Soccer-Portugal to honour Jota with special wristbands at World Cup


Soccer Football - World Cup - UEFA Qualifiers - Group F - Armenia v Portugal - Vazgen Sargsyan Republican Stadium, Yerevan, Armenia - September 6, 2025 Portugal fans display a banner in memory of Diogo Jota inside the stadium before the match Photolure via REUTERS/Hayk Baghdasaryan

MIAMI, June 13 (Reuters) - Portugal's World ⁠Cup squad will wear commemorative wristbands in tribute to late former teammate Diogo Jota, midfielder Vitinha said ⁠on Saturday, as they prepare to open their Group K campaign against DR Congo next week.

The ‌wristbands, a gift from Prime Minister Luis Montenegro, carry the names of all squad members alongside that of former Portugal forward Jota, who died with his brother in a car crash in northwestern Spain last year.

Jota earned 49 caps and scored 14 goals for his country, and ​his absence has been felt deeply by his Portugal teammates.

"Basically, the story ⁠of the wristband is, when we went ⁠to meet with the Prime Minister, he offered us this wristband," Vitinha told reporters.

"They made sure that it was ⁠a ‌wristband that we could wear on the pitch. It has all the specifics for us to be able to enter the pitch with it, with the name of all the players plus the special name ⁠of Diogo Jota.

"He let us choose if we wanted to use it ​or not, how (we use it), during ‌the day or during the match. We received it with a lot of affection and we chose ⁠to use it."

Portugal will ​open their campaign on Wednesday.

Vitinha is no longer a stranger to the big stage, having won back-to-back Champions League titles with Paris St Germain, but he struck a cautious tone about Portugal's World Cup prospects, four years after their quarter-final exit in ⁠Qatar.

"I wouldn't say we're the favourites, we have great quality and ​capacity to advance far in the tournament," he said.

"We know the right path is to be humble and play the right game. We have the talent, all we need is the technical and tactical aspects (to come together)."

'VARYING TEMPERATURES' POSE DIFFICULTY

The tournament's ⁠three-country format across the United States, Mexico and Canada presents logistical challenges, but Vitinha remained philosophical about the varying conditions.

"The weather will affect how we play, but that is for everybody, not just for us," he said.

"With varying temperatures in the U.S., Mexico and Canada, it is very difficult. But it is the World Cup and there are ​no excuses, no conditions that can keep us from giving everything for the ⁠national team."

For Vitinha, whose father Vitor Manuel was also a midfielder, winning the World Cup remains a lifelong ambition.

"It's always ​been a dream, I've not wished to do anything else. To an ‌extent I've always followed what my father did," he said.

"This ​is what I always wanted to do, I've always dreamed of this and achieved many great things. I want to achieve winning this title as well."

(Reporting by Rohith Nair in MiamiEditing by Toby Davis)

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