That act – one part cynicism, one part heroism - made Suarez a hero in his homeland and a villain throughout Africa, but it was far from an isolated incident: a few months later he bit an opponent during an Eredivisie match against PSV Eindhoven, earning himself the nickname "The Cannibal of Ajax".He moved to Liverpool just a few months later, quickly earned a reputation as one of the most shameless divers in the game, and later upped his skulduggery several notches when he racially abused Patrice Evra during a match against Manchester United.This catalogue of crimes had shown time and again that this mercurially-gifted genius of the modern game evidently has a moral compass that spins out of control every time the red mist of temper descends.And yet, somehow, the world of football was still left rubbing its eyes in disbelief at what transpired in the Premier League match against Chelsea in April when Suarez bit Branislav Ivanovic on the shoulder.On this very website we ran a tongue-in-cheek blog suggesting that there are worse things in the world, but with half a year's perspective on the incident the 10-match ban he received now seems very lenient.Losing your rag and biting an opponent could be dismissed as a once-in-a-lifetime aberration - if perpetrated by a six-year-old in a primary school match.But for an international star at the very highest level to pull off the trick not once, but twice? That suggests that Suarez is a worryingly disturbed man. No wonder he left us shocked.(uk.eurosport.yahoo.com)ANN.Az