
Anfield Index
·8 luglio 2025
“A Blanket of Love” – Liverpool’s Chaplain Pays Heartfelt Tribute to Diogo Jota

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Yahoo sportsAnfield Index
·8 luglio 2025
It does not feel real, not yet. Walk up to Anfield this week and you are met not by turnstiles or tension, but silence, scarves and a weight that presses down on your chest. Diogo Jota is gone. And Liverpool, the city and the club, is struggling to breathe.
As tributes flood in for the No.20 who etched his name into Premier League history during Arne Slot’s title-winning season, it is the words of Bill Bygroves, Liverpool’s club chaplain, that have pierced through the fog of grief.
“There’s like a blanket of love here,” he said, standing among the scarves, shirts and sun-drenched flowers outside the Kop. “That shows the empathy and sympathy that is being displayed by our city and others beyond.”
Bygroves, who has served the club since the Shankly era, spoke as part of LFCTV’s special, Remembering Diogo: Our Number 20. His voice, weathered by decades of Merseyside life, carried a depth that only lived experience brings.
“There’s not a person here who hasn’t known loss,” he reflected. “But when it comes like this, so traumatic and devastating, it touches all of our hearts.”
This isn’t a standard farewell. This is Liverpool standing in formation, scarves raised, eyes red. This is grief wrapped in red flags and Portuguese colours, in shirts laid carefully under the Shankly Gates, in a PlayStation controller nestled beneath a framed photo of two brothers.
Bygroves captured it all. “Folk just want to show to the family how much we care and how much we love and that they are in our thoughts and prayers continually.”
In a time when grief can feel directionless, his words offered a compass: “You do need time. That’s important. You do need to shed tears.” And then came the line that has been shared, spoken, sung, written in chalk and etched into banners: “Tears are the safety valves of the heart when too much pressure is on them. They’re like liquid prayers. They say things we haven’t got the words for.”
Jota wasn’t just a forward. He was a symbol. A player whose relentless pressing, cool finishing and quiet humility made him adored. He was a key figure in Liverpool’s 2024-25 title triumph, scoring crucial goals in high-pressure moments and carving his place among Anfield’s modern heroes.
And now, Liverpool FC are looking at ways to ensure that No.20 is never worn again. It won’t bring him back, but it says everything about what he meant. The club has opened a book of condolences at Anfield and online, inviting supporters around the world to leave messages of love, support and memory.
There’s no instruction manual for mourning a player like Jota. But Bygroves perhaps came closest: “Keep and lock in your heart precious memories of folk and allow them to grieve in their own way, in their own time.”
This is what Liverpool does. We grieve in scarves. We mourn in song. And we remember in the silence between the chants. Jota will always be part of this club, stitched into its fabric, whispered in its anthem.
He will never walk alone.