
Diogo Jota death prompts outpouring of grief from Liverpool fans
Lifelong fan John Barlow from Leyland in Lancashire, a survivor of the Hillsborough disaster in 1989, said he was "absolutely devastated" when the news broke.
Mr Barrow said: "I had to stop what I'm doing at work and drive in."I come every match and he was like one of us. He had a bit of something about him, like a proper old Liverpool player, like the players we were brought up with."He had a fight in him and he came back from things and he was tough."He said he was "just heartbroken, absolutely heartbroken".
'We will miss you so much': Klopp leads tributes to Diogo Jota after he dies in car crash
Andrea Molyneux, who went to the stadium with herdaughters Isabella and Lily Costello, described their "utter devastation". "I can't even comprehend the grief that the family are going through," Ms Molyneux said."He was just such a young man and life can be taken away from you in such a short time. "He had everything. Everything."The Portugal international had recently married his partner, Rute Cardoso, with whom he had three young children.
Another fan told the BBC he would remember Jota with "a smile on his face, scoring goals for Liverpool". "But in a time like this, football pales into insignificance," he added. "He's left a wife and three children behind, his brother's passed away with him and his poor parents have lost two children. "I mean, he'll forever be remembered as a great Red for us. But when something like this happens, football doesn't matter anymore."
Writing on social media, former Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp, who was in charge at Anfield when Jota was signed from Wolverhampton Wanderers in 2020, said he was heartbroken."This is a moment where I struggle!" he wrote."There must be a bigger purpose, but I can't see it."Earlier Liverpool FC said it was "devastated" by the loss of the player and his brother. The club described the player's death as "an unimaginable loss".
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Clearly appalled at watching his side cough up possession and end up sliced wide open again and again by a Motherwell team smelling blood during a chaotic second half, Rangers head coach Russell Martin didn't go hard enough in his savaging of the egos, fragile mentalities and hide-and-seek champions lucky to escape Fir Park with a point. This is a squad that needs pretty much all the old guard cleared out. A squad that specialises in bottling it and going missing in domestic matches. Martin sees that now. Knows it now. And needs his sporting director Kevin Thelwell to speed up the exits and maybe make plans for a few more recruits after this absolute shambles. Forget all the stuff about changing styles and needing patience. Martin's side, earning multiple amounts of money more than their Motherwell counterparts, simply fell apart against a spirited, adventurous opponent and went completely into their shells. They turned off when it got tough. Martin called them out after it, to be fair. His is a squad still full of the losers who've seen boss after boss off the premises. And might well see him off too unless he sticks with his harsh post-match words and starts leaving them behind for good. With the creation of chances becoming a serious problem after a decent beginning, Rangers simply failed to show for the start of the second half and played second fiddle from that point onwards until the final whistle – seeing an early lead served up by captain James Tavernier cancelled out by Emmanuel Longelo three minutes from the end of regulation time. It was beyond pathetic. These are games Rangers need to win if they are to justify the confidence expressed by Martin on Friday in having a starting XI ready to compete for the title. They didn't. They got the sore face they deserved and Martin finished up with egg on his. Indeed, were it not for goalkeeper Jack Butland making a crucial save from home sub Tom Sparrow in the fourth minute of time added-on, this would have been an opening-day defeat. It should have been. Their backline was sprung so often on the counter that it began to feel like Groundhog Day. Needless to say, it's exactly how that last-gasp opportunity presented itself. Simple stuff. Yet too much for Rangers to handle. Longelo picked up the ball out left, played a forward pass and Sparrow raced behind a static rearguard to put himself through one-on-one. What a chance it was, but fair play to Butland for standing tall and saving, as he has done on a number of occasions during Rangers' three competitive matches so far. It cannot possibly go on like this for the Ibrox side, though. Martin's side is just so open, so porous, so adept at playing its way into bother. 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By that stage, the game had become altogether more competitive with Rangers' early dominance fading. When the second half got underway, the visitors just fell off a cliff completely. On 51 minutes, Callum Slattery picked out Elijah Just unmarked at the back post. All he had to do was direct the ball home from close-range. Instead, it bounced off his nut and went wide. Moments later, Slattery was creating havoc again. A sliderule ball from midfield caught that high Rangers defensive line square and Stamatelopolous raced through the centre to find himself with a clear sight of goal. The long legs of Nasser Djiga got back quickly, though, to make a saving challenge. Wave after wave of attack from the home side was flooding in and it took a fine one-handed save from Butland to stop a low curling effort from McGinn finding the far corner. Souttar hacked the loose ball clear with some desperate defending as Stamatelopolous readied himself to fire it home. Motherwell came desperately close again with 20 minutes to play. Just fired in a curling cross, Stamatelopolous beat Souttar in the air and his header went just over the bar from only a matter of yards out. It was no shock when the leveller arrived, mind you. It had been a long time coming. It's just a wonder Rangers didn't let the roof fall in completely late on. They were awful. Martin was right to be fuming. But turning this around is going to be a monumental task.