Recife, Brazil: Luis Suarez can learn to stop biting opponents but it will not be a quick or easy process, senior psychologists have said following the Uruguay striker’s bite on the shoulder of Italy defender Giorgio Chiellini at the World Cup.
Suarez, twice previously banned for biting, is under investigation by Fifa for the incident late in the Group D clash on Tuesday and faces another lengthy suspension.
A screengrab from a Vine video shows the incident.
“From what I’ve seen in the video footage, Suarez took out his frustration and anger on Chiellini from blocking his access to the ball by reactively and impulsively biting him,” Eva Kimonis, senior lecturer at the School of Psychology at the University of New South Wales in Australia, told Reuters via email.
“It’s likely that he did not give thought to the serious repercussions of his actions given his violent history in the sport until it was too late, at which point he acted injured.”
Among the research areas covered by Dr Kimonis at the Australian university are aggressive and anti-social behaviour and violent conduct.
“While common in early childhood, biting in adults is rare,” Kimonis said. “It may be one manifestation of a broader, long-term pattern of misbehaviour that involves other forms of aggression — hitting, bullying, shouting, physical fighting — and is common to people with particularly hot tempers and impulsiveness.”
Liverpool forward Suarez served a 10-game suspension last year after biting Chelsea’s Branislav Ivanovic in a Premier League match and spent seven games on the sidelines in 2010 for biting PSV Eindhoven’s Otman Bakkal while playing for Ajax Amsterdam.
Kimonis believes that Suarez may have been acting out of frustration when he bit Chiellini, or simply trying to gain the upper hand as Uruguay battled for a place in the knockout stages of the tournament.
“Aggressive behaviour like biting and hitting may be reactive in response to a real or perceived threat, or proactive to achieve some sort of instrumental gain, such as dominance or possessions,” she said.
“In the case of reactively aggressive acts, the action is typically preceded by some sort of stressor that leads to anger and frustration, causing the person to lash out against the source of that threat.
“For people with chronic aggression, cognitive behavioural therapies may be effective at helping the person to better identify when they are in an angry or frustrated state.”
Clinical psychologist Dr Corinne Reid from the School of Psychology and Exercise Science at Murdoch University in Western Australia, told Reuters there may be a team dimension to the striker’s actions that would need examination.
“It would be important to check whether he thinks his behaviour is justified or acceptable,” Reid said in an email.
“If he does, and if this view is endorsed, actively or passively, by his teammates or coaches, then change is unlikely.”