New York Post

DRAMA HAS TONGUES WAG-ING

- By SARA NATHAN

Brits live for two things: football (soccer, stateside) and tea — and there’s plenty of hot tea being spilled in the $3.7-million “Wagatha Christie” trial that kicked off Wednesday across the pond. The sensationa­l case, of which every tasty morsel has been obsessed over in the UK, centers around two of the world’s most famous WAGs — meaning the glamorous wives and girlfriend­s of superstar athletes — Coleen Rooney and Rebekah Vardy. The sexy soccer spouses are embroiled in a vicious libel suit. Here’s who’s facing off: Rooney, 36, who is married to Wayne Rooney, former Manchester United forward turned Derby Football Club manager; and Vardy, 40, the wife of Leicester City striker Jamie Vardy. They’re extremely rich and incredibly dramatic. Raging Rooney has accused Vardy, in the most public of ways, of leaking secrets about her to The Sun newspaper, and vengeful Vardy is suing Rooney for libel in response.

The salivating British press has dubbed their catfight “Wagatha Christie” because, in true Miss Marple fashion, Rooney dramatical­ly “solved” her own mystery and announced the shocking discovery in a parlor-scenelike Twitter post.

Since then, it’s been knives out between the women.

This trial has everything: gossip about a D-list celebrity’s manhood, tears in open court, shoulder pads, looks by Chanel and Prada — and a whole heap of bronzer and diamonds bigger than your knuckles. These two make Krystal and Alexis’ “Dynasty” swimming pool brawls look like a relaxing bubble bath.

‘Sting operation’

The women’s battle began with an alleged months-long betrayal — on Instagram.

In 2017, private stories about Rooney’s life started being published by The Sun — scoops that only her close friends online would know about. Fed up with the leaks, in 2019 the rich soccer wife began what she called a “sting operation.”

Over five months, Rooney blocked all her followers on Instagram from viewing her stories, except for one account — Vardy’s.

Crafty Rooney said that she then posted “a series of false stories to see if they made their way into the newspaper.” And, lo and behold, they did.

Headlines emerged about a rumored appearance on “Strictly Come Dancing” (the British version of “Dancing with the Stars”) and Rooney’s flooded mansion.

In August 2019, another Sun article said she had flown to Mexico for gender selection treatment to make sure her fifth child was a girl.

It was all bunk, planted by Rooney. And she wasn’t done yet.

The big reveal

Speaking from the witness stand this week, Rooney said, “It could have only come from my private Instagram account. The fact The Sun reported all this stuff that had happened and was untrue gave me the anger to put it out to the public that someone was giving out my private informatio­n. I was angry. I was fuming.”

Believing that she’d caught the culprit, Rooney took to Twitter in October 2019 and, like Hercule Poirot, dramatical­ly revealed her findings.

“This has been a burden in my life for a few years now and finally I have got to the bottom of it,” she wrote.

“It’s been tough keeping it to myself and not making any comment at all, especially when the stories have been leaked, however I had to. Now I know for certain which account / individual it’s come from,” she added. “I have saved and screenshot­ted all the original stories which clearly show

just one person has viewed them. “It’s……..Rebekah Vardy’s account.” The Internet exploded at the claim, and “Wagatha Christie” was born.

Their feud spilled over into the legal system in July 2020, when Vardy, a mother-of-five who denies all wrongdoing, filed a libel claim against Rooney, alleging that the accusation had caused “extreme distress, hurt, anxiety and embarrassm­ent.”

In a preliminar­y hearing in November 2020, the judge concluded that Rooney’s Twitter statement blaming “Rebekah Vardy’s account” constitute­d a direct accusation against Vardy.

In an attempt to end the drama, Rooney said that she tried three times to settle the case to prevent an ongoing spectacle. But Vardy didn’t bite.

She said that she feels “bullied and manipulate­d,” and pressed on with the libel action “to clear my name, and not just for me, for my family and my children.”

‘Serial leaker’

English libel law requires Rooney to prove that it was specifical­ly Vardy who leaked the stories or to convince the judge, Justice Karen Steyn, that her revelation was in the public interest.

That could be complicate­d, because Vardy insists other people have had access to her Instagram account over the years. One of those yet unnamed individual­s could have been “Deep Throat,” she insists.

This week, however, we’ve learned that Vardy happens to have a history of

blabbing to the press, and Rooney’s lawyers have tried to portray her as a “serial leaker.”

The loose-lipped WAG admitted that she attempted to make public a story about her husband’s then Leicester teammate Danny Drinkwater being arrested for drunk driving in 2019, but she insisted it was a one-off.

The court heard that Vardy told her manager to use her personal Instagram account to “monitor” Rooney’s account. She denies that allegation.

Vardy was also quizzed about a 2004 interview she had given to the now defunct News of the World newspaper in which she called Australian ’90s pop star Peter Andre’s penis a “chipolata” (a tiny sausage) after the pair had a night of passion in 2001.

She called the below-the-belt interview “one of my biggest regrets.”

‘Who is Davy Jones?’

It has been claimed that Vardy would feed the stories to her agent Caroline Watt, who would then allegedly sell them on to The Sun.

But water was thrown on that accusation in court. Watt’s cellphone — believed to contain damning evidence and messages — reportedly fell into the North Sea.

A lawyer for Rooney, David Sherborne, said in court that Watt had been “filming the coastline” while on a boat trip in Scotland and dropped her phone, leaving her “unable to retrieve it.”

He added that it was a “shame” that messages between journalist­s — who had allegedly been leaked the stories — and Watt were “lying at the bottom of the sea in Davy Jones’ locker.”

Vardy, not the sharpest coral on the reef, made the courtroom howl with her response: “Who is Davy Jones?”

The patient judge explained that the reference was a figure of speech that “just means the bottom of the sea.”

But Rooney’s team isn’t buying the oceanic plunge line.

Her lawyer alleged in written submission­s that Vardy and her defense team had engaged in a “deliberate and calculated” effort to dispose of evidence.

Vardy’s lawyers, however, said that’s “completely baseless . . . there is no such campaign of deletion . . . the reason there is no direct evidence against

Mrs. Vardy is because she didn’t do it.”

Watt, the agent who dropped the phone, has been deemed not healthy enough to give evidence herself.

Meanwhile, Vardy has broken down in tears four times on the stand.

She began sobbing when asked about her state of mind when she had her fourth baby, barely two months after Rooney’s post accused her of leaking the stories — and said she feared she would lose the child.

The verdict will come shortly. Until then, the cleats will be on.

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 ?? ?? GAME ON: Coleen Rooney (far left) staged a climactic effort to find out who was leaking fake stories about her to the British press — and called Rebekah Vardy (right) the culprit on Twitter. Vardy, claiming she’d been “bullied,” took her to court. Now the two WAGs — their husbands are soccer stars Jamie Vardy ( middle left) and Wayne Rooney (near left) — are in the middle of a wild libel trial involving tears on the stand, cellphones convenient­ly dropped into the sea and Vardy’s critiques of a minor celebrity’s manhood.
GAME ON: Coleen Rooney (far left) staged a climactic effort to find out who was leaking fake stories about her to the British press — and called Rebekah Vardy (right) the culprit on Twitter. Vardy, claiming she’d been “bullied,” took her to court. Now the two WAGs — their husbands are soccer stars Jamie Vardy ( middle left) and Wayne Rooney (near left) — are in the middle of a wild libel trial involving tears on the stand, cellphones convenient­ly dropped into the sea and Vardy’s critiques of a minor celebrity’s manhood.

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