Liverpool owner John W. Henry has ruled out selling unsettled striker Luis Suarez, adding that to let him go to Premier League rivals Arsenal would be “ludicrous.”
Suarez is desperate to play in the Champions League and insisting Liverpool stand by what he says was a commitment to let him leave if they failed to qualify.
Arsenal have had two offers for the 26-year-old forward turned down and Henry made it clear that any further bids from the North London club, or elsewhere, would be similarly rebuffed.
The American, whose reaction to Arsenal’s second bid was to tweet, “What do you think they’re smoking over there at Emirates?,” said he was “unequivocal” that Suarez would not be leaving.
“We are not going to sell Luis,” Henry, who also owns Major League Baseball’s Boston Red Sox, told British newspapers.
“For all the top clubs it’s extremely important [not to sell to a rival], but especially for Liverpool because we’re not in Europe this year and have not been in the Champions League for a while,” he said.
“To sell to a rival for those positions, or one of them, would be ludicrous. Liverpool needs to be playing in Europe. It needs to be playing in the Champions League. That’s what Liverpool football club is about,” Henry said.
The American said offers from clubs outside the Premier League would not be considered because there was too little time before the end of the transfer window on Sept. 2 for manager Brendan Rodgers to replace him.
“He won’t be sold even if a foreign club comes in because we do not have time to sign a suitable replacement,” Henry said.
“It’s a football reason. It’s not about finances. That’s why at this point, so late in the window, with everyone who’s already moved or isn’t moving, we can’t replace him. So for football reasons we can’t sell, and especially to Arsenal,” he said.
“I think the issue has been resolved now. We have said ‘no.’ Luis will be a Liverpool player on Sept. 3,” Henry said.
Suarez told Spanish sports daily Marca on Thursday that he wanted an “amicable agreement” to leave the club and thought a bid over £40 million (US$62.22 million) was enough to trigger a clause in his contract.
Arsenal’s bid was reported in the British media to be just £1 over that threshold.
Suarez has been involved in two major storms during his time at Anfield — his racist outburst at Manchester United’s Patrice Evra and his biting of Chelsea’s Branislav Ivanovic.
The club backed him during both incidents, despite much criticism, and Henry said that the memory of that solidarity added to the disappointment of the Liverpool fans.
“If you look at the full context of what’s happened here it’s jarring to all our supporters,” he said. “The club has stood by him so strongly at a time when you could question whether the club should have stood by him, but they did.”
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