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How Luis Suarez's explosive fallout with Marcelo Bielsa has left Uruguay in crisis ahead of facing England at Wembley

  /  autty

Uruguay head into tonight's friendly against England divided as the fallout from an explosive clash between Marcelo Bielsa and Luis Suarez almost two years ago continues to rumble on.

Former Leeds boss Bielsa took over Uruguay in May 2023 and initially started well, winning four of his first six World Cup qualifiers before they came third at the 2024 Copa America.

However, despite the optimism surrounding the national team, Uruguay quickly descended into crisis just a few months later following a dramatic interview by former Liverpool and Barcelona star Suarez.

The striker, who retired that September, launched a scathing attack on Bielsa and his management style.

Appearing on DSports, a Latin American TV channel, Suarez remarkably opened up on how the mood within the squad had collapsed, said senior players felt communication with Bielsa had broken down, and claimed the close, family-style culture traditional to Uruguay's national team was ruined.

'There were situations that occurred at the Copa America that hurt to see, that I didn't talk about for the good of the group,' Suarez added. 'It's going to continue to happen. The players are going to reach a limit and explode.

'At the Copa America, there were players who told me "Luis, I'll play the Copa America and then I won't play again".

'That tells you that we're nearing a difficult situation. Then you get over it and you return because you love your country. We all love representing our country.

'During my last call-up some of us were playing cards and (Bielsa's) staff would walk around and glance our way as if to be on the lookout for anyone who was playing cards... there were a lot of things that caught my attention.'

He continued: 'There were a lot of players who set up a meeting (with Bielsa) to ask the coach to at the very least greet us with a good morning.

'He wouldn't even say hello. I had a five-minute meeting with him as a leader of the team and in the end, he only responded with a "Thank you very much".'

Suarez also claimed that staff at Uruguay's training complex were forbidden from eating with or greeting players, and had to use specific doors to enter and exit the building.

Elsewhere, he opened up on one incident where Darwin Nunez was left in tears after particularly harsh criticism from Bielsa.

There was another example he cited when Bielsa had allegedly told players not to greet fans when they were in New York, but Suarez ignored the instructions.

Despite the interview - which caused controversy and split opinion in Uruguay - taking place in October 2024, Bielsa is still dealing with the fallout.

Uruguay did comfortably qualify for the World Cup but they won just one of their subsequent nine qualifying games.

Things were then looking up as Uruguay ended their campaign with two wins and a draw, but the situation reached a head after they were thrashed 5-1 by the USA in the November international break.

After that brutal defeat, Bielsa then called a blockbuster press conference which lasted almost two hours.

Within it, he denied that he would resign despite significant speculation, acknowledged his authority had been undermined by Suarez's criticism, described himself as 'toxic' and outlined a desire to lead Uruguay into this summer's tournament.

'I'm a generator of tension,' he explained. 'When I arrive, the environment becomes tense. That's why I appear infrequently. I'm toxic.

'To associate yourself with me makes you worse off. Do you understand me? There are toxic types who only see the errors that they are correcting, who are demanding, who are never satisfied with anything. He talks only about the work he is doing.

'When he goes out to eat, he reads the newspaper because he doesn't want to integrate with those around him, so that he doesn't have to talk about things that distract him from all that.

'Don't think I enjoy it. For me, it's karma. I am shy, obsessive. I'm a robotic person. I don't like clutter. Those are my flaws. I find it difficult to act free-spirited and friendly.'

Amid all the noise, several reports suggested that Bielsa has lost the Uruguay dressing room but FA president Ignacio Alonso provided the former Leeds boss with his backing.

'The coach will continue with us,' Alonso told the press after the US defeat. 'The meeting was very positive, we discussed things to improve; things to make everyone feel comfortable in preparation for the World Cup.

'The important thing about the crisis triggered by the match against the United States has been that it's made us work hard internally to know what needs to be done.'

After taking on England tonight, Uruguay face Algeria on Tuesday in two games that, despite being friendlies, will be crucial for confidence, unity and reducing the noise around Bielsa heading into this summer's World Cup.