logo
It doesn't make sense – Cristiano Ronaldo leads tributes to Diogo Jota

It doesn't make sense – Cristiano Ronaldo leads tributes to Diogo Jota

Cristiano Ronaldo said 'it doesn't make sense' following the death of his Portugal team-mate Diogo Jota, aged 28.
The Liverpool forward died following a car crash in Spain, along with his younger brother Andre Silva, who was also a professional footballer and played for Liga Portugal 2 side Penafiel.
Jota helped Liverpool to win the Premier League title last season and was part of the Portugal side, along with Ronaldo, that lifted the Nations League last month, and he got married less than a fortnight ago.
Não faz sentido. Ainda agora estávamos juntos na Seleção, ainda agora tinhas casado. À tua familia, à tua mulher e aos teus filhos, envio os meus sentimentos e desejo-lhes toda a força do mundo. Sei que estarás sempre com eles. Descansem em Paz, Diogo e André. Vamos todos sentir… pic.twitter.com/H1qSTvPoQs
— Cristiano Ronaldo (@Cristiano) July 3, 2025
Ronaldo said in a post on X alongside a photo of Jota: 'It doesn't make sense. Just now we were together in the National Team, just now you had gotten married.
'To your family, your wife, and your children, I send my condolences and wish them all the strength in the world. I know you will always be with them. Rest in Peace, Diogo and Andre. We will all miss you.'
Former Liverpool defender Jamie Carragher also paid tribute to Jota, saying on Sky Sports News: 'Just in a state of shock. Not with anyone associated to Liverpool but football in general. It is one of the few times when the football family all come together.
'I just cannot believe it. For everybody involved but especially his family – his wife and the children they've got, it's devastating for all involved.
'I can only imagine how his team-mates feel at Liverpool and Portugal, they must be in a world of pain with his friends and family.
'It just shows us all how quickly life can change. What a summer he's had, and you get this devastating news that his family have had in the last few hours, you can't even comprehend it.'
Atlético de Madrid is shocked by the tragic news of the passing of former club player Diogo Jota and his brother André. We send our deepest condolences to their family and loved ones. May they rest in peace. pic.twitter.com/gbYbKgRIWD
— Atlético de Madrid (@atletienglish) July 3, 2025
Raul Jimenez and Ruben Neves posted on their Instagram stories following the announcement of their former Wolves team-mate's death.
Mexico striker Jimenez, now at Fulham, said: 'It's hard to receive this kind of news, and I still can't believe it.
'An excellent colleague, friend, and above all, a great father. Thanks for everything, my friend. We'll always remember you.'
Jota's Portuguese compatriot Neves said: 'They say we only lose people when we forget them. I will never forget them.'
My prayers goes out to his loved ones during this time! May you all be guided and protected! YNWA JOTA!! 🙏🏾🙏🏾🙏🏾❤️ https://t.co/B3tYVJJxkA
— LeBron James (@KingJames) July 3, 2025
Jota's former clubs Porto and Atletico Madrid also took to social media. Porto said on X they were in 'mourning' in a statement, while Atletico added they were 'shocked by the tragic news'.
Former Manchester United and England defender Gary Neville wrote on X: 'That is heartbreaking news on Diogo Jota and his brother. All my love and best wishes to his family.'
NBA great and well-known Liverpool supporter LeBron James posted on X: 'My prayers goes out to his loved ones during this time! May you all be guided and protected! YNWA (You'll Never Walk Alone) JOTA!!'
— Gary Neville (@GNev2) July 3, 2025
Manchester United defender Diogo Dalot, who shared a dressing room with Jota on international duty with Portugal, said on his Instagram story: 'Devastating..speechless..Much strength to the family.'
UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin said in a statement: 'Just three weeks ago, I had the honour of presenting Diogo Jota with a medal after the UEFA Nations League final – a moment of joy, pride, and celebration that will now forever be burned in memory with sorrow.
'His passion, energy and spirit on the field inspired everyone around him. It is devastating to think that a life so full of joy and potential has been taken far too soon. Rest in peace, dear Diogo. You will not be forgotten.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Social media scammers set up accounts targeting Harry Potter stars
Social media scammers set up accounts targeting Harry Potter stars

Scottish Sun

time30 minutes ago

  • Scottish Sun

Social media scammers set up accounts targeting Harry Potter stars

Bogus pages have popped up after Scottish actor Dominic McLaughlin was announced as the boy wizard Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) SHAMEFUL scammers have set up a string of fake social media accounts pretending to be Harry Potter star Dominic McLaughlin, we can reveal. Bogus pages - claiming to be run by his parents - have popped up weeks after it emerged the Scots kid actor will appear in HBO's TV adaptation of the famous book series. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 4 Scammers have set up a number of accounts in the child actor's name 4 It comes after Dominic McLaughlin was announced as star of the HBO series 4 The series is set to be released late next year 4 Arabella Stanton, Dominic McLaughlin, and Alastair Stout will be in the main roles Dominic, from Glasgow, beat thousands of others for the boy wizard lead role. But weeks after he was announced as playing Harry Potter, online weirdos have now taken advantage of his rising public profile by impersonating him on the internet. PR consultant Mark Borkowski warned the young actor's team should jump into action and protect him. He said: 'The issue is that, particularly when you get thrust into the public arena these days, you become public property very quickly. 'And getting this break is going to be enormous. But, as we've seen in the past with other young stars, it's also a bit of a curse. 'The younger you are, obviously there's rules and regulations, but the badlands of the internet don't sort of grip the same principles. 'There's a huge Harry Potter fan base, as we know, and there's been a lot of expectation for this latest version of it. 'It will all come down to protecting him because of his age and allowing him to grow up against a backdrop of a huge amount of attention on him, both on and offline. And that is incredibly difficult to manage.' One Instagram account in Dominic's name has dozens of photos of the actor, and hundreds of followers. A bio says: 'Young actor. Playing Harry Potter in HBO's new series. Account managed by parents.' Toy Show star lands major role in Harry Potter A string of posts claim to be documenting his journey with the account boasting of 'bringing my best to Harry Potter', 'another change to make a bit of magic happen' and thanking fans for their support. Another 'parent managed account' in Dominic's name has links to channel HBO and streaming platform Stream On MAX. Alex Dowal, of the Cyber and Fraud Centre Scotland, warned most social media operators are struggling to take down fake profiles. He said: 'It's not actually a crime to set up a profile in someone's name. 'It goes against the terms and conditions of Facebook and Instagram. Unfortunately, the scale of policing that is virtually non-existent. 'It becomes a crime if you are seeking to benefit from pretending to be someone else. 'It probably wouldn't take long before some fake endorsements using his profile come out. That would consitute fraud.' We told how the cast were revealed by Warner Bros last month with film bosses pledging a 'faithful adaptation' of the books by author and executive producer J.K. Rowling. Earlier this week, the writer said she had read the first two episodes, adding: 'They are so, so, so good.' A spokeswoman for Warner Bros Discovery said: 'We won't be commenting at this time.'

Poignant scenes at Diogo Jota's funeral cut through traditional football tribalism
Poignant scenes at Diogo Jota's funeral cut through traditional football tribalism

Telegraph

time30 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Poignant scenes at Diogo Jota's funeral cut through traditional football tribalism

Sunglasses concealing his tears, Virgil van Dijk carried a wreath of flowers artfully sculpted into a replica of Diogo Jota's Liverpool '20' shirt, a jersey so freighted with pain that it would never be worn again. Beside him Andy Robertson offered an identical tribute marked '30', the squad number that Jota's brother, Andre Silva, made his own at Portugal's FC Penafiel. The juxtaposition, reflecting the close fraternal bond that endured until the night they died together on a remote Spanish highway, felt almost unbearably poignant. 'Força!' cried one woman outside the little Baroque church in Gondomar, seeking to give the players strength on a day when they looked ready to dissolve. The desolation that assailed Van Dijk was acute. Captaincy of Liverpool confers many heavy responsibilities, but none so sorrowful as attending the funeral of a team-mate five years your junior. Twenty-eight years old: it is no time to die. Silva, who like Jota began playing at their hometown club within walking distance of the church, was just 25. The magnitude of the tragedy was such that even Manuel Linda, the bishop of Porto, acknowledged as he addressed the brothers' mother, Isabel, that no words of consolation were adequate. Faith is supposed to offer a blessed sanctuary at times like these. But Jurgen Klopp, a devout Christian and the man who brought Jota to Anfield, has expressed the prevailing sense of numbness, reflecting: 'There must be a higher purpose – but I can't see it.' These agonies were expressed most starkly by the sight of those left behind. Just two weeks earlier, Rute Cardoso had been at church in Porto to marry Jota, her childhood sweetheart, in a ceremony watched by the couple's three children, all under the age of five. On Saturday she was his widow, trailing behind his coffin, rosary beads hanging from her wrist and a photograph of the man she had lost clutched tightly in her hand. 'My dream came true,' she had written, excitedly posting a few pictures of her wedding dress. Just two days later, that dream would be destroyed in the most violent fashion on a dark road in remote northwestern Spain, where the car containing Jota and Silva veered out of control from a tyre blow-out before exploding in flames. It was the cruellest reminder of the ephemeral nature of hope, of the arbitrariness with which an entire family could be shattered. Visibly traumatised, Jota's peers travelled across the oceans to converge in solidarity. Ruben Neves, his closest friend in football, had been playing for Al-Hilal in a Club World Cup quarter-final in Orlando 13 hours earlier. But no sooner were his team eliminated by Fluminese than he and Joao Cancelo scrambled 4,000 miles east as Neves assumed his duties as pallbearer, the only non-family member to be given such a role. Bruno Fernandes, the Manchester United captain, was also present, alongside Manchester City's Bernardo Silva and Ruben Dias, exemplifying the connections they had built across club lines with the Portuguese national team. The shattering impact of Jota and Silva's deaths so young has cut through the typical parameters of football tribalism. Even Oasis, a band so synonymous with City that they performed the opening concert of their reunion tour in Cardiff with a cardboard cut-out of Pep Guardiola on stage, felt compelled to honour Jota, beaming an image of his Liverpool strip on the giant screens over the closing strains of Live Forever. The tribute was wordless, but still genuinely affecting. For at a moment of shock so inexplicable, the best response is not rationalisation but simple respect. As Jose Mourinho put it: 'Three kids without a dad, a young woman without her husband, parents losing both sons? It's difficult to understand. Maybe one day we will, but not now.' A plangent Ave Maria, often chosen for Catholic funeral masses, hung in the air as the guests filed out of church into the mid-morning sunshine. It would be sure, in any circumstances, to make even the most stoic observers cry. But this time the significance of the musical choice was almost too much to absorb: it had, after all, been performed for Jota and his wife at their wedding a fortnight before. This time the same ensemble, from the Our Lady of the Lapa church, were back to recite it as he lay in a wooden casket. It was little wonder the Liverpool players in the congregation looked so bereft. One moment, they had been waiting to welcome him back for pre-season training. The next, they were assembling for his last goodbye.

Man Utd fend off interest to complete their best business of summer window
Man Utd fend off interest to complete their best business of summer window

Daily Mirror

time38 minutes ago

  • Daily Mirror

Man Utd fend off interest to complete their best business of summer window

There may not have been much to shout about at Manchester United to date this summer. However, tying down 14-year-old wonderkid JJ Gabriel, widely considered among the best talents of his generation, suggests there are still strong reasons to be excited about the future. The mercurial teenage sensation - dubbed 'Kid Messi' - is rated so highly within the club, Cristiano Ronaldo previously took a shine to him during his second spell at Old Trafford. Gabriel caught the eye of the United legend and six-time Ballon d'Or winner when featured in the same Red Devils youth side as Cristiano Ronaldo Jr, whom he formed a close friendship with. While United have spent the past few weeks haggling over a transfer fee with Brentford for Bryan Mbeumo, director of football Jason Wilcox and director of football negotiations Matt Hargreaves have struck gold with Gabriel. It's understood the pair have both played instrumental roles in edging an agreement with one of the world's most highly-coveted young stars over the line. United's Premier League rivals had been monitoring the situation closely and were ready to pounce should they have received any encouragement Gabriel might be available. Crucially, he also holds an Irish passport and that is significant because it means Gabriel would be able to feature for teams within the European Union from the age of just 16. Barcelona, Real Madrid and Bayern Munich have all been attentive to the situation because usually, gems such as Gabriel are not considered attainable until they've turned 18. For all of their flaws, INEOS have put huge emphasis on the continued importance of their academy and youth development since purchasing their 27.7 per cent stake in United in February 2024. There is total confidence Gabriel has all the tools to become a first-team regular at the Theatre of Dreams having already scored three goals - two on his debut against Leeds - for United's U18s. He also made his England U15 debut in February and is currently the talk of Carrington having frequently wowed club staff. Last October, 'Kid Messi' suffered a heavy, early blow and dislocated his shoulder in a Floodlit Cup fixture against Blackburn Rovers. Medical staff were reluctant to allow him to continue despite successfully popping it back into the joint. Gabriel insisted he wanted to make amends and he did so by scoring a stunning treble whilst also notching an assist. It spoke volumes of his character, perseverance and dedication to succeed at one of the world's most-famous footballing institutions. United are due to report for pre-season tomorrow and in the past week, Gabriel has been pictured sporting a training kit with an official squad number of 95. He is not 15 until October and cannot sign professional terms until his 17th birthday. But given Ruben Amorim has needed no invitation to hand youth-team prospects senior minutes, there is every chance Gabriel is on track to become United's youngest-ever player. The record is currently held by goalkeeper David Gaskell, who was 16 and 19 days old when he figured for United in 1956. Sky has slashed the price of its bundle ahead of the 2025/26 season, saving members £192 and offering more than 1,400 live matches across the Premier League, EFL and more. Sky will show at least 215 live Premier League games next season, an increase of up to 100 more.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store