Disney ryan reynolds wrexham1/11/2024 ![]() Tourists from all over the world have descended on Wrexham since the takeover and the club has a growing swell of A-list fans. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian I Mewn i'r Gôl, BBC Radio Cymru, Saturday 21 August, 13:30 BST and later on demand.John Evans, 76, used to cycle 23 miles to watch Wrexham as a teenager. Wrexham begin their new campaign on Saturday, where the expectation will be fully tested away to a Solihull Moors side who finished just four points below the Dragons in last season's table. "But they are doing it using their position wisely to build income into the football club so it can be done sustainably." ![]() "Okay, they can do it because of their fame, which helps. ![]() "And not only have they invested, they've looked at how they increase the revenue streams of the football club. "These people, in very difficult and uncertain times have invested into the football club "I think they are going to get a wonderful reception and rightly so as well," said Harris, who accepted the role as vice-president of the club. McElhenney and Reynolds have yet to visit Wrexham - the pandemic and filming commitments have not allowed that to happen so far.īut with the easing of Covid-19 restrictions and the return of fans, it is hoped the pair will make a long-awaited appearance at the Racecourse Stadium. Hollywood owners will be 'blown away' by Wrexham support "But I certainly hope we'll be back in the Football League within that five year time period." "The transition from League Two to League One is nowhere near as tough and then who knows where the club could be? "I've got everything crossed that they do it and if they do it - and that's the hardest step of the journey - it's where they want to take the club then. "It's the most horrible, brutal league and it could be the most difficult step anywhere in football in the world. "The hardest step is promotion out of the National League," Spencer Harris added. Wrexham, who were relegated from the Football League in 2008, hope that Phil Parkinson will be the manager to finally guide them to promotion. "But now is the time to get it right on the field." "Already there's fantastic stuff coming out of it and I have nothing but praise for the guys that have taken over. The work that's been going on in the background and off the field has been phenomenal. "I thought it was a dream, but the longer it goes on you realise it's real. "It's still hard to believe," said former Wrexham midfielder Waynne Phillips of the takeover. The Hollywood pair set out their plans for the club in a Zoom presentation to members of the Supporters Trust and more than 98% subsequently voted in favour of their bid. "It's not every day somebody tells you that two Hollywood A-listers want to buy your club," Harris added. Harris admits there was a sense of excitement when it was confirmed that Hollywood stars Rob McElhenney and Ryan Reynolds were the mystery men wanting to take over the north Wales club. "The club at that point belonged to the fans so it was very much incumbent on us to follow a process to find out who it was, make sure we kept them interested so the fans could make a decision on whether they wanted to continue a fans' ownership or sell to private owners." Spencer Harris is now vice president of Wrexham "It progressed from there to talking more in depth. "The initial stages were very much about talking about what the club is like - the culture, potential of the club, what it means to the community and the community work that it does. "We only knew him as Rob at that stage and listening to his experience of what he thought about sports," Harris told BBC Radio Cymru documentary I Mewn i'r Gol, which charts the club's takeover. "All that we knew was that it was two extremely wealthy and famous people."Įven when Harris got to speak with one of the potential buyers - over the telephone rather than Zoom - they did not disclose who they were. "We didn't know who the interest was from in the early stages. ![]() "We were always very sure from early days that it was a really serious bid and enquiry because the bank from New York had been involved in many football transaction involving Liverpool, Crystal Palace and Roma. "The people that they used to approach us were the best in the business," Harris recalls. They were acting on behalf of two individuals who were interested in taking over the National League club, who had been owned by Wrexham Supporters Trust since 2011 after some turbulent times in which the club's existence had been in doubt. Catlin was enquiring as to whether Harris would be willing to talk to representatives of a New York-based Investment Bank.
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