MLS
Luis Suárez finally finds form in MLS with Inter Miami
The Uruguayan has found his scoring boots at Inter Miami and is scoring for fun at his new team.
Luis Suárez is already the new hero of Inter Miami. With the absence of Messi, The Herons needed a leader who could make up for the lack of magic, and they have succeeded.
Since the start of the season, the Uruguayan has scored 6 times and has provided 5 assists; against DC United, El Pistolero once again showed off his scoring abilities with a brace in less than half an hour. Tata Martino can breathe easy, Suárez has finally arrived in the United States, just in time.
The arrival of Suárez to MLS was the end of his goal-fuelled story in Brazil. However, during pre-season, the Uruguayan’s lack of a scoring touch left more questions than answers (he only managed 1 in 7, against Al Hilal,).
But when it came to the moment of truth, Luis Suárez has more than fulfilled his duty. Against DC United, the forward managed to turn the tide in a match that seemed destined to end a draw. Half an hour later, he had scored a brace, including a superb goal, to put Inter Miami at the top of the Eastern Conference table.
“When you talk about Luis, it’s a similar situation to Leo (Messi), Busi (Busquets), Jordi (Alba). It’s nothing new. These are things he’s done throughout his career. We had decided that he would play 30 minutes and he changed the game for us. It makes me very happy because every game he looks better and the ease with which he scores goals is a great advantage for us,” commented ‘Tata’ Martino at the end of the match in Washington.
At 37-years-old, and when his knee problems do not bother him, Luis Suárez has shown that he is still in fine form and can play at the top. Only at Gremio did he score more goals in his first few games (7 goals and 2 assists in 7 games) than he has done at Inter Miami.
Not even at Ajax (4 goals and 3 assists), Liverpool (2 goals and 2 assists), FC Barcelona (1 goal and 4 assists) or Atlético de Madrid (4 goals and 1 assist) was he able to score so easily, even though he was considered one of the best strikers in the world at the time.
“He was coming from the Brazilian league, one of the toughest competitions in the world, where he scored 17 goals and got 10 assists, and that lasted until November,” Martino commented.
“There was no doubt about what he would bring to the team, the confidence he brings to it. And obviously people outside have opinions, but those people don’t see what we see day to day,” he concluded. Luis Suárez arrived so that the feeling of Messidependencia would become a memory, and for the moment he is making it so.