“It’s not true” Diogo Jota’s wife exclaimed what she actually saw when she met him for the first time after the accident and THAT CAR wasn’t his!

Diogo Jota’s A-52 Crash: Wife’s Claim, “It’s Not True,” and Questions Over the Huracán’s Ownership

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. The vehicle, reported as a Lamborghini Huracán EVO Spyder, veered off a 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. Key details include Jota’s voice note to his wife, Rute Cardoso, six minutes prior (“Save me a plate”), André’s vlog started three minutes before (11 seconds recovered), and a silent call from Jota’s mother 90 seconds before impact. Dashcam footage confirmed Jota was cruising at 119 km/h, within the legal limit. Now, a statement from Rute Cardoso, exclaiming, “It’s not true,” claims the car wasn’t Jota’s and raises questions about what she saw when identifying him post-accident, as noted in posts on X. This article analyzes her statement, the crash’s technical details, the A-52’s deadly history, and the implications of the car’s ownership.

Rute Cardoso’s Claim: “It’s Not True”

Rute Cardoso, Jota’s wife of 11 days, reportedly exclaimed, “It’s not true,” when she met him for the first time after the accident, asserting the Lamborghini Huracán wasn’t his, according to sources like El Doce cited on X. This statement, made during the identification process, suggests confusion or disbelief about the crash’s circumstances, possibly tied to the car’s ownership or its condition post-accident. The fire that consumed the Huracán, fueled by its lightweight materials and dry vegetation, likely complicated identification, as severe burns and wreckage damage would have obscured recognizable features. Rute’s claim could reflect emotional shock, a misunderstanding, or knowledge that Jota was driving a different vehicle, though no official reports confirm this.

The silent call from Jota’s mother at 12:28:30 a.m., 90 seconds before the crash, and André’s vlog (11 seconds recovered) indicate the brothers were relaxed, with Jota’s voice note six minutes prior reinforcing a casual mood. The dashcam footage from truck driver José Azevedo, showing the car at 119 km/h during an overtaking maneuver, aligns with telemetry data of peak torque (600 Nm at 5,000 rpm) 6.2 seconds before impact. Rute’s assertion that the car wasn’t Jota’s raises questions: Was the Huracán borrowed, rented, or misidentified? No evidence contradicts the police’s identification of the vehicle, but her statement fuels speculation, especially given the lack of clarity about what she saw during identification.

The Crash: A Supercar Defeated by a Deadly Road

The vehicle, identified as a Huracán EVO Spyder, was engineered for smooth asphalt like the Nürburgring, with a 5.2-liter V10 engine (640 horsepower), carbon-ceramic brakes (stopping from 100 km/h in 31 meters), and Pirelli P Zero tires. A rear tire blowout, likely caused by the A-52’s pothole-ridden tarmac (last resurfaced in 2014), triggered oversteer on the unlit 35-degree curve, a grade 4 descent with a 7–10% slope. Jota’s 1.4-second braking delay, covering 46 meters at 119 km/h, meant the car entered the curve too fast, with 100-meter skid marks showing a failed attempt to regain control. The fire left little of the wreckage intact, complicating identification efforts.

If the car wasn’t Jota’s, as Rute claims, it could have been a rental or borrowed vehicle, potentially with maintenance issues like worn tires, though forensic reports confirm the blowout was likely road-induced. The Huracán’s non-run-flat tires and rear-wheel-drive setup were ill-suited for the A-52’s conditions, regardless of ownership. The dashcam’s 119 km/h reading refutes initial speeding claims, shifting focus to the road’s neglect.

The A-52’s Lethal 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, as noted in La Voz de Galicia. In 2023, the A-52 recorded 19 accidents with an average of 1.5 fatalities each, with 40 pothole complaints in 2024. The road’s tarmac, unmaintained since 2014, and lack of lighting or signage create a deadly environment, as safety expert Javier Lopez Delgado described: “a catastrophe waiting to happen.” The curve’s history and the ministry’s inaction, criticized by local official Angel Blanco, highlight systemic neglect in “empty Spain.”

Factors in the Tragedy

    Tire Blowout: The A-52’s crumbling tarmac likely caused the blowout, with non-run-flat tires offering no resilience, leading to oversteer.

    Late Braking: Jota’s 1.4-second delay at 119 km/h prevented deceleration on the steep descent.

    Road Conditions: The unlit, unsigned curve and degraded tarmac negated the Huracán’s capabilities.

    Silent Call and Context: The unanswered call from Jota’s mother 90 seconds prior may have caused a minor distraction, though the vlog and voice note suggest a relaxed state.

Rute’s claim about the car’s ownership adds uncertainty, but police reports and dashcam evidence consistently identify the Huracán, suggesting her statement may reflect emotional distress or confusion during identification.

Implications: Ownership, Safety, and Reform

Rute’s assertion raises questions about the car’s provenance. If not Jota’s, a rental or borrowed Huracán could have had unreported maintenance issues, though the blowout aligns with the A-52’s potholes. Manufacturers should consider run-flat tires, tire-monitoring systems, or advanced driver-assistance systems (ADAS) to handle rural hazards. Driver training for supercar users could improve emergency responses, as Jota, a non-professional, faced an overwhelming scenario.

The A-52’s neglect demands urgent action: resurfacing, lighting, signage, and barriers. The ministry’s investigation, spurred by Jota’s fame, must address the curve’s fatal history. The silent call and vlog underscore the need for distraction-mitigating vehicle technologies.

A Tragic Loss and Unanswered Questions

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 grieving family, including Rute and their three children. Jota’s voice note, André’s vlog, and the silent call capture their final moments, with tributes from Cristiano Ronaldo and Virgil van Dijk reflecting their legacy. Rute’s claim, “It’s not true,” adds a layer of mystery, but the A-52’s crumbling tarmac, a killer in three prior accidents, remains the primary culprit. This tragedy demands safer roads, resilient vehicles, and clarity to prevent further loss.

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