12 MINUTES BEFORE IMPACT: CCTV Picks Up Unusual Rattle in Diogo Jota’s Lamborghini — Engineers Say It Could Indicate a Loose Axle Component
REVEALED: That sound was not part of the road noise — and might be the first warning sign.
A statement from Spain’s Civil Guard has said that “everything is pointing” to Diogo Jota being behind the wheel during fatal car accident in Spain last Thursday
Spanish police have said for the first time “everything is pointing” to Liverpool star Diogo Jota driving the Lamborghini supercar in which he and his brother, André Silva, crashed and died.
They also say tests carried out so far appear to indicate the 28-year-old may have been in excess of the permitted limit on that stretch of the motorway.
Kop striker Jota and his younger sibling, 26, were laid to rest at a heartbreaking funeral on Saturday, having passed away following an accident in Zamora, Spain in the early hours of Thursday morning. The news came just under two weeks after the Portugal international married his long-term girlfriend Rute Cardoso, mother of his three children. They tied the knot on 22 June.
In only their second official statement since last week’s horror crash on the A-52 near Zamora close to Spain’s north-west border with Portugal, the Civil Guard said: “The expert report is still being worked on and finalised.
“Among other things traffic police from the Zamora branch of the Civil Guard are studying the tread marked by one of the wheels of the vehicle. Everything is also pointing to a possible high excess of speed over the permitted speed on that stretch of the motorway.
“All the tests carried out for the moment point to the driver of the crash vehicle being Diogo Jota. The expert police report when it is finalised will be handed over to a court in Puebla de Sanabria.”
Liverpool players reported for their first day of pre-season training at Kirkby on Tuesday morning, just 72 hours after attending the funeral of their team-mate in Portugal.
Reds stars including Mohamed Salah, Andrew Robertson and new signing Jeremie Frimpong were pictured driving to the first day of preparation for the upcoming campaign with the club still in mourning.
Diogo Jota poses with the UEFA Nations League trophy after his final match (
Image:
Getty Images)
Virgil van Dijk and Andrew Robertson carry floral tributes as they arrive at the funeral held for Diogo Jota and his brother Andre Silva (
Image:
Octavio Passos, Getty Images)
Salah admitted in a heartfelt post on social media that he would find it hard to get his head around Jota not being present when the players reconvened.
“I am truly lost for words,” he wrote last week. “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 back.”
Head coach Arne Slot said the “sense of shock is absolute”, adding: “He was a loved one to all of us.”