MAN CITY singer Ruben Dias is said to have ended his nearly three-year romance with his attractive pop diva girlfriend April Ivy.
The news broke after the Portuguese international appeared to have deleted all traces of the lovely brunette from his social media accounts.
According to the Portuguese celebrity magazine FLASH!, they split up due to lifestyle differences, with Ruben being “more discreet” than April.
After their summer vacation in Greece, the attractive singer and her footballer boyfriend returned to the UK. According to monthly celeb magazine FLASH!, the pair “separated” due to lifestyle differences, with £64 million Ruben being “more discreet” than “exuberant” April.
There has been no official word from the Portuguese couple, who began dating at the close of 2018 and made their relationship public on New Year’s Day 2019.
April Ivy, actual name Mariana Goncalves, has continued to share images of herself and Ruben on Instagram, including one taken in Sardinia earlier this summer on the occasion of her 22nd birthday.
Before Dias signed for Man City from Benfica in September 2020, the attractive WAG moved to London ahead of the shutdown to establish her reputation in the music business.
The beauty had already created a name for herself in her hometown after a song she wrote and performed called ‘Be Ok’ topped the national radio airplay chart, as well as the national Spotify, YouTube, and iTunes charts.
‘Separating them’
She was nominated for Best Newcomer at the 2017 Portugal Golden Globes. April, who started playing the guitar at the age of nine, frequently posted videos of her partner on social media.
Dias collaborated with his missus last spring, accompanying her on guitar in a video she posted on Instagram.
Soon after, the 24-year-old soccer student revealed April chastised him for his football addiction, telling Uefa’s website: “Many times my girlfriend turns to me and says, ‘Oh, you’re going to see another game?!'”
“And I always joke with you, ‘Let me read a little more of my book.'” There is always a fresh opportunity to learn, a new aspect of the game to examine, such as a goal that a team suffers, how the team failed to avoid it, or how it prevented it from happening.
“From a young age, encouraged by my father, I became accustomed to learning something from everything I saw, and not just viewing the game as a show but as a study material.”
“I didn’t pick up skills from just one, two, or three players. I learned from 10, 20, or 30 people. “Everything I saw taught me something.”