Wayne Bridge threatens to 'move out' if wife Frankie falls pregnant again
The ex-England defender, who already has three children, teased the former Saturdays singer after she revealed she would love to have another baby one day
Wayne Bridge joked that he would pack his bags if broody wife Frankie were to fall pregnant again.
The couple share son Carter, 5, and seven-year-old Parker.
Former Chelsea star Wayne also has Jaydon, 14, from his previous relationship with his ex girlfriend Vanessa Perroncel.
Frankie admits she would love to have another kid someday.
But it appears Wayne, 40, is hatching his escape plan just in case she has some news to share.
She told The Sun: "Wayne is having none of it!
"He was like, 'If we have another one I will either move out or go and get a job I don't care what it is, I will just get a job.' So I was like, 'That's a no then?'"
She added: "I change my mind on a daily basis. I really enjoy the baby stage - 18 months is my favourite stage because of my personality.
"It is when they are starting to transform into little humans. Everyone hates it but I love it."
The two children they do share have no idea mummy and daddy are famous.
Frankie, 31, told The Mirror in August all about lockdown life - and she revealed the boys aren't in the least big interested when their parents appear on TV.
She said: “I’ve asked them, ‘What do Mummy and Daddy do?’ and they just say, ‘Work’. They don’t really have a clue and I think that’s quite nice.
“They know we’re on telly sometimes, but they don’t sit and watch us. I’ll say, ‘Daddy’s on TV today’, and they’ll say, ‘Oh, OK’, and then it’s back to their iPads.”
Before the pandemic forced her to ease up, Frankie took part in a 100-mile challenge in the Namib desert in Namibia for Sport Relief in February, which was also the month her book, Open, about her struggles with depression, was published.
And now she has co-written The Munchy Trunks, the world’s first “eat along book”, with baby food brand Ella’s Kitchen, encouraging little ones to explore a variety of tasty finger foods through fun, sensory play at mealtimes.
Frankie says: “As a mum of two boys, I’ve been through the weaning journey myself, watching them try new foods for the first time and getting used to different tastes and textures.
“I hope the characters in the book will help little ones practise different grips and grabs to pick things up and eat for themselves. My first, Parker, was a bad eater, but Carter was a good eater.
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