The happy end of the season Wrexham FCthe Welsh club owned by the actor ryan reynolds together with another well-known character in the artistic environment of the United States, Rob McElhenney. They acquired him for $2.5m in November 2020 and in their second full year in charge of the institution they became champions of the National League, the fifth tier of British football.
Reynolds and McElhenney celebrated the 3-1 win against Boreham Wood from its box at the Hippodrome, a stadium built in 1807, once again packed to the delight of a small town that returns to enjoy the glories of yesteryear. At the end of the game there was a pitch invasion and a party which lasted until after midnight.
The actors bought the club in November 2020 in exchange for $2.5 million and after convincing Wrexham’s partners with their project. They took over in February 2021 and only in their second full season were they able to achieve their first goal, to be champions and promote: now they will be looking to do it again next year.
When the promotion was over, the actors hugged and let off steam for a few minutes, screaming with the Welsh fans but also shed a few tears. There was a lot of pressure they had: their idea could end in a resounding failure not only for their economy but for the life of a city that survives on football and was about to disappear.
This whole adventure is told Welcome to Wrexhamthe docuseries that can be seen through the Star+ streaming service, whose first season had 18 episodes and the second has no release date yet, but a huge spoiler for the finale: the team was champion.
The story of Wrexham and Ryan Reynolds
Recommended by the former English footballer David Beckhamthe Canadian Reynolds, star protagonist of the films of the saga dead Pooland American McElhenney, creator of the sitcom It’s always sunny in Philadelphiathey started the process of buying the club in November 2020, paid £2m ($2.5m) and took the helm in February 2021.
More than 15 decades of history preceded the actors’ arrival. In a town located in north-east Wales, 40 kilometers south of Liverpool, and whose productive engines were the brewing, tanning and coal industries, the institution was founded in October 1864 by a group of members of the Wrexham Cricket Club. That very distant genesis keeps it as the third oldest professional club on the planet, surpassed only by Notts County (1862) and Stoke City (1863).
The foundation came just a year after the Football Association (FA) was created and the first rules of the game were written, and 12 years before the Football Association of Wales (FAW) was born. That’s why it’s one of the Welsh clubs playing in the English league system.
Even its stadium, the Racecourse (with a capacity of 10,500 spectators), is part of the history books. Built in 1807 and initially used for cricket matches and horse racing, it hosted the first match that the Welsh national team played in its territory: on 5 March 1877 they fell 2-0 to Scotland in a friendly duel. This makes it the oldest stadium on the planet among those that have hosted at least one match of international teams.
While Wrexham’s history is long, it is not a successful one. His most outstanding period was during the 1970s and early 1980s. In the 1977/78 season he was champion of the third division, which allowed him to be promoted to the second division for the only time, where he remained for four years. Additionally, they reached the quarter-finals of the FA Cup in 1974 and 1978, and the same instance of the European Cup Winners’ Cup (which they entered as Welsh Cup winners) in the 1975/76 season.
At the same time as the closure of the coal mines and the destruction of the industrial fabric of the city during the Thatcherite storm, the club began to go down a slope that led it to the fifth division of English football and a deep economic crisis that put it on the verge of bankruptcy. Faced with the defection of private investors, a group of supporters in September 2011 raised the £100,000 needed to prevent his disappearance and took control of the institution.
They were approved club members overwhelmingly (over 98% approved) for sale to Reynolds and McElhenney in February 2021. “Our aim is to grow the team, bring them back to the English Football League with bigger crowds in an upgraded stadium whilst also making a positive difference to the Wrexham community”the proposed actors in a statement published a few hours after the completion of the operation.
The first steps have not been very fruitful in financial terms: in March 2022, after a year under new management, the club announced that it had recorded losses of almost £3m. Although turnover increased during this period (from 1.5 million to 5.9 million), the loss was mainly driven by the increase in investments in professional football (from 1.3 million to 4 million).
This higher investment correlated with team performance. In the 2020/21 season, during which Reynolds and McElhenney took over the institution, the Red dragons finished eighth in the National League, the fifth tier of English football, in which professional clubs, such as Wrexham, coexist with other semi-professional clubs, such as Maidenhead United. In the following campaign, they finished second, behind Stockport Countyand fell in the semi-finals of the playoffs for the second promotion.
This season, before playing the 45 date that gave him promotion, the team led by Phil Parkinson (He led Hull City, Charlton & Bolton in the Championship) He had a devastating run – won 33 of 44 games played (draw 8 and lost just 3), added 107 points and led his escort, Notts County, of 4. With the victory against Boreham Wood, who became champions, he will return to League Two after 15 years and will become the fourth Welsh club to participate in any of the English Football League categories: the others are Cardiff City, Swansea City (both in the Championship) and Newport County (in League Two).
To complete a very successful year, Wrexham had a great FA Cup, advancing to the fourth round: they beat Oldham Athletic, Farnborough and Coventry City, and were eliminated by Sheffield United (they are just a step away from promotion to the Premier League) after drawing 3-3 in the first game and falling 3-1 in the replay. And last Sunday her women’s team earned promotion to the top flight of Welsh football.
THE Red dragons they returned to League Two, but their ambitions didn’t end there. “The plan is, and always has been, the Premier League. I just can’t give it a date. But if it is theoretically possible to move from the fifth division to the Premier League, why not give it a try?” Ryan Reynolds raved about January. This Saturday he climbed the first of four steps that will take his club to the top of English football.
Source: Clarin
Jason Root is the go-to source for sports coverage at News Rebeat. With a passion for athletics and an in-depth knowledge of the latest sports trends, Jason provides comprehensive and engaging analysis of the world of sports.