Vancouver Sun

Chelsea’s ‘Dirty Diego’ given three-game ban for stomping on Liverpool’s Can

- JOHN LEICESTER

When soccer historians tell the story of the hurricane that battered England in the form of Chelsea forward Diego Costa, they might pinpoint this week as the moment when admiration started to sour into disdain.

By stomping on the ankle of Liverpool’s Emre Can, Costa took ownership of the Premier League’s unofficial title of No. 1 Bad Boy that Luis Suarez vacated when he started afresh with Barcelona this season. As Suarez showed in three-plus years of thick and thin at Liverpool, when he was both adored and pilloried, often rightly so, a bad reputation can become a heavy load to bear, for both a player and his team.

Life, both on and off the pitch, will change — by how much will depend partly on his behaviour going forward — for Costa when he returns in two weeks from the three-match ban handed down Friday that will keep the Premier League’s top scorer from one of the pivotal games this season: Chelsea against title rival Manchester City on Saturday.

Having seen how the Brazilborn, street-hardened striker pulled the wool over the eyes of their colleague Michael Oliver, who missed the stomp that cameras caught, referees will be even more acutely aware that Costa needs watching.

More than ever, the scrutiny will be not on the beauty of his football, but on his ugly tricks and brittle temperamen­t, too. To try to make his self-destructiv­e impulses boil again, opposing fans and players can be counted on to give Costa an even more torrid time. The “elephant man” chants directed at Costa by Liverpool fans could give way to spikier taunts. Opposing players will be encouraged and prepared to give as rough as they get from the uncompromi­sing, crafty and physical Spain internatio­nal.

And rabid voices in the sports media, already calling him “Dirty Diego” and “monster,” will be ready to slobber fresh demonizati­on and gleefully dismantle another idol they helped create the next time Costa’s slow-burning aggression bubbles over. As it surely will. Manchester City manager Manuel Pellegrini expressed hope that the three-match ban for violent conduct might help change Costa.

But not change him too much.

Costa’s rough edges, the blend of bad and good, make him box office. Will he score? Start a fight? Or both?

The tingle of anticipati­ng what Costa might do next is making him the most entertaini­ng Premier League player this season.

Even as he torments them with goals and doggedness, fans and players not wearing Chelsea blue would give hind teeth to have Costa on their team.

 ?? GLYN KIRK/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Chelsea striker Diego Costa earned a three-game ban for stomping on Emre Can.
GLYN KIRK/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Chelsea striker Diego Costa earned a three-game ban for stomping on Emre Can.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada