Jamie Carragher says Brendan Rodgers' decision to banish Luis Suarez from Liverpool FC training is the right one.
And the former Anfield ace has called upon Suarez to “sort himself”, stating that the Uruguayan's ongoing dispute with the club could serve as a distraction to the Reds' preparations for the new season.
Carragher says he detected a change in his former teammate last week, when he trained with the Reds squad ahead of Steven Gerrard's testimonial.
He said: "I know Luis and I've played with him in the last couple of years and he's a warrior. He's a fighter on the pitch and every day in training. He never misses a session.
"I went in to Friday training before Stevie's testimonial and that wasn't the Luis Suarez I knew.
"I think it's right for Brendan Rodgers to take him out of the group because no one player is bigger than the team or the squad.
"He's not going to be playing because he's banned, so Liverpool need to concentrate on getting it right for the first game of the season against Stoke.
"If Suarez is a distraction for everyone then he needs to be taken out of the group."
Asked if he would have any words for Suarez if he were still playing, Carragher said: “Sort yourself. You can't have that and can't accept that.
"There's ways and means of going about it. Players get transferred all the time and you can't always have what you want.
"Liverpool Football Club have got to protect themselves as well. Arsenal are a big rival for a top-four place and maybe if he wanted to go somewhere else it wouldn't be such a big issue and maybe Liverpool would sanction a deal.
"Nobody wants unhappy players at the training ground or on the pitch playing. It affects other people.
"But it's very difficult for Liverpool, like the Wayne Rooney situation with Manchester United and Chelsea. They're direct rivals and that's the big deal. That's the problem."
He added:"He can't carry on the way he's been carrying on. Brendan Rodgers has come out and said that nobody is bigger than the club and that's exactly right.
"There will be agents and probably people at Arsenal talking to him, but he's a grown man. He's not a kid, he's got a family and he needs to make his own decisions and what's right for him.
"It's also how he's coming across as a person to the Liverpool public and the country in general.
"Of course Arsenal want to get the player, but sometimes you've got to remember how people are seeing the situation and how people are looking at you."