Diogo Jota: Mourners to gather for Liverpool footballer's wake in Portugal
The 28-year-old father of three, who had married his long-term partner Rute Cardoso just 11 days ago, died in a car crash in Spain alongside his brother Andre Silva.
The crash happened on the A-52 in Palacios de Sanabria near the city of Zamora at 12.40am on Thursday. It is suspected that the Lamborghini they were travelling in veered off the road and burst into flames following a tyre blowout.
Jose Manuel Macedo, parish priest at the Igreja Matriz de Gondomar in Sao Cosme, told the PA news agency in a translated message that a wake for the brothers will take place at 8am at the nearby Capela da Ressurreicao before their funeral at the Igreja Matriz on Saturday at 10am.
Tributes poured in from across the football world and beyond yesterday. They were led by Liverpool Football Club, which Jota had been a star player for since he joined the club in 2020.
In a statement yesterday afternoon, manager Arne Slot said the 'sense of shock is absolute' for the club.
Liverpool fans leave tributes outside Anfield Stadium in memory of Diogo Jota.
Alamy Stock Photo
Alamy Stock Photo
'Diogo was not just our player. He was a loved one to all of us. He was a teammate, a colleague, a workmate and in all of those roles he was very special,' Slot said.
'I could say so much about what he brought to our team but the truth is everyone who watched Diogo play could see it. Hard work, desire, commitment, great quality, goals. The essence of what a Liverpool player should be.'
He said Jota 'never sought popularity' but gained it anyway and was a friend to everyone, able to make others feel good about themselves 'just by being with them'.
He said the last time they spoke, he wished Jota luck for his upcoming wedding.
'In many ways, it was a dream summer for Diogo and his family, which makes it all the more heartbreaking that it should end like this,' Slot added.
Our lad from Portugal. Forever ❤️
pic.twitter.com/opXUCmJqKq
— Liverpool FC (@LFC)
July 3, 2025
'When the time is right, we will celebrate Diogo Jota, we will remember his goals and we will sing his song. For the time being, we will remember him as a unique human being and mourn his loss. He will never be forgotten.'
Irish goalkeeper Caoimhin Kelleher, who left Liverpool last month to join Brentford, said Jota had become 'one of my closest friends in football' in a tribute shared last night.
'I was surprised a lad from Portugal loved sports such as darts, snooker and horse racing so much and some of my best memories were having a laugh watching them with you,' Kelleher said.
'I feel so blessed and grateful to have seen you on your happiest day, the day of your wedding and to be able to share in that day with you was special. I'll never forget it.
You were deeply loved by everyone at the club, the city and all over the world.
'It's gonna hurt for a long time and I'm gonna miss you so much but I feel so lucky to have got know you and have such a good friend.'
Advertisement
Liverpool captain Virgil Van Dijk said he was 'absolutely devastated and in total disbelief' following the news of Jota's death.
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by Virgil (@virgilvandijk)
'What a human being, what a player, but most importantly what an unbelievable family man. You meant so much to all of us and you always will! For your family to lose two sons, a husband and a father is just unimaginable. So cruel and unfair.
'I promise you that in these difficult times and beyond we will always be there for your family,' he added.
'We will miss you beyond words and never forget you. Your legacy will live on, we will make sure of it!'
The club has opened physical and digital books of condolence in the wake of the deaths, and supporters and members of the public can go to the Anfield Road Stand reception area over the coming days to sign a message.
The online book can be found on
Liverpool's website
.
Flags have been lowered to half-mast at the stadium and all club stores, museums and tours have been closed until Monday, with staff offered wellbeing support.
The Portuguese Football Federation also said it was 'devastated' to learn of the deaths, adding: 'Their deaths represent irreparable losses for Portuguese football.'
The tributes at Anfield Stadium seen from above.
Alamy Stock Photo
Alamy Stock Photo
Police said they were investigating the possibility that the Lamborghini left the road because of a tyre blowout while overtaking, and a source from the government sub-delegation in Zamora confirmed 'a possible speeding incident' was being looked at.
No other vehicles are said to have been involved in the incident.
Pictures of the aftermath of the crash showed debris scattered along the side of the road including what appeared to be charred parts of the vehicle.
Liverpool fans began leaving tributes outside Anfield after the news broke yesterday, with flowers being laid with messages including 'Thanks for everything, Diogo'.
Jota was part of Liverpool's Premier League-winning side in the 2024/25 campaign, scoring six goals in 26 appearances.
He joined the Merseyside club from Wolverhampton Wanderers in 2020, winning three major trophies.
Liverpool fans have called for the number 2o shirt, which Jota wore throughout his tenure at the club, to be retired in his honour.
Jota and his wife were together since 2013. They have three children together – two sons and a daughter who was born in November.
With reporting from Press Association
Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone...
A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article.
Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation.
Learn More
Support The Journal

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The 42
an hour ago
- The 42
'Not a normal club' - Why Keith Andrews' extraordinary elevation makes sense at Brentford
IN THEIR PLAYING days, Keith Andrews and Damien Duff would while away the long hours of international windows by playing chess. Few grandmasters could have anticipated the pair's most recent moves. First Duff abruptly walked out of Shelbourne, and then Andrews was handed his first head coach's job with Brentford. In the Premier League with Brentford, no less. The latter was a checkmate to conventional wisdom. Since Les Reed's infamous elevation to the Charlton manager's job in 2006, only four men have been given their first manager or head coach's role in the Premier League without any previous experience as a caretaker either at that club or elsewhere: Gareth Southgate at Middlesbrough in 2006; Gianfranco Zola at West Ham in 2008; Mikel Arteta at Arsenal in 2019; and now Andrews at Brentford. Southgate and Arteta could benefit from playing careers at their respective clubs, while Zola also traded off legendary Premier League playing days. Andrews, by contrast, played 84 times in the Premier League for Blackburn and West Brom. 'It's not the done thing in normal football clubs, but I don't think we are a normal football club,' said Andrews upon being announced as Brentford's head coach. Not half. Brentford did speak to external candidates – including USA manager Mauricio Pochettino, as my colleague David Sneyd revealed – but elected to promote Andrews from his role as set piece coach. It's in keeping with Brentford's means of doing business at least: Thomas Frank had previously been Dean Smith's assistant prior to his promotion. When Andrews says that Brentford are not a 'normal' club, he's referring not just to their use of data, but their belief in it. As Liverpool's former director of research Ian Graham explains in his book, How to win the Premier League, Brentford, Brighton and Liverpool are the only clubs in the Premier League to truly believe in the data. While they don't make any decisions based solely on data, they don't make any decisions without the data, either. That data is provided by owner Matthew Benham, whose insights plotted their improbable rise to the Premier League. The intelligence of their recruitment allowed them continually sell their best goalscorer without stalling collective progress: Scott Hogan, Neal Maupay, Ollie Watkins, and Ivan Toney all came and went without halting the club's upward trajectory. Given the club are going to lose their captain Christian Norgaard along with their best goalscorer in Bryan Mbeumo, Andrews needs the club's recruitment success rate to remain high. Advertisement Among Brentford's other innovations under Benham has been to pilot the role of the set piece coach – to which Andrews was appointed last season – realising there was an edge to be gained on corners and free kicks. Benham also looked at the balance of rewards in leagues which offered three points for a win and told every one of his head coaches that they were not attacking enough. 'In minute one, Brentford must attack. In minute 90, 1-0 up and down to 10 men, Brentford must attack', writes Graham, recalling a past conversation with Benham. Brentford moderated that approach once they reached the Premier League, and Frank showed an outstanding ability to be flexible and improvise. His teams could swap between a back three and a back four; they could defend in a low block and counter; and they could play a higher line and attack the opposition. (This is the quality identified by Spurs as a necessary corrective to Ange Postecoglou's dogma.) Andrews' task will be to remain as adaptable as his predecessor. Andrews, Stephen Kenny and Ruaidhrí Higgins at an Ireland training session in 2020. Ryan Byrne / INPHO Ryan Byrne / INPHO / INPHO Coleraine manager Ruaidhrí Higgins worked with Andrews when both were on Stephen Kenny's staff with Ireland, and is backing him to meet the challenge. 'I always had a feeling Keith would be a really good head coach or manager, because of what people can see in interviews: he is really well spoken and very articulate', says Higgins. 'On the inside, you see how he conducts himself with people. Not everyone sees it, but he is a really strong character.' A staple of Sky's EFL coverage and a regular on Irish TV and radio, Andrews was cultivating an impressive media career before he joined Kenny on the Irish U21s staff in 2019. As Higgins explains, these communications skills are necessary in the modern game. 'Even 10 or 15 years ago there wasn't as much coaching in terms of the tactical side of things, but now players really want information, they crave it,' says Higgins. 'Keith is very articulate in giving that information. 'Players will find excuses, that's the way life is. The more excuses you can take away from them, the better. Keith is very good at taking away excuses, he is very good at covering every angle. Say you play a team floating between a back three and a back four: he will make sure the team is prepared to face both systems. 'Keith is very good at getting his point across, he presents really well, and he treats people with respect. His experience on TV has helped in that regard.' Andrews showcased some of that attention to detail when working with Ireland, conjuring up the kick-off routines from which Brentford profited last season, and once running through a warm-up routine with a back four to disguise from the opposition the fact they were in fact playing a back three. But what Andrews' Irish tenure will not have prepared him for is the scrutiny and attention coming his way. Martin O'Neill has already mischievously wished him well in the role, saying that one of his most vitriolic critics will now learn how tough the job really is, while Roy Keane – who went out of his way in a 2020 interview with a showbiz journalist to call Andrews a 'bullshitter' – is the highest-profile pundit in the game and sure to preside over some of Andrews' games for Sky. The fact Brentford's head coach is just one cog in a larger collective will not be acknowledged by the Premier League's wider media-industrial complex where perception, as Keane has previously told us, is reality. Andrews has previously batted away Keane's criticisms and insists he will not be affected by the attention coming his way from a sceptical English public. 'That toughness is the bit that people might not see,' says Higgins of Andrews, 'he has that toughness and resilience, he will be very clear in his mind of what he wants, and how he is going to go about it, he won't deviate from his plan as he beliefs. 'He is a tough man, Keith's first cap was, what, when he was 28? That shows his level of resilience and determination. He had nothing handed to him in his career.' Andrews went to Wolves as a youngster at the same as Robbie Keane, but where Keane flourished, Andrews faltered. Suffering from injuries and omitted from squads, Andrews fell into drinking too often, and flirted with quitting the game and moving to university in America. He ultimately dropped down the divisions and landed with a bump in League Two with MK Dons, where he found the break he needed in meeting manager Paul Ince. Ince promised to take Andrews with him to his next job and was good to his word, taking him to Blackburn in the Premier League. Andrews outlasted Ince at Ewood Park but faced more adversity, become a target of fan abuse amid wider discontent at the ownership group. One newspaper described Andrews' treatment as a 'hate campaign'. Andrews always insisted he was not bothered by it all, until Steve Kean told him he was being dropped from the team for that very reason. He therefore left for Ipswich to remain in the picture for Ireland, and he proved to be Ireland's best performer within the chasm that lay between them and their opponents at Euro 2012. He was the first of the Irish players to try to meet the step up in quality at that tournament, and now Andrews is the first to stand among the elite in the Premier League, where the lessons of his playing career must stand to him.


Irish Independent
an hour ago
- Irish Independent
Diamond League round-up: Rhasidat Adeleke fourth again over 400m while Orla Comerford sprints to 100m para win
Fellow Dubliners Sarah Healy and Orla Comerford both produced strong runs at the same meeting, with Healy finishing seventh over 1500m in 3:57.20 and Comerford sprinting to victory in the mixed class para 100m in 12.14. With 10 weeks until the World Championships in Tokyo, Adeleke's form remains well off where it was through the previous two summers and she was unable to replicate the 50.42 she clocked in Oslo last month and the 50.48 she ran in Stockholm. Her Irish record remains the 49.07 she ran to win the European silver medal in Rome last year. Pitched in against some of the world's best, she held her own through the opening half but was visibly lacking her usual fluidity and was unable to land any sort of blow against McLaughlin-Levrone, who coasted to victory with fellow US athletes Aaliyah Butler (49.86) and Isabella Whittaker (50.81) following her home. With swirling winds in Hayward Field, times were mediocre throughout the field, but the size of the gap to the leaders was a reminder for Adeleke of how much distance she will need to make up if she's to contend for her first individual global medal in Tokyo. Healy, meanwhile, produced another strong showing in what's been the season of her career, the 24-year-old clocking 3:57.20 to finish seventh in the 1500m, just outside her PB of 3:57.15 which she set in Paris last month. Kenya's Faith Kipyegon produced another masterclass out front, the three-time Olympic champion breaking her own world record with a superb final lap, clocking 3:48.68. There was another world record in the women's 5000m where Olympic champion Beatrice Chebet of Kenya clocked 13:58.06. Comerford, the Paralympic bronze medallist in the T13 (visually impaired) category, was a dominant winner of the mixed para 100m, clocking 12.14 to come home well clear of US sprinter Brittni Mason (12.40), but she wasn't pleased with her time which was well down on the PB of 11.87 she ran to win at the Oslo Diamond League. 'I came in feeling really good, strong, confident, and it's a real honour to be invited,' she said. 'Unfortunately the performance wasn't really there for me today, I had a really bad stumble out of the blocks but no excuses. We'll go back to the drawing board and make sure that when we're stepping out next time we're looking towards those personal bests, world records. I'm still very honoured and privileged to take the win.' Ireland was also represented in the T54 (wheelchair) 800m, with Shauna Bocquet finishing sixth in 1:55.76. Meanwhile at the National U-20 and U-23 Championships in Tullamore, Precious Akpe-Moses – the younger sister of former European U-20 100m champion Gina Akpe-Moses – was among the stars, winning the U-20 100m in 11.64 and setting a championship record of 23.66 over 200m. Sean Doggett (Athenry AC) was the standout performer in a stacked U-20 men's 400m, winning in 47.08, while rising star Nick Griggs made a triumphant return to national championship action, winning the U-23 800m in 1:52.46.


The Irish Sun
2 hours ago
- The Irish Sun
‘He was there with me today' – Trent Alexander-Arnold speaks out after first game since Diogo Jota's tragic death
TRENT Alexander-Arnold dedicated his performance in Real Madrid's Club World Cup win to former Liverpool team-mate Diogo Jota. Alexander-Arnold took to the field for the first time since Advertisement 5 Trent Alexander-Arnold has dedicated his performance in Real Madrid's Club World Cup win to former Liverpool team-mate Diogo Jota Credit: Getty 5 Alexnader-Arnold and Jota were teammates for five years Credit: AFP 5 Jota and brother Andre Silva tragically died in a car accident on Thursday Credit: Getty And the ex-Reds star created the second goal for fellow wing back Fran Garcia as Real raced into a 2-0 lead before Alexander-Arnold said: 'No matter how difficult it was and how difficult it is, I still have a job to do do. 'As hard as it was, I had to try to push it to the back of my mind. 'It was difficult, I'm not going to lie about that. Advertisement READ MORE ON DIOGO JOTA 'I've done it in honour of my close friend. 'That's what I'm sure he would have wanted me to do and we would have had a laugh and a joke about the assist. 'That was in some way in memory of him. He was there with me today I'm sure.' Alexander-Arnold bravely decided to speak in public about Jota after Advertisement Most read in Football Exclusive Exclusive 5 Real Madrid and Borussia Dortmund held a minute's silence pre-kick off to remember Diogo Jota and brother Andre Silva Credit: Reuters Visibly emotional, the 'It's been very very difficult for me and all the ones that knew him - not just team-mates, friends and family, but the footballing world. 'It's been very emotional and heartwarming to see the football world unite and come together to show their love and support to him and his family and his brother as well. Advertisement 'Although it's been difficult, it's been a nice showing out from everyone, all clubs and all people uniting to show love and support in what must be a mind-blowingly hard time for the family. 'I've been in and around him and his brother, his family, his amazing wife, his parents, his amazing three children, so it's truly truly heartbreaking to wake up to news like that. 'It's something you would never ever expect. 'He was a very close friend, someone who lit up a room when he was in it. I shared a dressing room with him for five years, amazing memories on and off the pitch with him. Advertisement 'He will never be forgotten by anyone. He will live long in our memories for the man and player he was.' 5 Alexander-Arnold got a crucial assist as Real Madrid beat Borussia Dortmund 3-2 Credit: Getty