Jota gave us moments. Liverpool FC just gave him immortality
Number 20 Forever

The Club Got It Right
On the tribute podcast I recorded with Eddie Gibbs for Anfield Index, I said I hoped the club would do the right thing. Not for the headlines, not for PR, just because it’s who we are. And they did. This wasn’t just a football club, this was a family showing how to handle grief. With grace, with heart, with class.
The way the club managed the entire week has been nothing short of exemplary. No grandstanding, just respect. And more importantly, they’ve set the tone for others. How to behave when something like this happens. That matters.
A City, A Country, A Game United
I’m based in Wolverhampton, so I had to pay my own respects at Molineux. I went there quietly, just a fan remembering a player who gave us everything. And what I saw from Wolves fans was moving. A former Wulfurian remembered with pride. That’s what got me. The class. The dignity. The recognition. They understood what Jota meant, and they honoured it.
Even beyond Wolverhampton, the tributes have come pouring in. Every corner of the football world seemed to pause for a second, to take a breath, and remember. Not just a footballer, but a human being. A teammate. A friend. A father. That’s the thing we forget, this game that eats up headlines every hour of the day is full of people. Real people. And in Diogo Jota’s case, one hell of a person.
All His Moments Counted
Thiago does something magical in midfield, finds him in space, and bang. Through Ramsdale’s hands. Cannonball. Goal. That was Jota. Predatory, sharp, lethal. He didn’t just score goals. He changed matches. He flipped the script. That’s why we sang his name. That’s why the song was always there.
You know the one. The one that still spins around your head. The one he sang with us, laughing, buzzing, belonging. “Oh his name is Diogo” Simple, powerful, rhythmic. A song sung because we loved him. A song sung because he made us happy.
His final goal, too, was huge. Not just another stat. A goal that pushed us to the brink of another league title. He left the city red. Again. That’s how he went out, delivering a moment that really mattered. That’s his legacy. That’s why retiring the shirt feels right. He was number 20. He is number 20. Always.
Liverpool, The Classy Club
Arne Slot is now in charge and deserves massive credit for the way he’s led the group through this. Winning the league in his first season was sensational. But the human side of leadership is often harder than the tactical one. And he’s handled it all impeccably. Quiet strength. Just what the lads needed.
Retiring a number at Liverpool is rare. Very rare. But when the decision came, there was no doubt in my mind. Jota’s number 20 deserved to be sacred. This wasn’t just for sentiment. This was for everything he gave, the weight of his moments, and the raw connection with the fans. He earned that immortality.
And it matters that it came from the top. From the club. They didn’t hesitate. They acted. They listened to fans like me, to the tone of the city, to the feeling around the world of football. And they did the right thing. I’m proud of them. I really am.
Because this is a moment where the game remembered what it was about. Not sponsors or broadcast rights or viral videos. But people. Emotions. Shared memories. Songs we’ll still sing, even if they now make our voices crack a bit.
More Than a Player
The song will live on. The goals will play forever in highlight reels. But more than that, it’s the feeling he gave us. That edge-of-your-seat anticipation. The chaos he brought to defences. The sense that something could happen, and probably would, the moment he got the ball in the box.
Jota gave us moments. Beautiful, sharp, unforgettable moments. That’s what football is all about. Not endless possession, not heat maps. Moments. And he gave us more than his share.
Now, every time someone asks what happened to the number 20 shirt, we’ll smile and say, it belongs to Diogo. And only Diogo. Because he earned that. With his boots, with his spirit, with his legacy.