Coleen Rooney stepped out in low-key gym gear after an early morning workout on Tuesday.
The WAG, 37, broke into a run as she headed to her car after working up a sweat at her local gym in Cheshire.
The mother-of-four wrapped up in the freezing winter weather, wearing a £42 New Balance Legends hoodie underneath a black padded gilet.
Coleen completed the look with simple black workout leggings and black trainers.
The star looked focused as she prepared to head home just days after husband Wayne, 38, was sacked as Birmingham City manager after a string of poor performances.
Coleen Rooney stepped out in low-key gym gear after an early morning workout on Tuesday
The WAG, 37, broke into a run as she headed to her car after working up a sweat at her local gym in Cheshire
The former England forward was fired last week after only 13 weeks in charge, following a terrible run of nine defeats in 15 games.
On Friday, Coleen paid tribute to her beloved sister Rosie on the 11th anniversary of her death.
She told her late sibling she ‘loved her to the moon and back’ as she marked 11 years since Rosie passed away in 2013 aged 14 on Instagram.
Rosie died after her lifelong battle with Rett syndrome, a rare brain disorder that causes severe disabilities.
Coleen shared a series of sweet photos of her teenage sister with her eldest son Kai, 14, who was born in 2009, and one of Rosie looking at a laptop.
She captioned the post: ’11 years without you. We love and miss you always Rosie Mc.’
Coleen’s family, the McLoughlins, took Rosie in as a foster child when she was two and while they previously just provided respite care, Coleen noted that ‘Rosie was different’ in her Wagatha Christie Disney+ documentary.
She explained: ‘When Rosie came along she was a massive part of our lives. She was the sister that I never thought I was going to have.’
The mother-of-four wrapped up in the freezing winter weather, wearing a £42 New Balance Legends hoodie underneath a black padded gilet
Coleen completed the look with simple black workout leggings and black trainers
Speaking to her mother Colette and her father Tony, she continued: ‘I used to do her hair and used to love picking clothes with me mum for her. She brought that little bit extra to the house. We fell in love with her.’
Yet the family soon realised that Rosie was struggling with her development, and after a series of hospital tests she was diagnosed with Rett syndrome.
Coleen explained: ‘Rosie, she struggled. She couldn’t walk and talk and would be in pain and sick but she still put a smile on her face.
‘Sometimes she used to force a laugh out. I think it was just to make my mum and dad happy.
‘Gradually her brain wasn’t functioning so she couldn’t eat anymore, couldn’t talk, move.’
Rosie needed 24-hour care and after suffering from ‘lots of complications’ and being admitted to intensive care, Colette revealed the family decided to bring her home to spend her final days surrounded by her loved ones.
‘We had a sleepover, one last sleepover, all of us together,’ she explained. ‘And then we had a big party to celebrate her life.’
Breaking down in tears, Coleen said: ‘To lose a child is the worst thing that could ever happen to anyone but when you look back now she gave us so many good years of happiness and love.’
Coleen’s husband Wayne was sacked from his role as Birmingham City manager last week after winning just two of his 15 matches in charge, prompting the Blues to slip from sixth to 20th in the Championship standings.
Coleen wore her hair in a low ponytail while her fringe blew in the wind
In a statement, Wayne said he was planning on spending some time with Coleen and the couple’s four sons; Kai, 13, Klay, 10, Kit, seven, and Cass, five.
He said: ‘Football is a results business – and I recognise they have not been at the level I wanted them to be. However, time is the most precious commodity a manager requires and I do not believe 13 weeks was sufficient to oversee the changes that were needed.
‘Personally, it will take me some time to get over this setback. I have been involved in professional football, as either a player or manager, since I was 16.
‘Now, I plan to take some time with my family as I prepare for the next opportunity in my journey as a manager.’