Current:Home > StocksWelsh soccer club Wrexham, owned by Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney, promoted after winning title -FundSphere
Welsh soccer club Wrexham, owned by Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney, promoted after winning title
View
Date:2025-04-25 19:45:20
Ryan Reynolds held his head in his hands. Rob McElhenney leaned forward, took a deep breath and was soon wiping tears from his eyes.
Below the Hollywood actors, thousands of Wrexham fans flooded onto the field at the Racecourse Ground, setting off red flares and waving Wales flags.
A previously down-on-its-luck Welsh soccer club thrust into the global spotlight because of its A-list owners was celebrating on Saturday after Wrexham secured promotion to the fourth tier of the English game.
Reynolds and McElhenney, along with actor friend Paul Rudd, were among a crowd of more than 10,000 at the Racecourse in north Wales to see Wrexham clinch the National League title with a 3-1 win over Boreham Wood.
Reynolds and McElhenney embraced in the directors' box when the fulltime whistle sounded and, before long, were holding up a flag with the words: "Wrexham champions 2022-23."
They seemingly have become soccer fanatics since completing their out-of-nowhere purchase of the club for $2.5 million in 2021. An offshoot of the takeover was the making of a fly-on-the-wall documentary — entitled "Welcome to Wrexham" — that has charted the journey of a team run by a couple of actors learning the ropes of sports club ownership.
The second season of the show will have a happy ending, with Wrexham heading back into the English Football League — the three divisions below the Premier League — for the first time in 15 years.
"One thing that is running through my head over and over again," Reynolds said, looking around at Wrexham's jubilant players and fans, "is that people said at the beginning, 'Why Wrexham, why Wrexham?' This is exactly why Wrexham."
Wrexham is four points clear of second-placed Notts County with one round of games left, so is guaranteed the sole automatic promotion spot to League Two. After being greeted by Reynolds and McElhenney, Wrexham's players lifted the league trophy in the middle of the field to the sound of "We are the Champions."
Reynolds is best known for starring in the "Deadpool" movies, while McElhenney is the creator of TV show "It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia." One of their stated aims when combining to buy Wrexham from its success-starved fans was to lead the 158-year-old team — the world's third oldest professional club — to the Premier League and the journey is well underway.
It is Wrexham's first league title at any level since the old Division Three — then the third tier in the English game — in 1977, and the team has done it in style, collecting a record 110 points so far and winning 34 of its 45 games.
With the title in the bag, Wrexham fans lapped up the final few minutes of a match that ended more than a decade of hurt. The club fell on such hard times since the turn of the century that its supporters' trust twice had to save the team from going out of business.
"We can feel what it means to the town," McElhenney said on the field. "This is a moment of catharsis for them and celebration. For us to be welcomed into the community, and to be welcomed into this experience, has been the honor of my life."
Since their unlikely takeover, Reynolds and McElhenney have used their large Twitter followings to promote the club and brought in sponsors such as TikTok, Aviation Gin and Expedia, global brands that typically have no place at this level of the game.
The actors are also living up to the promises they made when taking over, like making improvements to the stadium and investing heavily in the women's team. They brought in board members and advisers with experience of top-level soccer and who have made good, sensible decisions.
The industrial town of about 65,000 people, located near the northwest English border and close to the soccer hotbeds of Liverpool and Manchester, has been abuzz with excitement for the past two years.
Last season, Wrexham lost in the playoffs to miss out on promotion but made no mistake a year later to get out of the non-leagues, where some teams are semi-professional.
- In:
- Ryan Reynolds
- United Kingdom
- Soccer
veryGood! (7)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Up First briefing: A Labor Day look at union fights, wins and close calls
- Robots are pouring drinks in Vegas. As AI grows, the city's workers brace for change
- Jimmy Buffett died after a four-year fight with a rare form of skin cancer, his website says
- Bodycam footage shows high
- COVID hospitalizations on the rise as U.S. enters Labor Day weekend
- Whatever happened to this cartoonist's grandmother in Wuhan? She's 16 going on 83!
- Aerosmith singer and Maui homeowner Steven Tyler urges tourists to return to the island
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- South Korea’s Yoon to call for strong international response to North’s nukes at ASEAN, G20 summits
Ranking
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- In the pivotal South Carolina primary, Republican candidates search for a path against Donald Trump
- 5 people have pleaded not guilty to Alabama riverfront brawl charges
- St. Jude's arm is going on tour: Catholic church announces relic's first-ever tour of US
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- Steve Harwell, the former lead singer of Smash Mouth, has died at 56
- The US government is eager to restore powers to keep dangerous chemicals out of extremists’ hands
- Gasoline tanker overturns, burns on Interstate 84 in Connecticut
Recommendation
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
Robots are pouring drinks in Vegas. As AI grows, the city's workers brace for change
Charting all the games in 2023: NFL schedule spreads to record 350 hours of TV
'Don't forget about us': Maui victims struggle one month after deadly fires
South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
Minnesota prison on lockdown after about 100 inmates refused to return to cells amid heat wave
New FBI-validated Lahaina wildfire missing list has 385 names
How heat can take a deadly toll on humans