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Wimbledon star given special permission to wear black armband so he can pay tribute to Diogo Jota

Wimbledon star given special permission to wear black armband so he can pay tribute to Diogo Jota

Scottish Sun9 hours ago
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A TOP Portuguese tennis player plans to wear a black armband at Wimbledon in honour of the late Diogo Jota – and he has backing from the All England Club to do so.
Liverpool forward Jota, 28, died in a car crash in the early hours of Thursday morning near Zamora in northwestern Spain.
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Diogo Jota was tragically killed in a car crash
Credit: PA
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Francisco Cabral is the world No40 in doubles
Credit: Getty
His brother Andre was also killed in the incident on the Rias Bajas Highway A-52 near Palacios de Sanabria.
It happened 10 days after the player married his long-term girlfriend, Rute Cardoso, with whom he has three children.
Francisco Cabral, a leading doubles player, grew up in the same city, Porto, as Jota and they had shared acquaintances.
Cabral, 28, was travelling to Wimbledon for his first-round men's doubles tie with Austrian partner Lucas Miedler when he heard about the tragic news.
The pair ended up beating Scotland's Jamie Murray and American Rajeev Ram 7-6 6-3 but the tragedy was in his mind
Wimbledon sources say players who wished to pay tribute to Jota would be allowed to wear a black armband during tennis matches.
This is despite the tournament's strict all-white dress code for the Championships fortnight.
Cabral gave an emotional interview when he talked about his fellow countrymen and someone he had admired from afar.
He said: 'I didn't know him personally. But I know a friend who knew him. A great guy.
'Obvioiusly, very, very sad news. Not only in the sports world but in Portugal overall.
'Heartbroken' Ronaldo leads tributes to Diogo Jota as football mourns Liverpool & Portugal star
'He's such an idol. Such an icon. Such a good person. I am very sad to hear what happened.
'I got the news when I was driving to Wimbledon. I wish all the best for his family. He had great people around him. I hope they can get through it.
'He was really hard working, what he had come through, what he had conquered in his career and life. Very inspiring for me.
'He plays in the national team. One of the best teams in the world. I followed the games and when he scored, I was happy for him.
'In the back of my head while I was playing, I was sad as everyone is in Portugal. I had to play the game. I had to focus on my game. I'm sad, of course.'
Asked if he would be willing to wear a black armband in tribute, Cabral said: 'I'm open to doing it.
'I need to get a black strip to put on my shirt. If someone can arrange that for me, I will be very, very happy to do it.
'Of course, I would be open to (a one-minute silence). He's such a legend of our country.'
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Fans worldwide pay tribute to Diogo Jota after his tragic death as Liverpool supporters sing You'll Never Walk Alone outside Anfield and banner is displayed at Portugal's Women's Euros clash with Spain
Fans worldwide pay tribute to Diogo Jota after his tragic death as Liverpool supporters sing You'll Never Walk Alone outside Anfield and banner is displayed at Portugal's Women's Euros clash with Spain

Daily Mail​

time39 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Fans worldwide pay tribute to Diogo Jota after his tragic death as Liverpool supporters sing You'll Never Walk Alone outside Anfield and banner is displayed at Portugal's Women's Euros clash with Spain

Emotions ran high during Portugal's match against Spain at the Women's Euros on Thursday night - a game that took place just hours after Diogo Jota passed away at the age of 28. Jota was a fully-fledged international in the Portugal men's team, playing 49 times for his country, scoring 14 goals, and was a Nations League winner - the victory coming just a matter of weeks ago. The Liverpool star died on Thursday alongside his brother when his Lamborghini had a tyre blow out while overtaking another vehicle on the A-52 at Cernadilla near Zamora - just ten miles over the border from Portugal. The car is said to have rolled and burst into flames, with emergency services unable to save the footballing duo. Jota's brother, Andre Silva, 26, played for Portuguese second division side Penafiel. Jota and Silva were headed to Santander to catch a ferry to Britain after Diogo was advised not to fly following lung surgery, it was reported in his home country. And Portugal and Spain fans and players alike used the opportunity of their game on Thursday to pay tribute to the star, who leaves behind his new wife, Rute, and their three children. Tributes took place long before the game at the Stadion Wankforf in Bern, Switzerland, with fans chanting Jota's name and holding up signs outside the ground. Inside the ground, they continued to sing his name as countless banner and photos were produced paying tribute to the player. One group of fans were seen holding pieces of paper with the Portuguese's face and name on, while others held a banner. The banner read 'Obrigado por tudo,' which translates to 'thank you for everything', and 'descansa em paz,' meaning 'rest in peace.' After the game, which Spain won 5-0, the players merged to stand behind the banner themselves on the pitch. Beforehand, players engaged in an immaculate minute's silence and also wore commemorative black armbands. Throughout the day, back in Liverpool, fans gathered in their hundreds to lay and pay their own tributes to Jota. Jota played 182 games for Liverpool and was part of the Premier League title-winning squad from last season under Arne Slot. Slot, alongside the likes of Virgil van Dijk and Andrew Robertson, paid their own tributes. One group of fans gathered to sing Liverpool's traditional 'You'll Never Walk Alone' song, aiming it at the forward, while another striking image showed two men - one in a Liverpool shirt and one an Everton shirt - walking with flowers to lay them down. Football fans gathered outside Anfield stadium and sang ''You'll Never Walk Alone', the club's anthem, in honour of Diogo Jota, who died in a car crash in Spain. — Sky News (@SkyNews) July 3, 2025 Some fans in the crowd at Switzerland donned signed with Jota's face on and sang his name Doctors had reportedly advised Jota not to catch a plane after a recent operation, so he was getting a boat back to England instead. A Brittany Ferries service from Santander to Plymouth left at 4pm BST on Thursday, arriving in Devon at 11.15am on Friday. According to Record, Jota and new wife Rute attended a friend's wedding over the weekend and had been celebrating together. The lamborghini crash happened on the A-52 in the province of Zamora. The Spanish dual carriageway is a key route taken by drivers after leaving northern Portugal as they head for the ports of Santander and Bilbao or drive north-east towards France. Emergency services in the Castilla and Leon region confirmed the crash and two fatalities at around 12.35am on Thursday. Diogo and Andre's deaths were then confirmed by the Portuguese Football Federation at around 8am. Wreckage at the scene suggested the brothers were driving to the UK in a Lamborghini Huracan Evo Spyder. Jota had married childhood sweetheart Rute a matter of days ago, having met her at school when the duo were children.

Jota was that rare breed - a player you admired regardless of who you support
Jota was that rare breed - a player you admired regardless of who you support

Daily Mirror

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mirror

Jota was that rare breed - a player you admired regardless of who you support

If you don't follow football but you're wondering why the torrent of tributes to Diogo Jota has been so relentless, here are some of the reasons. Yes, the Liverpool footballer was an outstanding, versatile player, arguably the best finisher in the English champions' squad on his day. Yes, he lifted everything there was to win during his five years at Anfield. And yes, he scored crucial goals last season to help them to win the title, including the winner - his last ever goal - in the Merseyside derby against Everton in April. But he was also low maintenance, high in the good energy that attracts kindred spirits and universal respect. He wasn't ever pictured falling out of nightclubs, engaging in unseemly Twitter/X controversies or involved in the pantomime, Baller League-type flare ups we see on Instagram. Jota, the man, was summed up by the pictures that have so dominated the news agenda over the past 24 hours. A family man, a devoted man, taken too soon when the car he was in with his younger brother, Andre Silva, came off the road in north-west Spain on Thursday night. They'd been driving through northern Spain to catch an overnight ferry to the UK for pre-season which had been due to start on Monday. Jota had been advised not to fly following lung surgery, according to reports in Portugal. But the Lamborghini the siblings were in was said to have blown a tyre while overtaking on the A-52 at Cernadilla near Zamora - just ten miles over the border. We continue to await confirmation of the full, tragic circumstances. But what we do know is that Jota was loved. He was cherished within his club and adored within his native Portugal. He was the kind of guy who played computer games in his spare time. A guy who was still paying to play for his local club Gondomar at the age of 16, an age when some talented players in England are already pushing for a place in Premier League teams. He was a footballer whose lack of malice, hostility and animosity during matches came as a refreshing antidote to so many of the tiresome antics we see at the elite level of domestic and European football. He was a father, a son, most recently a husband whose low key life away from the game was summed up by the fact that he was with his brother when the tragedy struck. It doesn't seem real to be talking about him in the past tense. Jota - aged 28. A man barely past the first few chapters of his life. It wouldn't be an exaggeration to suggest he was that rare breed - the kind of player you admired regardless of which team you support. An army of top clubs and their fans had admired Jota and the 17 goals he'd scored to help Wolves into the Premier League as champions before Liverpool gazumped them all to sign him, five years ago. How do the Premier League Champions now focus on football beyond this? How do they park their grief and get on the game again? It is a given that the game will wrap its collective arms around Jota's family. But if we as journalists and fans are rocked by his sudden heartbreaking loss, what about Jota's close friends and colleagues in that dressing room. What about his bosses even? Sadly, Liverpool have a history stretching back decades of dealing with the kind of trauma they simply should not have to bear. And the sadness of it all is in the timing. He was just 28. No age. In May, he'd celebrated winning the Premier League title with Liverpool, he posted pictures all over his socials. In June he helped Portugal to win the Nations League international tournament alongside the likes of Cristiano Ronaldo. And less than two weeks ago he was married. Gorgeous pictures on his social media accounts of him with his childhood sweetheart, Rute Cardoso and his three children. Now, in the blink of an eye, she is a widow. He has been taken away from them. Football comes very much second to the magnitude of the chasm left in the Jota family. It will never be filled. What we do know is that he will never be forgotten.

Diogo Jota: the sense of loss goes far and wide
Diogo Jota: the sense of loss goes far and wide

The Guardian

timean hour ago

  • The Guardian

Diogo Jota: the sense of loss goes far and wide

Liverpool's Diogo Jota has died in a car accident in Spain. It is devastating news and still hard to get our head around. Jota was 28, a father of three young children and married his long-term partner Rute Cardoso less than two weeks ago. His younger brother André Silva, a footballer for Penafiel, also died in the crash. It is an unimaginable loss for their friends and family to process and we hope they get all the support and love they need. At Anfield, where Jota was adored by Liverpool fans for his goalscoring instinct, pace and combative dribbling style, the club flag is at half-mast and scarves, shirts and other tributes bearing the forward's name are still being left. Supporters spoke of their love for an 'adopted scouser' whose chant is among the most popular on the Kop. He was last seen at Anfield holding the Premier League trophy aloft as his name echoed around the ground – 'oh his name is Diogo'. Many of those fans, including the writer of this email, and people in the wider football community did not know Jota, but his actions on the pitch made them feel something. Footballers provoke emotion and talented and committed ones, such as Jota, do it often enough to form a connection. So the sense of loss goes far and wide. This has been evident in the range of tributes for Jota and his brother from Liverpool teammates, his former clubs, his Portugal captain Cristiano Ronaldo, rival Premier League sides, Uefa president Aleksander Ceferin and Portugal's prime minister Luís Montenegro, who said Jota 'was an athlete who greatly honoured Portugal's name'. The Portuguese FA president Pedro Proença spoke of Jota's warm personality, something that seemed evident in post-match interviews when the forward would often be smiling broadly and looking delighted to be living out his dream: 'Much more than a fantastic player, who played almost 50 matches for the national A team, Diogo Jota was an extraordinary person, respected by all his teammates and opponents, someone with an infectious joy and a reference in the community itself.' Jürgen Klopp said he was 'heartbroken' to lose 'a great friend … we will miss you so much!' Jota's career has been a decorated one. He won the Championship, the Premier League, the FA Cup and League Cup as well as playing in a Champions League final with Liverpool. And in his last match, for Portugal against Spain, he won the Nations League for a second time. But at only 28 he was at the peak of his powers and had much more to give. It is unendingly sad. His 65 goals in 182 Liverpool appearances seem remarkable considering he was unfortunate with injury layoffs. Fans were desperate to see more of him – as the song goes – cutting inside and scoring for LFC. His last Liverpool goal was Jota in a nutshell. It was a derby winner against Everton in April, in which he wriggled through a group of defenders before taking his shot so early it left everyone flat-footed. And off he went, celebrating in front of those fans who loved him. Those fans who felt that connection. Those fans who won't forget the memories he left behind and who, no doubt, will sing his name for years to come. RIP, Diogo and André. YNWA. 'It doesn't make sense. Just now we were together in the national team, just now you had got 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 André. We will all miss you' – Cristiano Ronaldo pays tribute to his international teammate Diogo Jota. From his time in Portugal's Primeira Liga right through to Nations League and Premier League glory, we look back at Diogo Jota's career. The death of Diogo Jota hits me hard as a Liverpool fan. It is salutary reminder that using a tragedy, any tragedy for a cheap gag is tasteless in the extreme. Football divides us sometimes, death should unite us' – Kev McCready. Please send your letters to There will be a moment of silence before both of the Euro 2025 matches in Switzerland. Join Emillia Hawkins from 5pm BST for MBM coverage of Belgium v Italy, with Barry Glendenning covering Spain v Portugal at 8pm. The Football Weekly Extra podcast is here for you. Finland are up and running at the Euros after beating Iceland 1-0 in the tournament opener, as are Norway, 2-1 victors over hosts Switzerland. 'This was important, this means a lot for us … the goal was euphoria for me but it was damn important for the team as well,' said Ada Hegerberg. Martin Ho has signed a three-year deal to take over as Tottenham Women's new head coach until 2028. A consortium spearheaded by Gareth Bale has submitted an offer to buy his hometown club, Cardiff City. Everton are closing in on the signing of Villarreal's France Under-21 striker Thierno Barry for a fee of about £27m. And Chinese third-tier club Changchun Xidu are counting the cost of trying to throw visiting opponents off their game, having been fined for placing superstitious paper charms in the away dressing room. Get ready for Wafcon 2024, just a year later than billed. Osasu Obayiuwana has more, including the return of Jorge Vilda. Two-time Ballon d'Or winner Aitana Bonmatí is back to spearhead Spain's push for Euros glory. Nick Ames reports. And Ashifa Kassam explains how that kiss ended up transforming Spanish football. Xabi Alonso is relishing the value of Fede Valverde, as Sid Lowe explains. John Duerden has written on Al-Hilal and the strength of Saudi football. The Rumour Mill rolls on. And check out all the latest men's and women's moves in the window.

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