Wrexham executive director Humphrey Ker believes the Welsh club can make similarly “financially irresponsible” decisions to those that Premier League title challengers Liverpool do thanks to Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney.
Ker, 41, is credited with inspiring the Hollywood actors to buy Wrexham, approaching three years ago now. The California -based actor and writer is a lifelong Liverpool fan, first introducing McElhenney to English football by watching the club’s midweek matches while on set filming the television series ‘Mythic Quest’ in which they both played characters.
He then recommended McElhenney watch the documentary series ‘ Sunderland ‘Til I Die ‘, which led to him tasking Ker with finding a club for them to buy. That subsequent research led them to Wrexham.
Almost three years later, the ‘ Welcome to Wrexham ‘ documentary has the club raking in record revenues that could hit £20million this season. That turnover dwarfs their fellow League Two teams and is comparable to some Championship clubs.
“We are in this extraordinary position of being a genuinely unique club in world football because of the level of interest that comes from outside sources and from people who would usually never pay the slightest attention to football,” he told The Athletic. “That arms you with an incredible level of resources, frankly, and allows you to be ambitious and expansive.”
Ker added: “There is probably no other club in the country who could go, ‘Yeah, we’ll lose a tonne of money doing what is, on a business level, a pretty stupid thing to do, but let’s do it anyway’.”
Those comments came regarding Wrexham building the roofless temporary Kop stand at the ‘Town End’ of the Racecourse Ground. Expectations are that the club will lose £250,000 while it is in use despite helping to raise the capacity by just over 2,000 seats for the remainder of the season.
Ker acknowledges that the club can eat those losses due to their rosy financial outlook. “Why this remains such fun is we are insulated from some of the pressures, challenges and stresses that others have,” he said.
“There’s been this debate at Liverpool recently about Joel Matip being injured beyond his contract (which expires on June 30). The debate is, ‘Should Liverpool give him a new contract to see him through (his recovery)?’.