Diogo Jota’s A-52 Crash: Brother’s Vlog, 11 Seconds Recovered, and the Road’s Deadly Role
On July 3, 2025, at approximately 12:30 a.m., Portuguese footballer Diogo Jota and his brother André Silva died in a fiery crash on Spain’s A-52 highway near Cernadilla, Zamora. Their Lamborghini Huracán EVO Spyder veered off a notorious 35-degree curve after a tire blowout, exacerbated by a 1.4-second braking delay and the road’s crumbling, unlit tarmac, unmaintained for 11 years. Six minutes before the crash, Jota sent a voice note to his wife, Rute Cardoso, saying, “Save me a plate,” reflecting a casual mood. Now, reports indicate André Silva began recording a vlog just three minutes before the impact, with only 11 seconds of footage recovered, offering a fleeting glimpse into their final moments. Truck driver José Azevedo’s dashcam confirmed Jota was cruising at 119 km/h, within the legal limit, shifting focus to the A-52’s deadly conditions. This article analyzes the vlog’s significance, the crash’s technical details, the road’s history, and the urgent need for reform.
The Vlog: A Fragment of the Final Moments
Three minutes before the crash, at roughly 12:27 a.m., André Silva reportedly began recording a vlog, likely capturing the brothers’ journey as they traveled toward Santander for a ferry to England. Only 11 seconds of footage have been recovered, possibly due to damage from the fire that consumed the Huracán. The contents of the vlog remain unreleased, likely out of respect for the family’s privacy and ongoing investigations, similar to Jota’s voice note sent six minutes earlier. The brief clip, if stored on a device recovered from the wreckage, may have been partially salvaged by forensic teams, though no official reports confirm its condition or content.
The vlog’s timing suggests André was documenting a lighthearted moment, consistent with Jota’s voice note, “Save me a plate,” sent to his wife at 12:24 a.m. Three minutes later, the brothers were approximately 2–3 kilometers from the crash site, based on their speed of 119 km/h (33 meters per second), as verified by Azevedo’s dashcam. The vlog could offer insight into their state of mind, potentially ruling out distraction as a factor, as André’s recording likely ceased before the critical overtaking maneuver 6.2 seconds prior to the crash, when telemetry shows the Huracán hit 600 Nm of torque at 5,000 rpm.
The Crash: A Supercar Undone by a Neglected Road
The Huracán EVO Spyder, designed for smooth racetracks like the Nürburgring, features a 5.2-liter V10 engine with 640 horsepower, carbon-ceramic brakes, and Pirelli P Zero tires. Its braking system can stop the car from 100 km/h in 31 meters, but a 1.4-second delay in braking—covering 46 meters at 119 km/h—proved fatal. A rear tire blowout, likely triggered by the A-52’s pothole-ridden tarmac, destabilized the rear-wheel-drive car on the unlit 35-degree curve, a grade 4 descent with a 7–10% slope. The road, last resurfaced in 2014, contributed to the blowout, with 100-meter skid marks showing Jota’s struggle to regain control before the car rolled and ignited.
Despite initial police claims of speeding, Azevedo’s dashcam confirms Jota was at 119 km/h, within the A-52’s 120 km/h limit. The blowout, late braking, and road conditions—not excessive speed—sealed the tragedy. The Huracán’s non-run-flat tires and track-focused design couldn’t cope with the rural highway’s hazards, underscoring a mismatch between supercar engineering and real-world conditions.
The A-52’s Deadly Legacy
The 35-degree curve at kilometer 65 has claimed three prior fatal accidents in five years, none reported nationally due to their local victims. Regional outlets like La Voz de Galicia note similar patterns—tire failures and high-speed crashes—yet the curve’s dangers went unaddressed. In 2023, the A-52 saw 19 accidents with an average of 1.5 fatalities each, and 40 pothole complaints were filed in 2024. The road’s unlit, unsigned state and crumbling tarmac, described by safety expert Javier Lopez Delgado as “a disaster,” made 119 km/h unsustainable on the steep descent.
The lack of maintenance since 2014 reflects the neglect of “empty Spain,” where rural roads like the A-52 receive minimal investment. Local official Angel Blanco called the highway “very dangerous,” and the ministry’s post-crash investigation, spurred by Jota’s fame, highlights a systemic failure to act on earlier fatalities.
Key Factors in the Tragedy
Tire Blowout: The A-52’s degraded tarmac likely caused the blowout, with the Huracán’s non-run-flat tires offering no resilience, leading to oversteer.
Late Braking: Jota’s 1.4-second delay entering the curve at 119 km/h prevented effective deceleration on the steep, uneven descent.
Road Conditions: The unlit, unsigned curve and 11-year-old tarmac created a lethal environment, negating the Huracán’s advanced systems.
Driver Context: The vlog and voice note suggest the brothers were relaxed, not distracted, with André’s recording likely stopping before the critical moment.
The 11-second vlog fragment, though unreleased, could corroborate the dashcam’s evidence, further absolving Jota of reckless driving and emphasizing the road’s role.
Implications for Safety and Reform
The A-52’s history demands immediate action: resurfacing, lighting, signage, and barriers to address its deadly curve. The ministry’s investigation must lead to systemic investment in rural infrastructure, prioritizing safety over political expediency. Supercar manufacturers like Lamborghini should consider run-flat tires, advanced tire-monitoring systems, or driver-assistance systems (ADAS) to handle real-world hazards. Enhanced driver training for supercar owners could also prepare them for emergencies, as Jota’s non-professional status likely limited his response to the blowout.
The vlog’s recovery, even if partial, underscores the need for robust data preservation in vehicles, potentially aiding investigations. Its unreleased status respects the family’s grief but may inform future safety protocols.
A Heartbreaking Loss
Diogo Jota, a 28-year-old Liverpool star with 65 goals in 182 appearances, and André Silva, a 25-year-old Penafiel midfielder, left a profound legacy. Jota’s voice note and André’s vlog capture their warmth, with tributes from Cristiano Ronaldo and Virgil van Dijk reflecting their impact. The tragedy, just 11 days after Jota’s wedding, devastates their family, including Rute and their three children.
The Huracán, built for smooth asphalt, met a crumbling tarmac that claimed two lives. The A-52’s curve, a silent killer in three prior accidents, exposed systemic neglect. The 11-second vlog, Jota’s voice note, and the dashcam’s 119 km/h reading demand change: safer roads, resilient vehicles, and accountability to ensure no more lives are lost.