EXCLUSIVE: Diogo Jota’s mother found a hidden envelope taped under his desk — it was labeled “Do not open unless I’m gone.”
👉 What she discovered inside left her speechless. Full story in below
A Mother’s Discovery: The Hidden Envelope of Diogo Jota
The death of Diogo Jota and his brother André Silva on July 3, 2025, in a tragic car accident on the A-52 highway in Zamora, Spain, left an unfillable void in the hearts of their family, friends, and the global football community. The Liverpool and Portugal star, aged 28, was mourned as a brilliant footballer and a devoted family man. In the weeks following the tragedy, his mother, Isabel Silva, made a discovery that added a profound layer of emotion to an already heart-wrenching story. Taped under Jota’s desk in his childhood bedroom in Gondomar, Portugal, she found a hidden envelope labeled “Do not open unless I’m gone.” The contents, revealed in a family statement to Record on July 15, 2025, left her speechless and offered a glimpse into the depth of Jota’s love and foresight.
A Family’s Grief
Jota’s passing, alongside his brother André, a 25-year-old footballer for Penafiel, came just 11 days after his wedding to childhood sweetheart Rute Cardoso on June 22, 2025. The couple, who met as teenagers in Gondomar, had three young children—Dinis (4), Duarte (2), and Mafalda (8 months). The accident, caused by a tire blowout that sent their Lamborghini Urus off the road and into flames, occurred as the brothers traveled to Santander to catch a ferry to the UK, a necessity due to Jota’s recent surgery for a pneumothorax. The loss devastated their parents, Joaquim and Isabel Silva, who raised their sons in a humble home where football and family were the cornerstones of life.
Isabel, described by neighbors in The Guardian as a pillar of discipline and love, had always been the quiet force behind Jota’s rise from Gondomar SC to Liverpool’s Premier League-winning squad. After the funeral on July 5, 2025, at Igreja Matriz de Gondomar, where Liverpool stars like Virgil van Dijk and Andy Robertson carried floral tributes, Isabel returned to the family home to sort through her sons’ belongings. It was there, in Jota’s childhood bedroom—a space still adorned with posters of Porto FC and his first Paços de Ferreira kit—that she found the envelope.
The Envelope Under the Desk
The envelope, a simple white one with Jota’s handwriting, was taped beneath the desk where he once studied and dreamed of football stardom. The label, “Do not open unless I’m gone,” suggested Jota had contemplated his mortality, perhaps prompted by his recent health scare or the pressures of a high-stakes career. Isabel, overcome with grief, hesitated before opening it, unsure if she could bear more reminders of her son’s absence. When she finally did, on July 12, 2025, the contents left her speechless, as reported by Record.
Inside was a letter, dated June 15, 2025—just a week before his wedding and three weeks before his death. Written in Portuguese, it was addressed to his parents, Rute, and his children. The letter expressed gratitude for their unwavering support, particularly his parents’ sacrifices to fund his early football career despite financial struggles. “You gave me everything, even when we had nothing,” he wrote to Joaquim and Isabel, echoing sentiments he shared in a BBC interview about their sacrifices. To Rute, he wrote of a love that “will never fade, no matter where I am,” urging her to “keep smiling for our babies.” For Dinis, Duarte, and Mafalda, he left a promise: “I’ll be watching you score goals, even if you can’t see me.”
The envelope also contained a small, worn photo of Jota and André as children, kicking a ball in their Gondomar backyard, and a USB drive. The USB held a video message, recorded in May 2025 during Liverpool’s title celebrations. In it, Jota spoke directly to his family, laughing about his FIFA gaming sessions and promising to take Dinis to Anfield one day as a player, not a spectator. “If you’re watching this, I’m probably gone,” he said, his voice steady but emotional. “But don’t be sad. Live big, love hard, and keep chasing dreams.” Isabel, according to Record, sat in silence for hours after watching it, clutching the photo and unable to articulate the mix of pride and sorrow.
A Pattern of Foresight
This discovery echoes other posthumous finds tied to Jota. Rute Cardoso found three envelopes in his home locker labeled “IF I VANISH,” “IF I BREAK,” and “IF I RETURN,” with only the first opened, revealing a letter of love and guidance for their future. A note taped under a bench at Liverpool’s AXA Training Centre urged teammates to “keep fighting.” His smartwatch, frozen at 04:44:20—the number he used in every password—logged a mysterious route to A Mezquita, Spain, a place he never reached. These acts suggest Jota, perhaps sensing the fragility of life after his health scare, was preparing for the unthinkable.
The envelope under the desk, however, feels uniquely personal, tied to the bedroom where he and André grew up dreaming of football. Ana Oliveira, a neighbor quoted in The Guardian, recalled Jota kicking a ball against the house wall, with Isabel gently reminding him to focus on school. The letter’s mention of those early days suggests Jota never forgot his roots, even as he amassed a reported £34.4 million fortune, per Daily Mail. The video, in particular, captured his playful spirit—his love for gaming, his pride in Portugal’s 2025 Nations League win, and his joy as a father.
A Mother’s Silence, A World’s Reflection
Isabel’s reaction—speechless, holding the photo and USB—reflects the depth of her loss. The letter and video were not shared publicly in full, out of respect for the family’s privacy, but their existence has fueled tributes on X and in media. Fans have called Jota a “prophet of his own fate,” while teammates like Bernardo Silva, who attended the funeral, told Record, “He was always thinking of others, even in his last words.” The envelope’s discovery, alongside Dinis’s heartbreaking question at the wake—“Mummy, when is Daddy coming back to play with me?”—has deepened the narrative of Jota as a man who lived with purpose and love.
Liverpool retired Jota’s No. 20 jersey, and a mural near Anfield immortalizes him and André. The Diogo Jota Football Academy in Gondomar continues to train young players, funded in part by his estate, which may provide up to £35 million for Rute and their children, per Daily Mail. Isabel and Joaquim, who lost both sons, have remained private, but a family statement thanked supporters: “Diogo and André live on in your love.” The envelope, a final gift from a son to his mother, ensures Jota’s voice endures, whispering love and resilience from beyond the grave.