Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney paid $2.5 million for the world's third-oldest football club.
But the team is in the 5th division of the English football pyramid and has almost no chance of making it to the Premier League.
Still, it was a genius move.
Here's why 👇
1) American investment in English football isn't new.
Half the Premier League now has American owners, including Chelsea, Manchester United, Arsenal, Liverpool, and more.
And the upside is clear:
• Global game
• Increasing media rights
• Lower valuations than NFL, NBA, etc.
2) But Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney purchased Wrexham AFC, a 5th-tier club located in a blue-collar town ~25 miles outside Liverpool & Manchester.
Why?
Well, this wasn't about Premier League promotion — it was about creative storytelling & marketing genius.
Let me explain.
3) Wrexham is owned by the fans, so Reynolds & McElhenney met with 2,000+ supporters (on Zoom) in 2020 and made an offer.
They agreed to invest ~$2.5m in the club's players and facilities & even signed a 25-year stadium lease in Wrexham so fans knew they wouldn't move the team.
4) But the real play was a "Netflix-style" docu-series that tracked their purchase, investment in the club, and the team's journey back to prominence.
It's called "Welcome to Wrexham."
And here's the best part — the first season was a massive success, on-and-off the pitch.
5) Welcome to Wrexham debuted on FX in August.
The show received a 97% audience score & was immediately greenlit for season two.
The club probably made good money on the deal:
~$400k per hour of content
+ 8-part series
= ~$3.2m in revenue
But that's just part of their success.
6) Wrexham is now in 2nd place in the National League standings, and their social accounts have exploded:
Twitter: 45k to 209k (+364%)
Instagram: 27k to 208k (+670%)
TikTok: 0 to 459k
And most importantly, Wrexham has turned this increased attention into tangible revenue.
7) Wrexham AFC has signed kit sponsorship deals with several companies:
• TikTok
• Expedia
• Vistaprint
• Aviation American Gin
And the number of fans buying season tickets has nearly tripled:
2019: 2,609
2021: 5,892
2022: 6,820
So the local community is also buying in.
8) This strategy has also provided the club with global reach—something Wrexham AFC would have never achieved.
For example, Wrexham’s FA Cup qualifier versus the Blyth Spartans on Saturday will air on ESPN2 & ESPN+
That means it will be available in ~100m households globally 🤯
9) This is the perfect example of someone taking a local sports asset and using strategic marketing and creative media to make it global.
But this didn't just benefit Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney — it benefited Wrexham AFC fans too.
And that's the best part.
10) If you enjoyed this thread, you should:
1. Follow me; I tweet cool stories like this every day.
2. Subscribe to my free daily newsletter where I break down the most interesting stories in sports business. huddleup.substack.com
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
They just raised a $12 million Series B and are already doing eight figures in annual revenue.
Full disclosure: I own equity in ALLCITY (because I think it will be massive).
Here's why 👇
1) Everyone knows sports media is struggling.
The democratization of content (podcasts, social media, etc.) has hurt RSNs, newspapers, and radio stations, leading to smaller audiences and mass layoffs.
However, this is where ALLCITY sees an opportunity.
2) The easiest way to explain ALLCITY is that it's a digitally-focused network of local sports content.
The business model is simple:
1. Go to a big sports town (Chicago, etc.) 2. Hire the best talent (radio/reporters) 3. Have them start podcasts/write 4. Sell ads as a network
My favorite sports business story involves two brothers turning $1 million into $800 million as basketball team owners without ever owning an NBA team.
It's a masterclass in leverage, long-term thinking, and the power of equity and ownership.
Here's the crazy story 👇
1) The story starts with Ozzie & Daniel Silna.
The two brothers were born in New Jersey after their parents immigrated from Latvia in the 1930s.
They worked at their dad's small textile business, but when he sold the company, they started manufacturing polyester in the 1960s.
2) As polyester sales skyrocketed throughout the 1960s, Ozzie & Daniel Silna's business grew.
So they used $1 million in profit to buy the ABA’s failing Carolina Cougars in 1974.
They then moved the team to Saint Louis and rebranded as the Saint Louis Spirits.
I asked my audience: "What is the best sports book you've ever read?" — and received more than 1,000 responses.
Here are the Top 10 👇
1) Open, an autobiography by Andre Agassi.
Everyone needs to read this, seriously.
2) Moneyball by Michael Lewis
This book follows the Oakland A's historic 2002 season — 103 wins with one of the lowest budgets in MLB —and details how the Athletics pioneered the use of analytics and advanced statistics.
This is a must-read, plain & simple.
3) The Score Takes Care Of Itself
This book breaks down the leadership lessons Bill Walsh installed as head coach of the 49ers, taking the team from a 2-14 record to Super Bowl Champions in just 2 years.