Billie Shepherd ‘hysterical’ with pain over mystery disease as husband Greg steps in

Former TOWIE star Billie Shepherd lifts the lid on Sister Act, her new reality show with sister Sam, their tight bond and the secret health battle that left her bed bound

With three beautiful children, a happy marriage and an exceptionally close bond with her sister, Billie Shepherd appears to live a charmed life. But behind the smiles, the former TOWIE star has been dealing with a diagnosis that has left her bedbound, which she describes as “horrendous”.

As Billie and her younger sister Samantha Faiers make their long-awaited return to our screens in their new ITV reality show, Sam And Billie: Sister Act, Billie sits down for an exclusive interview with the Mirror to reveal how she is slowly emerging from a battle with Lyme disease, a bacterial infection usually caused by the bite of an infected tick. Symptoms include extreme fatigue and joint pain which can last years.

“It’s been a really, really tough time,” Billie admits. “I’ve been lucky in that I’ve never been challenged with health issues, I’ve never had to face that. And people are dealing with things 10 times worse, but it has been awful.” Billie, 35, says she first started noticing symptoms in January. It comes after Mark Wright shares big ‘disappointment’ after holiday with baby Palma and Michelle Keegan.

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Billie has revealed her secret battle with Lyme disease(Image: Alex James)

“One day I was fine, the next I woke up with really bad pains in my elbows and my arms,” she explains. “I thought I must have slept funny. I tried to ignore it but as the days went on, the pain went all over my body to the point where I couldn’t even get out of bed. It was horrendous.”

Billie says she went “back and forth to the doctors” and yet no one could work out what was wrong with her. But the symptoms only got worse. “I had hard, red lumps all over my legs, which were so painful, a horrible rash on my back and extreme fatigue,” she recalls.

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“But worst was the reactive arthritis — the most intense, awful pain in my joints. It was agony. My immune system was attacking the healthy tissue in my joints. I had so many blood tests but no one could figure it out. One doctor said she’d never seen anything like it. It was frustrating. This went on for about two months before we learnt it was Lyme’s.”

Doctors believe Billie was bitten by an infected tick, possibly as long as three years ago. But the infection lay dormant until her immune system weakened, likely as a result of bouts of tonsillitis last year. As Billie’s discomfort increased, so did the prescriptions. Courses of antibiotics and steroids were offered in a bid to control her pain and reduce the inflammation.

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Billie Shepherd in red outside a red phonebox
The TV star detailed how the pain of her condition had her in tears(Image: Alex James)

“My body wasn’t responding to antibiotics any more,” Billie says. “After the last course, I actually got worse. I was so unwell. It was only after Sam introduced me to a holistic doctor and I started taking natural medicines that I started to notice a difference and things slowly began to turn around.”

Billie had to rely on her husband Greg, Sam and their mum, Suzanne Wells, for daily help. “Some mornings I couldn’t even get out of bed. I would have to crawl,” she recalls. “Going to the toilet, I was in bits, I was hysterical, crying, because I was in so much pain. It was hard for me to sit on the toilet without Greg helping me. It was so scary.

“How could I have been fine one day and like that the next? Greg was so worried, but he’s been really good. And my mum, too. She could see I was in agony. She was round every day. Obviously I confided a lot in Samantha, too.” The big dilemma for Billie was how to explain it to her children, Nelly, 11, Arthur, eight, and Margot, two.

“Kids are adaptable, but I was so poorly there’s no way they wouldn’t notice,” Billie tells us. “I explained honestly why I wasn’t very well. Nelly understands, she’s on the ball and will ask if it’s Lyme disease that’s making me tired when I’m not feeling good. But equally I don’t want them to ever feel worried about me.”

Billie Faiers in green dress on street in London
Billie also opens about her daughter’s ‘scary’ hospital dash(Image: Alex James)

Billie now wonders if the disease, which also affects Justin Timberlake, Avril Lavigne and Bella Hadid to name a few, was exacerbated by the fact she was stressed out by her children’s separate health issues. In the opening episode of Sister Act, which starts this week, Billie can be seen in tears as she tells Sam, 34, about the terrifying moment Margot was rushed to hospital by ambulance after suffering a seizure.

“That whole situation was really, really scary,” Billie says. “As a parent, you never think it’s going to happen to you — you wouldn’t even want to imagine it. And when it does happen you go into fight or flight mode. I was petrified.

“Margot hasn’t had a seizure since, and that was back in January. So I’m praying and hoping she’s grown out of them. But it was such a worrying time. As any parent who’s experienced their child having a febrile seizure will tell you, you’re on edge a lot of the time. It’s hard to deal with when it happens. It’s made me realise how much stress can affect your body.”

Billie continues, “It was a vicious circle. I think I was holding in a lot of worry and anxiety about the kids and not knowing at the time what was wrong with me. I think it all led to a massive immune system crash.” Arthur had health issues, too. Like his mum, he’d had tonsillitis for months and had been due to have them out — but Billie didn’t think it was a good idea.

Billie Shepherd in yellow dress outside london metal building
The star reveals life is ‘chaotic’ with her brood – but she loves it(Image: Alex James)

“My gut feeling was that it was all bad timing and Arthur really didn’t want to go through that,” she says. “It’s not a nice operation — the aftermath is hard for children. So we spoke to a surgeon who suggested postponing it, especially as I was so ill at the time.

“I eventually got Arthur on natural medicine to try and clear his immune system. He’d had a lot of antibiotics for several bouts of tonsillitis, which isn’t ideal — it’s not great for your gut health — and the natural medicine really helped. Touch wood, he’s not had any problems since.”

While Billie says the holistic approach is working for her family, she is keen to stress that she’s not preaching or encouraging others to try it. “When I got ill I felt like my whole life had changed overnight. I worried about how I was going to get through it,” she says. “Things had been getting worse and worse by the day, but within two weeks of taking the holistic approach I was feeling better. I’m not saying that would be the case for everyone, of course. But it was right for me.”

Billie’s now feeling a lot better, though she stills suffers from fatigue, brain fog and occasional aches and pains. She’s hoping her story will raise awareness as there are an estimated 2,000 to 3,000 new cases of Lyme disease a year in the UK. It plays out in Sister Act, which, although filled with drama, also focuses on plenty of positives, including a cameo from Amanda Holden and, of course, Sam and Billie’s unbreakable bond.

Billie Shepherd in blue dress in front of a tube sign
She says it’s been ‘so natural’ filming with Sam again for their new show Sister Act(Image: Alex James)

“We’ve absolutely loved filming together again,” Billie gushes. “It’s so easy, so natural. We’re so close anyway, so to do this together again has been brilliant. The timing was right for Samantha and I, so as soon as the opportunity came up we thought, ‘Why not?’” Billie admits she and Sam had plenty of fights while growing up — “usually about clothes, or shoes, that kind of stuff” — but now they’re best friends.

“We don’t argue or bicker at all,” she insists. “We just get each other. We know what the other one’s like. Now, when Sam comes over, we have big sleepovers with all the kids. Greg will make himself scarce and leave us to it. Me, Mum and Samantha have the best time when it’s the three of us together. We have other friends and family, but when it’s just us, it’s the best. We love being in each other’s company.”

But while Sam and Billie are enjoying a harmonious sibling relationship, the same currently can’t be said of Nelly and Arthur. “Oh my God, they fight a lot,” Billie says, half laughing, half sighing. “It’s actually very stressful in our household. They chase each other around the kitchen as I’m trying to make dinner. Margot just watches and takes it all in. But that said, there will be a day when I miss all the crazy carnage in the house, now they’re all getting older.”

Billie shepherd in pink dress and lime green wrap walking across road in london
The two sisters don’t argue and just ‘get’ each other, says Billie(Image: Alex James)

Nelly starts secondary school next month and Billie has already seen big changes in her eldest. “I’m getting into the next phase of parenthood,” she says. “I’ve noticed Nelly has really grown up in the last six months. We got her a phone for her birthday, her first one, and she walks around the house FaceTiming her little friends. That’s all they do. It’s hilarious.”

Billie lights up when talking about her children. Given what she’s been through, it’s a wonder she’s able to stay smiling, but, as Sister Act will show, she’s nothing if not resilient. “People have it far worse than me,” she says. “But it’s important, being on reality TV, to be honest and real. We all go through things. Being open about what we’re going through is the only way to be.

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“When you’re in the public eye it can be good to share things. It can be a comfort to other people who are going through similar situations. I’d never heard of Lyme disease before I got it. So now, if I can raise awareness and offer others comfort at the same time, I’ll be happy.”

Sam And Billie: Sister Act premieres on Tuesday 19 August at 9pm on ITV2 and ITVX

William and Harry stopped from inheriting Diana’s childhood home due to strict rule

Althorp Estate in Northamptonshire, where Princess Diana grew up and is buried, will be passed down to another member of the Spencer family instead of her two sons, because of one centuries-old tradition

Despite inheriting much of Princess Diana’s fortune and belongings after her untimely death, her childhood home will instead be passed down to another family member(Image: Getty Images)

When Princess Diana tragically died in 1997, her two young sons, Princes William and Harry, inherited the majority of her £13million fortune, including her possessions, jewellery and money.

The money was both invested and placed in a trust until they reached legal age, with the fortune swelling to more than £20 million. Despite inheriting much of their late mother’s belongings, William and Harry will not inherit Diana’s childhood home due to one strict rule.

The Grade I listed Althorp Estate in Northamptonshire, where Diana grew up and is buried, has been owned by the Spencer family for more than 500 years. The late Princess of Wales spent many holidays at the huge property before permanently moving in at the age of 14. It comes after Kate Middleton halts summer break to release new video with emotional statement.

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WASHINGTON, UNITED STATES - NOVEMBER 11:  Diana, Princess Of Wales, Talking To Her Husband, During A Visit To The British Embassy.  The Princess Is Wearing A Taffeta And Lace Gown With A Scalloped Neckline Designed By Murray Arbeid With Queen Mary's Diamond And Pearl Tiara, A Present From The Queen.  (Photo by Tim Graham Photo Library via Getty Images)
William and Harry inherited the majority of Princess Diana’s £13 million fortune when she died in 1997(Image: Tim Graham, Tim Graham Photo Library via Getty Images)

Despite Harry or William’s potential desire to inherit the property, it will instead go to their cousin, Louis Spencer, Viscount Althorp: the son of Diana’s brother, Charles Spencer and his first wife, Victoria Lockwood.

Louis will inherit the £100 million estate and title, despite the fact that he has older siblings – Lady Kitty, Lady Amelia and Lady Eliza Spencer – due to centuries-old tradition. The Spencers will follow the practice of male primogeniture, by which an aristocrat’s title and estate passes to the eldest son, rather than the eldest child.

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In years past, various politicians have spoken out about male primogeniture and its sexist undertones. During his time as prime minister, David Cameron said: “The idea that a younger son should become monarch instead of an elder daughter, simply because he is a man, just isn’t acceptable any more.”

Boris Johnson echoed the sentiment several years later as he reportedly ordered the issue of male primogeniture be looked into as part of plans to make Parliament more welcoming to women.

An aerial view of Althorp House in Northamptonshire
Althorp Estate in Northamptonshire, where Diana grew up and is buried, has been owned by the Spencer family for more than 500 years(Image: Getty Images)

Despite the demand to abandon the practice, Earl Spencer has previously said that he is not inclined to embrace the “changing attitudes” and said he will keep to tradition.

In 2015 he said: “If I chose Kitty [his eldest child] it would be against all the tradition that goes with Althorp. It’s just the way it is. I get the problems with it as a concept. I also get the strengths of it having worked to date. It is still intact. If you go around the chateaux of the Loire or whatever, they are empty.

“Everything gets split equally through the generations and you end up with a beautiful building with one nice tapestry in it. The whole idea of primogeniture was to keep it together.”

Louis Spencer, Viscount Althorp
The estate will be passed on to Louis Spencer, Viscount Althorp: the eldest son of Diana’s brother Charles(Image: Getty Images)

Kitty also previously discussed being overlooked in the order of inheritance in an interview with Town & Country magazine, as she said: “Primogeniture can be a tricky topic, because as times are changing, attitudes are as well. We’ve grown up understanding that it’s Louis to inherit, and Louis will do an incredible job.”

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In the December 2015 issue of Tatler, Kitty reiterated: “I’m totally pro-gender equality. But I’m quite happy that that’s [going to be] my brother’s responsibility. I just think it’s the correct way. I like that the house stays within the same family, with the same surname. I wouldn’t want it any other way for the Spencers. And I just know my brother is going to do an impeccable job.”

New-look Man City aim to bounce back amid uncertainty

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Manchester City head into the new season with the cloud of financial charges still hovering over them, while there are questions on how quickly their new signings will integrate into the set-up.

Having been dominant with four successive Premier League titles, Pep Guardiola’s all-conquering side endured a bitterly disappointing 2024-25 campaign.

They finished third in the table, failed to win a major trophy and suffered a shock last-16 exit from the Fifa Club World Cup at the hands of Saudi Arabia’s Al-Hilal.

City will be a wounded beast, but there is uncertainty as to how they will respond to last season’s struggles and whether Guardiola can build another title-winning machine.

“We are ready,” said the Spaniard. “We had a short pre-season but a really good one and we are ready to go, to enjoy the good moments and bounce back as soon as possible.

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Charges verdict rumbles on

Last Sunday, the giant electronic advertising board close to Manchester United’s Old Trafford stadium served a reminder it has been “246 days since Man City’s FFP hearing ended”.

That has since ticked on to 252 days and we are no closer to knowing the outcome of City’s 115 charges for allegedly breaching the Premier League’s financial rules, which were first published in February 2023.

The hearing took place in front of an independent commission between September and December of last year, but there has been no indication as to when the findings will be announced.

City have strongly denied the charges but, if found guilty, the commission could sanction a massive points deduction or the unthinkable scenario of relegation.

A decision was widely expected to arrive in the first quarter of 2025 and boss Guardiola provided a timeline of “in one month” back in February, but that has now dragged into another season.

The sheer scale of charges and amount of evidence has led to October now being mooted for the time of the verdict, but there has been no official confirmation of this.

The club has declined to comment, while Premier League chief executive Richard Masters said they have “no influence” on the timing and it would be “wrong” for him to speculate.

In the meantime, it has been business as usual for City.

Star striker Erling Haaland signed a new bumper contract which expires in 2034 and the club extended their kit partnership with Puma for a record £100m per season, making it the largest such deal in the Premier League.

Are City flying under the radar?

It isn’t that often Guardiola gets it wrong in the transfer market but of the four January signings, only Egypt forward Omar Marmoush can be classed as a success after scoring eight goals, including a hat-trick against Newcastle.

Uzbek defender Abdukodir Khusanov barely got a look-in after March, Brazilian centre-back Vitor Reis has now been sent on loan to Girona, while there appear doubts over whether Guardiola trusts midfielder Nico Gonzalez.

City’s summer strategy was to bolster the squad by addressing the problem areas, bringing in Rayan Ait-Nouri from Wolves to fill the hole at left-back, while box-to-box Dutchman Tijjani Reijnders will bring much-needed energy to the midfield.

Club legend Kevin de Bruyne and Jack Grealish left in the summer and it may fall to Frenchman Rayan Cherki to pick up the mantle of attacking creativity, while James Trafford will provide goalkeeping competition to Ederson as the Brazilian enters the final year of his contract.

City desperately missed the presence of Rodri in the middle of the park during an injury-ravaged season for the club and the Spaniard is unlikely to be fully fit until September after a setback.

The dressing room has lost serial winners in De Bruyne, Grealish and former captain Kyle Walker so, while Guardiola will be hoping the new boys quickly grasp his vision and settle in immediately, are City flying under the radar?

Aside from the acquisition of Trafford from Burnley, City did the bulk of their transfer business in June before the Club World Cup, while signings such as Florian Wirtz for champions Liverpool and Viktor Gyokeres at Arsenal caught the headlines.

Club sources have pointed to new captain Bernardo Silva having the experience to galvanise a side which underperformed to their previous high standards last term, when he leads them out against Wolves on Saturday (kick-off 17:30 BST).

Guardiola to relight fire – or is the end near?

Pep GuardiolaGetty Images

Last season will have been a shock to Guardiola, finishing outside of the top two for only the second time in 15 seasons as manager at City, Barcelona and Bayern Munich.

Starting a 10th season with City, the 54-year-old is currently the Premier League’s longest-serving boss and has said he will take a break from management once he leaves.

Like the great Sir Alex Ferguson did over at neighbours Manchester United, Guardiola will need to show he still has the desire to re-energise himself and his team in an attempt to overthrow Arne Slot’s Liverpool and return to the summit again.

Not only has the playing squad been refreshed, but the coaching staff too. Jurgen Klopp’s former Liverpool assistant Pep Lijnders has joined in a similar role, and set-piece coach James French has also arrived from the Reds, while Kolo Toure was promoted from the youth set-up.

But former City and Liverpool midfielder Dietmar Hamann has cast doubt over whether Guardiola has the ability to go again, telling BBC Radio 5 Live: “When a season starts, you’ve got to light a fire in a team, with the fans, and make people believe. And I’m not sure he’s got that fire any more.

“I’m not sure they’re going to win another big title under Guardiola. I’d be surprised, to be honest.”

Spanish football expert Guillem Balague added: “The fire that we see now – what we see in his eyes, in the jokes with his players and how he returned refreshed from the summer – can that continue until the end of the season?

“He has a two-year contract until 2027 and 100% by the end of the two years he will not continue with club football. But nobody can say that may not happen earlier, that this could be his last season.

“Is he excited because it is his last season or is it because he really feels he has a team in his hands which he can mould and create a new Manchester City, a third version?

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‘Charisma seen from space’ – Britain’s Davis stuns Rabadanov

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Britain’s Alfie Davis stunned defending champion Gadzhi Rabadanov to win the PFL lightweight tournament by unanimous decision in Charlotte, North Carolina.

London’s Davis landed the more damaging strikes to edge a close contest with all three judges scoring it 48-47 in the 33-year-old’s favour.

Davis was overcome with emotion as the result was read out as he won $500,000 (£369,000) – a prize he described as “life-changing”.

He becomes the third Briton to win an annual PFL tournament after featherweight Brendan Loughnane in 2022 and women’s flyweight Dakota Ditcheva last year.

“I don’t know what to say, I’ve worked so hard for this,” said Davis.

“To be a champion like Gadzhi, I respect him and have watched him for so many years – he and his team are amazing. To beat someone like that is a dream come true.”

Davis reached the final after enjoying the best spell of his 11-year career with wins over Clay Collard and Brent Primus.

In Russia’s 32-year-old Rabadanov, however, he was facing last year’s champion and a fighter on a 12-fight win streak.

Davis said he had suffered from a lack of confidence in the past, but has put that behind him with a string of impressive displays.

Following a tentative first round, Rabadanov took control, earning the first takedown of the fight and controlling the action on the ground.

Davis, who had been on the back foot, started to open up in the third by stifling Rabadanov’s pressure with a number of counter strikes.

As the crowd rallied, chanting “Alfie, Alfie”, Davis landed an eye-catching spinning elbow, before spending the fourth round on his back following another takedown by Rabadanov.

Sensing the fifth could decide the fight, Davis’ team said “win this round, change your life” before the final five minutes, and he delivered by landing the more damaging strikes.

Nurmagomedov defends his PFL lightweight belt, which was formerly the Bellator title, in a rematch against Hughes in Dubai on 3 October.

In the women’s flyweight final, Liz Carmouche knocked out fellow American Jena Bishop before calling for a fight with Ditcheva.

Ditcheva, who has won the first 15 fights of her career, beat Sumiko Inaba in July but is currently recovering from surgery after injuring her hand during the bout.

Alfie Davis in action against Gadzhi RabadanovGetty Images
Alfie Davis celebrates beating Gadzhi RabadanovGetty Images

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Family, memories and childhood – getting to know Wayne Rooney

The Football Interview is a new series in which the biggest names in sport and entertainment join host Kelly Somers for bold and in-depth conversations about the nation’s favourite sport. We’ll explore mindset and motivation, and talk about defining moments, career highs and personal reflections. The Football Interview brings you the person behind the player.

Wayne Rooney will always be regarded as one of England’s best strikers.

Rooney scored 53 goals in 120 appearances for his country and won the Premier League five times with Manchester United, as well as lifting the Champions League, Europa League, FA Cup and League Cup during a glittering career.

He will be one of the pundits on the BBC’s Match of the Day throughout the season, giving his views on all the latest Premier League action.

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WR: Yes, I always remember when I was about 14 – I was doing things you shouldn’t be doing. Colin Harvey was the under-19s manager at the time. He saw me crossing the road with a bag of cider, which of course was wrong. He pulled me in and said: ‘If you keep doing this, you are going to throw everything – your talent, your ability – away. You need to focus yourself because you have the ability to go on and play for not just Everton – but England.’

Wayne Rooney and Kelly Somers

WR: I couldn’t say one. My mum and dad equally. I see it now when I’m taking my kids to football. My mum didn’t drive and my dad worked, so I used to have to take three buses with my mum at times.

Both my mum and dad had huge roles to play and, as a kid, you probably don’t appreciate it. You take it for granted – the stress, the work they put in. I have two brothers and they had to do it for them as well. It’s only when you have kids you see it and understand the sacrifices they had to make.

Wayne RooneyGetty Images

WR: If I had to choose one, I’d say the Arsenal FA Cup final in 2005. The performance, how we played against a very good Arsenal team… and then we lost on penalties. I would say that is the one I would change, because it was one we probably deserved to win.

WR: With management, it was something I always wanted to go into. I saw it as a challenge. I always want in life to be challenged and take things head on, but also understood that there’s a chance it might go wrong as well. But I don’t mind taking that risk and challenge.

Some former players might wait for the perfect opportunity. The Derby County one… I was playing there and Phillip Cocu got sacked. We went into administration. It was a really tough start to management but I felt we did a really good job.

At DC United, when we went there, I felt we did a good job even though it doesn’t get portrayed that way. They had finished bottom the three seasons before we went there and we got them to within a point of the play-offs.

The Birmingham one, everything was wrong – the timing of it, the fans didn’t really give me an opportunity, we lost games. It felt right at the time but looking back at it, it wasn’t.

Wayne RooneyGetty Images

WR: I think I’m quite fair and honest really – that is the only way to be. I say this as a player, a manager, and now as a pundit – it’s the same values. The fans aren’t stupid. If you expect me to sit there and try and sugar-coat things which fans can see, I don’t think I should be doing it.

There are some pundits out there who try and go over the top as well. All I can do is try and be fair with what I’m seeing and give my honest opinion. I am sure some players or managers might get annoyed with that but you have to be honest. Wayne Rooney the player probably wouldn’t like Wayne Rooney the pundit, and I get that.

We used to think ‘why would pundits say that?’ but when you finish playing you realise why pundits say things. I’ve been criticised by many pundits as a player and I was never one to phone them up and complain – it actually drove me a bit more to think, ‘next time you are speaking, you are saying good things’.

Wayne and Coleen RooneyGetty Images

WR: I always try to have some time just to sit there and if watching a TV series I just chill with a glass of wine and just switch off from everything.

WR: Yes, he’s doing really well. I was at my cousin’s wedding at the weekend. They were doing the speeches and I had my phone and was watching Kai playing in Croatia. I jumped up – he scored in the last minute – but he was offside!

WR: He plays as a striker, plays off the right. He’s strong, not the tallest, but he will be taller than me.

He understands the game fantastically and he thinks about it. He comes home, cooks for himself, he speaks fluent Spanish, so he is doing everything he can to try to live his dream.

WR: It was The Shawshank Redemption but I think over the last few years I’m going to have to say The Wolf of Wall Street.

WR: It’s no secret that I didn’t even take GCSEs but I think people assume because of that that I’m not educated, which is really wrong.

I made a conscious effort when I was at Everton and Manchester United to educate myself in a lot of different things, such as black history and religion. The reason I did that was because I wanted to hold conversations with my team-mates who are from different backgrounds.

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‘People think I’m uneducated’ – getting to know Wayne Rooney

The Football Interview is a new series in which the biggest names in sport and entertainment join host Kelly Somers for bold and in-depth conversations about the nation’s favourite sport. We’ll explore mindset and motivation, and talk about defining moments, career highs and personal reflections. The Football Interview brings you the person behind the player.

Wayne Rooney will always be regarded as one of England’s best strikers.

Rooney scored 53 goals in 120 appearances for his country and won the Premier League five times with Manchester United, as well as lifting the Champions League, Europa League, FA Cup and League Cup during a glittering career.

He will be one of the pundits on the BBC’s Match of the Day throughout the season, giving his views on all the latest Premier League action.

To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser.

WR: Yes, I always remember when I was about 14 – I was doing things you shouldn’t be doing. Colin Harvey was the under-19s manager at the time. He saw me crossing the road with a bag of cider, which of course was wrong. He pulled me in and said: ‘If you keep doing this, you are going to throw everything – your talent, your ability – away. You need to focus yourself because you have the ability to go on and play for not just Everton – but England.’

Wayne Rooney and Kelly Somers

WR: I couldn’t say one. My mum and dad equally. I see it now when I’m taking my kids to football. My mum didn’t drive and my dad worked, so I used to have to take three buses with my mum at times.

Both my mum and dad had huge roles to play and, as a kid, you probably don’t appreciate it. You take it for granted – the stress, the work they put in. I have two brothers and they had to do it for them as well. It’s only when you have kids you see it and understand the sacrifices they had to make.

Wayne RooneyGetty Images

WR: If I had to choose one, I’d say the Arsenal FA Cup final in 2005. The performance, how we played against a very good Arsenal team… and then we lost on penalties. I would say that is the one I would change, because it was one we probably deserved to win.

WR: With management, it was something I always wanted to go into. I saw it as a challenge. I always want in life to be challenged and take things head on, but also understood that there’s a chance it might go wrong as well. But I don’t mind taking that risk and challenge.

Some former players might wait for the perfect opportunity. The Derby County one… I was playing there and Phillip Cocu got sacked. We went into administration. It was a really tough start to management but I felt we did a really good job.

At DC United, when we went there, I felt we did a good job even though it doesn’t get portrayed that way. They had finished bottom the three seasons before we went there and we got them to within a point of the play-offs.

The Birmingham one, everything was wrong – the timing of it, the fans didn’t really give me an opportunity, we lost games. It felt right at the time but looking back at it, it wasn’t.

Wayne RooneyGetty Images

WR: I think I’m quite fair and honest really – that is the only way to be. I say this as a player, a manager, and now as a pundit – it’s the same values. The fans aren’t stupid. If you expect me to sit there and try and sugar-coat things which fans can see, I don’t think I should be doing it.

There are some pundits out there who try and go over the top as well. All I can do is try and be fair with what I’m seeing and give my honest opinion. I am sure some players or managers might get annoyed with that but you have to be honest. Wayne Rooney the player probably wouldn’t like Wayne Rooney the pundit, and I get that.

We used to think ‘why would pundits say that?’ but when you finish playing you realise why pundits say things. I’ve been criticised by many pundits as a player and I was never one to phone them up and complain – it actually drove me a bit more to think, ‘next time you are speaking, you are saying good things’.

Wayne and Coleen RooneyGetty Images

WR: I always try to have some time just to sit there and if watching a TV series I just chill with a glass of wine and just switch off from everything.

WR: Yes, he’s doing really well. I was at my cousin’s wedding at the weekend. They were doing the speeches and I had my phone and was watching Kai playing in Croatia. I jumped up – he scored in the last minute – but he was offside!

WR: He plays as a striker, plays off the right. He’s strong, not the tallest, but he will be taller than me.

He understands the game fantastically and he thinks about it. He comes home, cooks for himself, he speaks fluent Spanish, so he is doing everything he can to try to live his dream.

WR: It was The Shawshank Redemption but I think over the last few years I’m going to have to say The Wolf of Wall Street.

WR: It’s no secret that I didn’t even take GCSEs but I think people assume because of that that I’m not educated, which is really wrong.

I made a conscious effort when I was at Everton and Manchester United to educate myself in a lot of different things, such as black history and religion. The reason I did that was because I wanted to hold conversations with my team-mates who are from different backgrounds.

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  • Manchester United
  • Everton
  • Football
  • England Men’s Football Team