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'Jota was a dream to work with and a pleasure to call friend'

'Jota was a dream to work with and a pleasure to call friend'

BBC News14 hours ago
Diogo Jota was "a dream to work with and a pleasure to call a friend", says Conor Coady, who was Wolves captain during the Portuguese forward's three seasons at the club. Before joining Liverpool, Jota was part of a Wolves side that won the Championship in 2017-18 and then went on to qualify for the Europa League with a seventh-placed finished during their first season back in the Premier League.Jota, aged 28, died in a car crash on Thursday along with his brother Andre Silva, who was 25. Their funerals will take place at 10:00 on Saturday in their hometown of Gondomar in Portugal. Coady, who began his career at Liverpool and currently plays for Leicester City, heard about his friend's death while at pre-season training with the Foxes. "I think we'll all remember where we were, but it goes bigger than football, what we're all feeling now," Coady told BBC Sport."This has hit everybody hard. And it will hit everybody hard for a long, long time because Diogo was a fantastic human being, an amazing friend, an amazing husband, an amazing father and an absolute incredible footballer for all the clubs he has played for."He was an unbelievable person. This is celebrating an incredible human being. A human being who should never left us this early and this [early] into an amazing career."
'He was born to play in the Premier League'
Jota joined Wolves from Spanish side Atletico Madrid at the age of 20, initially on loan when they were still in the second tier of English football.The Portuguese forward proved to be a revelation at the club, scoring 17 goals and providing six assists to help Wolves finish at the top of the table during his debut campaign."You could see it in his first session, that tenacity and the will to win was like no other," said 32-year-old Coady."He was the heart and soul of the dressing room. He had a quiet way of going about himself. But you knew you could go to him about anything. For me as a captain, it was an honour and a dream to play with him."Before moving to England, Jota had already played under Wolves head coach Nuno Espirito Santo while on loan at Porto, and he also reunited with his former Porto and Portugal Under-21 team-mate Ruben Neves at the club."He was born to play in the Premier League but Wolves were in the Championship. I used to always tell young people they need to learn from players like Diogo and Ruben, who were brave enough to step into the Championship to help a club who were struggling at that time," said Coady."He was brave enough to bring his childhood sweetheart to Wolverhampton and really buy into the culture of England. He was such an example for everybody."I absolutely loved him. As a captain, he was a dream to work with. But it was a pleasure to call him a friend."
'He took the Premier League by storm'
During a three-year stay at Wolves, Jota made 131 appearances for the club, scoring 44 goals, including consecutive hat-tricks in the 2019-20 Europa League victories over Besiktas and Espanyol.In September 2020, he joined Premier League champions Liverpool in a £41m deal, with Wolves boss Nuno saying Jota is leaving "knowing that it will never be forgotten, especially by our fans, all the memorable moments that Diogo provided"."We were gutted we were losing him because he was that good," said Coady."But at the same time, you gave him a big hug and you went, you know what mate, you deserve it more than anyone. Go and enjoy yourself. Go and make a name for yourself at one of the biggest clubs because you can certainly do that. And he has done for that a number of years."Coady posted a moving tribute to his former team-mate on his social media account after hearing the news, which he said he did while he "cried my eyes out".In the post, he describes how he felt grateful hearing his kids say "dad, you played with Jota" when the Liverpool player came up on the television screens - a feeling he reiterated again."People look at football and think it's all about rivalry. But watching him win the Premier League with Liverpool, it filled me with immense pride - to say I played with him and he has gone on to do incredible things," said Coady."He took it by storm, like he took us by storm. Like he then took the Premier league by storm. Like he then took Europa League by storm with Wolves. "He's then gone and done it with one of the biggest clubs in the land. A remarkable footballer, but an even better team-mate, which is 10 times more important than being a remarkable footballer for me."
Coady recalls Jota's best Wolves moments
Coady picked Jota's hat-tricks in successive Europa Leagues games during the 2019-20 season as one of the standout moments of his Wolves career."It was like nothing to him. It was like it was dead easy. That's how good he was. It was like he was meant to do it," said Coady.He also rates highly Jota's goal against Manchester United at Molineux which sent Wolves into the 2018-19 FA Cup semi-finals. "He scored a goal against Aston Villa in the Championship that was unbelievable but his goal against United summed him up as a footballer - his pace, his power, his technique to finish it with his left foot at near post," Coady recalled."The infectious personality within a dressing room and how he helped me as a captain, how he helped us as a team, just being able to share a dressing room with a mate - it will live with me forever. "The whole three years will live me forever and I'll make sure that my family and my kids will always know the stories about me being able to share the pitch with him because he was an incredible fellow."You can listen to the full interview in Saturday's 5 Live Sport from 11:00 BST.
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Wales will 'figure it out' at Euro 2025

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Gianluigi Donnarumma bursts into tears on pitch after PSG star's challenge causes Jamal Musiala horror injury

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

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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.

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