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Coleen Rooney has conflict about being a happy team with Wayne & is trying to rebrand him in IAC, says body language pro
SINCE entering the jungle for this year’s I’m A Celebrity, Coleen Rooney has been hard at work, but not with the gruesome bush tucker trials.
According to body Language pro Judi James, Coleen’s jungle stint is all in a bid to help hubby Wayne Rooney re-brand himself as a doting husband.
The couple have has their share of ups and downs throughout their 22-year relationship[/caption]The couple, both 38, share four sons Kai, 14, Klay, 11, Kit, eight, and Cass, six, and have had their fair share of ups and downs throughout the course of their 22-year relationship.
“Although it’s Coleen in there suffering hunger and cold and potentially risking a meal of bull’s testicles and fish eyes, it seems to be on behalf of husband Wayne, to re-brand him as a romantic partner who writes Coleen poetry and leaves her love-notes,” Judi told Fabulous.
This comes after Colleen confessed that despite his tough image on the pitch, the England footie legend is quite the romantic.
Coleen said: “Wayne’s always wrote me poems.
“You know the hotel pads? He was always writing a little poem and putting it in his bag and he’d give it to me when we got home.
“They’re nice to keep but I can’t remember the last time he gave me one…
“He is romantic in ways, we’re not the lovey-dovey couple in public but little things like that I think it keeps the relationship alive and it’s special when someone’s done something just for you, and the words mean something.”
When she talks about Wayne on the show “her body language and her smile in particular ooze loyalty,” Judi explained, “and any signals of supressed anger from her seem aimed at the public and their reaction to what she calls his ‘mistakes’ rather than at him.”
But Coleen’s stories about her relationship might be more “deliberate” and designed to paint over her relationship’s bumpy history, according to the body language pro.
“She talks about his ‘mistakes’ by miming an invisible brick gesture with her hands, suggesting a desire to contain any problems and to compartmentalise them, before ‘placing’ that mimed brick to her left to signal she sees those ‘mistakes’ as things in the past that have been bagged up, thrown out and dealt with,” Judi said.
Not only that but Coleen has shown “a will to fight for her man” with her hand gestures, especially her “beak hand precision gestures”.
On the show, she can also be seen to touch her mouth as she speaks, which “could suggest inner conflict,” Judi added.
But it’s not Wayne she holds anger towards, but rather the public, the pro explained: “A micro head-wobble suggests it’s the public she has the anger towards for not forgiving Wayne, miming a ‘split’ or cancel gesture to show what she thought the public wanted them to do.”
But the couple’s past struggles may have brought them closer together, showcased by Coleen’s ‘pray’ gesture,” which, according to the pro, announces “‘We’re happy now, a team’”.
Judi also said Coleen’s resentment towards to public is further evident when she speaks about her happiness with Wayne.
“A self-hug with her elbows pulled into her body to suggest a desire for privacy,” she said, “although both her hands stretch out sideways and are splayed in a huge ‘announcement’ gesture to suggest she is primarily driven to set the record straight.”
As for Wayne’s love notes, Coleen “mimes the act of writing as though she has spent time imagining Wayne actually doing it,” Judi examined.
“We again get the slight anxiety ritual of some chin rubbing and scratching but her smile as she gets the ‘Aw!’ from her audience suggests she feels her story is mission accomplished.” she added.
The couple’s controversial past
In 2004, the Sunday Mirror reported that a teenage Rooney had paid £140 for sex with prostitute Charlotte Glover, then 21, and gave her his autograph as a “souvenir”.
That same year he was said to have slept with Gina McCarrick, then 37, at a £45-a-go brothel in Liverpool.
The football star visited the brothel 10 times and was caught on CCTV.
It was at this same brothel that he was said to have slept with grandmother Patricia Tierney, then 48, who wore a rubber catsuit and was known as the “Auld Slapper”.
In 2010 Helen Wood claimed Wayne had paid for a threesome with Jenny Thompson.
In 2017 Coleen was left fuming again when her husband was caught in a car with Laura Simpson and tested positive for drink-driving.
According to The Mirror, the Wag has concerns that things might have gone further if Rooney hadn’t been pulled over – while Laura admitted she would have “s****ed him”.
Wayne was sentenced to 100 hours of community service, after admitting to drink-driving.
Back in August 2019, the married former England ace was pictured laughing and joking with a mystery brunette — dressed in a skimpy white top and high heels — at the end of the mammoth booze-up.
His wild night out with team-mates included visits to two clubs, chatting with three girls and jumping into a jacuzzi at a pal’s flat.
Speaking to British Vogue, Coleen said that although they’ve seen some tough storms, the ‘love’ between them has never faltered.
She said: “It’s been a battle at times, I look at [any] situation we’re in and think, ‘Could we move forward from that? Is it worth moving forward from that?’, I don’t just give up.”
Despite their hardships, the wag has managed to find humour out of the situation of Wayne’s misbehaviour.
She continued: “We’ve never backed away from it. We own it. I remember having a conversation about this with someone and I said, ‘Well, do you know what your wife gets up to every day and night? At least I know what my husband’s doing!’ It mightn’t be good, but I know. People lie to themselves.”
She said the footballer often writes her poetry[/caption]Coleen Rooney's surprising bad habit
COLEEN Rooney has revealed the embarrassing habit hubby Wayne reckons will annoy her I’m A celebrity campmates.
She’s usually preened and perfect – but the WAG has confessed she snores.
Coleen said: “I didn’t think I snored, but Wayne says I snore.
“Not continuously though – just every now and again.
“I have been in the public eye for over 20 years now and people take what they want from it.
“I do think people will get a better idea of what kind of person I am.”
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‘It’s not the worst’ admits Heimir Hallgrimsson as Ireland discover opponents for UEFA Nations League play-off
HEIMIR HALLGRÍMSSON reckons Bulgaria is an ‘OK’ draw for Ireland.
Ireland have been paired with the east Europeans in the Nations League relegation/promotion play-off.
In March, Ireland will be away first with a return game at the Aviva Stadium with the winner competing in League B and the loser in League C.
The other options for Ireland were Armenia, Kosovo and Slovakia.
And Hallgrímsson said: “I think Bulgaria is an OK draw. It’s not my favourite, it’s not the worst.
“Slovakia was the highest FIFA-ranked team and everyone would like to avoid them. Yeah it’s probably going to be an equal game like most of these set-ups.
“They were in a group with Northern Ireland and if I remember correctly they lost 5-1 in Belfast [it was 5-0] but that is kind of an outlier in all the results.
“They had four clean sheets in that group and somebody had told me Ireland had them in the group in 2020 and it was two draws. You would expect a low scoring game when you look at the goals and statistics.
“That is going to be a tricky thing, to break them down for sure.
“It’s good to have a home advantage in the second game. It’s a tricky place to go to, Bulgaria.”
Ireland have been in League B in every Nations League campaign to date. Asked if it was important to stay there, Hallgrímsson said: “Well it’s different opinions as to how important it is to be in League B, some say it’s even better to be in Group C to have more chances of winning games.
“My opinion is that you should always play the stronger team and try to improve that way. That’s my opinion and I think it’s important that if we want to try to qualify for finals it’s always better to play better teams than not.”
Hallgrímsson will hope that his players will be able to put their 5-0 loss to England behind them by the time the sides meet in March.
He said: ”If you look at our games, this season half is an outlier in our performance so hopefully time will heal these wounds.
“Now, it’s a little bit of a quieter time for me and a good time to look back and reflect and just gather every key note that I’ve put in my diary and go through it and gather my thoughts.”
Having used 31 players in six games, Hallgrímsson expects to have a more settled side in 2025.
He said: “I needed contact time with the group, with the squad, to try to find the players who will fit how we want things to be done. So the number of players is probably according to what I expected in the beginning.
“Obviously always it’s better to do a bigger camp with the players at the beginning and select from there but this was how it was.
“I think we used it wisely. We didn’t do a lot of changes but there was always some changes so there a little stability as well. This is how go forward.
“My contact time with the players is three weeks, three weeks and two days or something, so it’s not much. As a coach what you can do in three weeks.
“It’s good it was September, October, November. It was a continuity in what we were saying and our message was pretty clear in my opinion and the players now know what we expect, and they probably know more why we select in the future these players but not these players.”
And he reckons any players on the move in the January transfer window will not be primarily motivated by their national-team fortunes.
He said: “If it’s a player that’s not playing, I think he will do that regardless of what his national team coach has to say.
“All players like to play and if they are not getting minutes, they will try with their agents to get playing time somewhere else.
“Of course as a national team coach, you want your players to be playing regularly and at the highest level possible.”