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Mohamed Salah fearful of returning to Liverpool following Diogo Jota's death

Mohamed Salah fearful of returning to Liverpool following Diogo Jota's death

BreakingNews.ie17 hours ago
Liverpool forward Mohamed Salah admits he is fearful of what awaits when he returns to the club in the wake of Diogo Jota's death.
The club, fans and football as a whole are in mourning after the 28-year-old Portugal forward and his brother Andre Silva were killed in a car crash in Spain in the early hours of Thursday.
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Players were due back this weekend to begin the preliminaries of pre-season. However, the first tranche of the phased return scheduled for Friday has been postponed.
I am truly lost for words. Until yesterday, I never thought there would be something that would frighten me of going back to Liverpool after the break. Team mates come and go but not like this. It's going to be extremely difficult to accept that Diogo won't be there when we go…
pic.twitter.com/TIEzpjOABr
— Mohamed Salah (@MoSalah)
July 4, 2025
'I am truly lost for words. Until yesterday, I never thought there would be something that would frighten me of going back to Liverpool after the break,' Salah wrote on social media.
'Team mates come and go but not like this. It's going to be extremely difficult to accept that Diogo won't be there when we go back.
'My thoughts are with his wife, his children, and of course his parents who suddenly lost their children.
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'Those close to Diogo and his brother Andre need all the support they can get. They will never be forgotten.'
Mourners gathered at a wake in Portugal on Friday morning, ahead of the brothers' funeral at the Igreja Matriz de Gondomar in Sao Cosme at 10am on Saturday.
Former Liverpool captain and team-mate Jordan Henderson joined the thousands of mourners to have laid a tribute at the temporary shrine which has built up outside Anfield.
'Jots it was a pleasure to share a pitch with you but more importantly a friendship. All the laughs we had off the pitch and trying to find ways to wind milly up and get him fined, which we never could,' the England midfielder wrote on Instagram.
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'Taking pictures of me asleep on the bus travelling then sending them to me later. You always wanted to have a laugh and were a pleasure to be around.
'I know how much Rute and your family meant to you and I know you will always be looking down on them. Thank you for everything you brought into this world, we will all miss you.'
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A post shared by Jordan Henderson (@jordanhenderson)
Liverpool head coach Arne Slot said everyone associated with the club owed it to Jota to 'stand together and be there for one another'.
'For us as a club, the sense of shock is absolute. Diogo was not just our player. He was a loved one to all of us. He was a team-mate, a colleague, a workmate and in all of those roles he was very special.
'We need everyone at the club to stand together and to be there for one another. We owe this to Diogo, to Andre Silva, to their wider family and to ourselves.'
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Jota's team-mates have spoken of the struggle to comprehend his death, with captain Virgil van Dijk writing on Instagram he was 'absolutely devastated and in total disbelief'.
'What a human being, what a player, but most importantly what an unbelievable family man,' he added.
Our lad from Portugal. Forever ❤️
pic.twitter.com/opXUCmJqKq
— Liverpool FC (@LFC)
July 3, 2025
'A champion forever, number 20 forever. It's been a privilege to have stood by your side on the pitch, and to have been your friend off it.
Andy Robertson, who attended Jota's wedding to long-term partner Rute Cardoso less than a fortnight ago, posted: 'I can't believe we're saying goodbye. It's too soon, and it hurts so much. But thank you for being in my life, mate – and for making it better.'
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'Heartbroken' former manager Jurgen Klopp, for whom his Christian faith has played a big part in his life, wrote on Instagram: 'This is a moment where I struggle! There must be a bigger purpose! But I can't see it!'
Liverpool, who are supporting Jota's family, have opened a book of condolence, both physical in the Anfield Road Stand and online, lowered flags to half-mast and closed all stores and the museum and suspended all tours until Monday.
Fans continue to leave flowers, scarves and shirts outside Anfield and there are similar scenes at Wolves' Molineux Stadium, where Jota spent three years before his move to Liverpool.
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Saturday's briefing: Saying goodbye to Diogo Jota and England start Euros
Saturday's briefing: Saying goodbye to Diogo Jota and England start Euros

Powys County Times

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  • Powys County Times

Saturday's briefing: Saying goodbye to Diogo Jota and England start Euros

Football will briefly take a back seat on Saturday as Diogo Jota and Andre Silva's family and friends gather to celebrate their lives. On the pitch, England and Wales both launch their Euro 2025 campaigns in Switzerland with the defending champions in action after Rhian Wilkinson's finals first-timers. Former Arsenal midfielder Thomas Partey is facing a court appearance after being charged with five counts of rape. Mourners pay respects to Diogo Jota The funeral of Liverpool striker Diogo Jota and his younger brother Andre Silva will take place in Portugal on Saturday morning. Mourners will gather to pay their respects to the two men at the Igreja Matriz de Gondomar at 10am a day after a wake was held at the nearby Capela da Ressurreicao. Jota, 28, and his 26-year-old brother died in a car crash in Zamora, Spain, in the early hours of Thursday morning. Their deaths prompted an outpouring of sympathy for Jota's wife Rute, who he married less than two weeks ago, their three children and the wider family from the football world and beyond. Lioness Leah raring to go England captain Leah Williamson revealed she finally felt free to let go of 'anxiety' on the eve of the Lionesses' European Championship opener against France in Zurich. The Arsenal defender, who famously lifted the trophy in 2022, was forced to miss England's first run to a Women's World Cup final two summers ago in Australia after suffering an anterior cruciate ligament injury. 'I've probably held some anxiety, I suppose, up until this moment,' said Williamson, when asked if missing the World Cup and her recovery had given her a new appreciation for this opportunity. 'I wanted to experience another tournament for England, and being away from home is special. It's a bit different to England in 2022, so I'm just taking everything in. I'm very excited. Obviously so much has changed, so I'm intrigued to come back and enjoy that tournament football.' The time has come for Wales Rhian Wilkinson is confident Wales are ready for their 'watershed moment' on a first major tournament stage at Euro 2025. While few expect Wales, who kick off their campaign against the Netherlands in Lucerne on Saturday evening as the lowest ranked team in the competition, to progress from a daunting group which also includes England and France, Wilkinson believes the game has changed in the country forever. Speaking at her pre-match press conference, she said: 'This is a wonderful team, great people, fantastic footballers, and we're going to be tested against some of the best in the world. 'That's what we've been wanting. To showcase Wales as a country, this team and their talent.' Thomas Partey charged Former Arsenal midfielder Thomas Partey has been charged with raping two women. The Metropolitan Police said the Ghana international, whose contract at the Emirates Stadium expired on June 30, faces five counts of rape and one count of sexual assault following alleged offences between 2021 and 2022. Partey's lawyer Jenny Wiltshire said he 'denies all the charges against him', adding: 'He now welcomes the opportunity to finally clear his name.' The player, who is due to appear at Westminster Magistrates' Court on August 5, is accused of two counts of rape against one woman and three counts of rape against another. The sexual assault allegation relates to a third woman, police added. What's on today? European champions England launch their defence with a tough Group D opener against France in Zurich. Debutants and group rivals Wales also get under way when they face the Netherlands in Lucerne looking to gain a foothold in the competition. At the Club World Cup, Champions League winners Paris St Germain go head-to-head with Bayern Munich in Atlanta with a semi-final against either Real Madrid or Borussia Dortmund, who meet at the MetLife Stadium, at stake.

Meet Rhian Wilkinson - the world class coach destined to manage Wales
Meet Rhian Wilkinson - the world class coach destined to manage Wales

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Meet Rhian Wilkinson - the world class coach destined to manage Wales

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"And I think from my end, it will be right up there in the greatest moments of my career to stand there and watch these women take the field."Despite only being appointed weeks before the start of Wales' qualifying campaign, Wilkinson's connection to Cymru runs far her own words, despite being a former Canadian international with 183 caps to her name, Wilkinson "feels Welsh." Wales in her heart Born in Canada, Wilkinson has a deep-rooted links to Wales having lived in Cowbridge for 18-months as a a Welsh mother (Shan) and an English father (Keith), Wilkinson says she has a big connection to the country she has steered to an historic first major in Quebec, Wilkinson lived in Cowbridge in south Wales and attended Bont Faen Primary School between returning to Wales as the women's head coach in February 2024, Wilkinson admits it is a job that was on her mind for years."When the job came up after Jayne Ludlow stepped down, I was sorely tempted to apply," she said."I thought what an amazing opportunity it would be, but I had already verbally agreed to another job, it wasn't great timing for me."I was on holiday in Rome when I saw the news that (Wilkinson's successor) Gemma Grainger had left. She and her staff had done such a wonderful job with the team, and I had followed the team closely. When it came up that she departed, I couldn't sleep that night."It was something that definitely interested me straight away and I thought this could be a very exciting move for me."Wilkinson still has plenty of family members in Wales – her grandmother lives in Cowbridge and her aunt and uncle and cousins live in Cardiff - and she speaks glowingly of family holidays spent scaling Wales' highest peak, Yr Wilkinson was instrumental in the decision to announce Wales' Euro 2025 squad at Yr Wyddfa - also known as Snowdon - a destination with huge meaning for her, having been the place where her parents enjoyed their honeymoon. Six months before she became Wales manager, it was also the place where the Wilkinson family held a ceremony for her father after his was no surprise when Wilkinson opted to walk up the mountain – all 1,085 metres of it - rather than take the train on the day of the Wales squad has always been someone who has scaled great heights in women's football, first as a player and then as a world class coach. An elite player and coach Wilkinson was a tough and formidable defender for Canada, though equally capable in midfield and she represented her country on the international stage from 2003 until 2017. Her 183 caps make her one of the 50 most capped female footballers in history and she played in four Olympic Games, winning bronze medals in 2012 and club career saw her star in the National Women's Soccer League and also play for a spell in Norway,A college graduate with a major in communication and English from the university of Tennessee, Wilkinson's playing career and her natural leadership always made a coaching career a likely worked her way up, starting as an assistant and age-grade coach with Canada before working as an assistant for both the England national team and Team GB at 2021 Olympic was only a matter of time before a head coach role arrived and Wilkinson was appointed as Portland Thorns coach in 2021, winning the NWSL Championship in her first Wilkinson was asked to stand-down after an investigation into a relationship with a player – there was no suggestion Wilkinson did anything wrong and the couple have subsequently married – with Wilkinson admitting that it was "a painful time," for was out of football at the highest level for a year after her departure from Portland, before Grainger's shock resignation and move to Norway opened up a vacancy she had always thought about. She was appointed Wales boss in February Association of Wales (FAW) chief football officer David Adams told BBC Sport Wales that the governing body chiefs were happy to appoint Wilkinson as she had been exonerated of wrongdoing by an investigation."We followed all the right steps and she was exonerated by the NWSL, so from our side of things we followed all the right steps." The right job at the right time Unquestionably, it was not easy for Wilkinson to hit the ground running as Wales boss, with the players angry and frustrated by Grainger's departure and wary of Wilkinson's there were certainly some issues in winning over the players who had hoped Grainger's assistant, Jon Grey, would be given the had it not of been for the circumstances of Wilkinson's departure from Portland, it might have been the case that Wales would have always remained a place where Wilkinson felt affinity, but not somewhere she was particularly minded to it quickly became apparent that this was an ideal match, with Wilkinson succeeding in winning over the Wales squad over a 15-month period where Wales' results spoke for steered Wales to Nations League B promotion, before helping to mastermind their Euro 2025 play-off success, firstly with a hard-fought semi-final win over Slovakia, before Wales stunned Republic of Ireland in Dublin to finally reach a major finals for the first 43-year old especially showed her credentials in the Republic of Ireland matches, steering Wales past formidable foes despite being without Sophie Ingle and with star performer Jess Fishlock far from full fitness after returning from a calf seemed to successfully utilise mind games against then Ireland boss Eileen Gleeson, who got increasingly annoyed with comments made about her side."The only time I think about Rhian Wilkinson is when I get asked about her by you," she told journalists before the showdown in seemed agitated and on the edge in the final, Wales kept their cool and finally, are to play in a major Perhaps. 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Enzo Maresca excited by glimpse of Chelsea's future with ‘huge talent' Estêvão
Enzo Maresca excited by glimpse of Chelsea's future with ‘huge talent' Estêvão

The Guardian

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  • The Guardian

Enzo Maresca excited by glimpse of Chelsea's future with ‘huge talent' Estêvão

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