Marc Gaier
BBC News
Reporting fromAnfield Stadium
Jonny Humphries
BBC News, Liverpool
EPA
Thousands of people have visited Anfield stadium to pay their respects to Diogo Jota
Thousands of football fans have made their way to Anfield stadium to pay their respects to the Liverpool forward Diogo Jota after his death in a car crash in Spain.
Jota, 28, was killed when a Lamborghini he was travelling in with his younger brother, Andre Silva, suffered a tyre blow-out, crashed and caught fire in Cernadilla in the Zamora province.
Both men died in the crash, which happened at about 00:30 local time, Spanish police told the BBC.
A sea of flowers, football shirts, scarves, balloons and flags have been laid outside Liverpool's ground by fans since news of his death broke.
PA Media
Fans have been paying their respects to the Portuguese forward at Anfield stadium
Lifelong fan John Barlow from Leyland in Lancashire, a survivor of the Hillsborough disaster in 1989, said he was "absolutely devastated" when the news broke.
Marc Gaier/BBC
Hillsborough survivor John Barlow said he was "just heartbroken"
Mr Barrow said: "I had to stop what I'm doing at work and drive in.
"I come to every match and he was like one of us. He had a bit of something about him, like a proper old Liverpool player, like the players we were brought up with.
"He had a fight in him and he came back from things and he was tough."
He said he was "just heartbroken, absolutely heartbroken".
PA Media
Jurgen Klopp, who was Liverpool manager when Diogo Jota signed for the club in 2020, said he was "heartbroken"
Andrea Molyneux, who went to the stadium with her daughters Isabella and Lily Costello, described their "utter devastation".
"I can't even comprehend the grief that the family are going through," Ms Molyneux said.
"He was just such a young man and life can be taken away from you in such a short time.
"He had everything. Everything."
The Portugal international had recently married his partner, Rute Cardoso, with whom he had three young children.
Marc Gaier/BBC
Andrea Molyneux and her daughters said the news left them feeling "utter devastation"
Another fan told the BBC he would remember Jota with "a smile on his face, scoring goals for Liverpool".
"But in a time like this, football pales into insignificance," he added.
PA Media
Diogo Jota joined Liverpool from Wolverhampton Wanderers in September 2020
"He's left a wife and three children behind, his brother has passed away with him and his poor parents have lost two children.
"I mean, he'll forever be remembered as a great Red for us. But when something like this happens, football doesn't matter anymore."
PA Media
Some fans were visibly emotional at Anfield stadium on Thursday
Writing on social media, former Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp, who was in charge at Anfield when Jota was signed from Wolverhampton Wanderers in 2020, said he was heartbroken.
"This is a moment where I struggle!" he wrote.
"There must be a bigger purpose, but I can't see it."
Earlier Liverpool FC said it was "devastated" by the loss of the player and his brother.
The club described the player's death as "an unimaginable loss".
Listen to the best of BBC Radio Merseyside on BBC Sounds and follow BBC Merseyside on Facebook, X, and Instagram, and watch BBC North West Tonight on BBC iPlayer.