently, but we stay focused on diplomacy’ – British High Commissioner on Ghana election remarks
31 minutes -
Government could seek more IMF funding, incoming finance minister Ato Forson says
1 hour -
Man told he can’t recover £598m of Bitcoin from tip
1 hour -
Gun-wearing leader sparks concern at Mahama’s inauguration
2 hours -
Boeing and Google give $1m each to Trump’s inauguration
2 hours -
TikTok to make final plea at Supreme Court against US ban
2 hours -
Supreme Court rejects Trump bid to halt hush-money case sentencing
2 hours -
Man with crocodile skull in luggage arrested at Delhi airport
2 hours -
Mozambique tense as opposition leader returns from exile
2 hours -
Morocco receives 17.4 million tourists in 2024, up 20% on 2023
3 hours -
Nigeria, China deepen ties with pledge on security, finance and economic growth
3 hours -
Mahama meets with AfDB boss Akinwumi Adesina
5 hours -
Shell writes down Namibia oil discovery in blow to country
5 hours -
Bellingham helps Real Madrid reach Spanish Super Cup final
6 hours -
Murray could not turn down ‘unique’ Djokovic opportunity
6 hours