Vinnie Jones has sold the last property he owned with his late wife Tanya.
The 58-year-old actress was married to Tanya for 25 years before she died of complications from cancer in 2019 at the age of just 53.
A spokesman for Vinny confirmed to Web that he has sold the home he and Tanya shared in Watford.
Vinnie previously shared that he sold the house he and Tanya lived in in LA because he couldn’t handle the idea of living there without her.
This comes after it was announced that Vinnie will star in a brand new documentary series for Discovery+, dubbed the “next Clarkson’s Farm.”
On the move: Vinnie Jones has sold the last property he owned with his late wife Tanya
The ex-footballer is working with Lime Pictures – makers of Hollyoaks and Geordie Shore – on a documentary series about his new life on a sprawling 147-acre farm in Petworth, West Sussex.
After Tanya’s sad death, he left his comfort zone and starred in “Celebrity” in 2019
The series will also build on his passion for the British countryside.
Vinnie said: “Most people know me as a professional footballer or a Hollywood hardman, but what they probably don’t know is that all of that hard work was to support my true passion: my home in the great British countryside.”
“I grew up in the country and can’t wait to show people the joy and beauty of our countryside and the rewards of old-fashioned hard work. ‘Bring it on.’
As part of the transformation, Mr Jones and his team will seek to establish new conservation methods, restore habitats and attract wildlife.
It’s a similar premise to Clarkson’s Farm, the Amazon series in which Grand Tour and former Top Gear presenter Jeremy Clarkson attempt to turn his “Diddly Squat Farm” into a sustainable and profitable business.
After Tanya’s death, Vinnie told how he threw himself into work and sought help from a psychologist to avoid feeling like he was “drowning” in his own despair.
Transformation: It comes after it was announced that Vinnie will star in a brand new documentary series for Discovery+, dubbed the ‘next Clarkson’s Farm’.
‘[Grief] is a ghost, it’s a blanket. It surrounds you and pulls you down. You don’t know when it will happen and why it will happen. “It just happens,” he told Stuff.
“You have to try to get your head above water and breathe in for as long as you can because you know you’re going to be pulled underwater again.”
“You have to give the people what they want or you’ll fucking drown.” It’s fucking exhausting [Sometimes I want to] “Build a 50-foot wall around it to keep everyone out and me in… My spirit may be broken inside, but I think I have enough knowledge and enough experience to cope.”