The Independent
·29 April 2026
Wrexham director claims promotion to Premier League would be ‘greatest sports story ever’

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Yahoo sportsThe Independent
·29 April 2026

A director at Wrexham has claimed that the club’s possible promotion to the Premier League would be the “greatest sports story ever” as the Welsh club look to secure a spot in the play-offs.
Wrexham occupy sixth place in the Championship entering the final round of fixtures, ahead of Hull City on goal difference.
The club have never previously featured in the top-flight of the English football pyramid but have risen quickly through the leagues since being purchased by Ryan Reynolds and Rob Mac (formerly McElhenney) in 2021.

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Co-owners Ryan Reynolds and Rob Mac will be hoping Wrexham can make the play-offs (PA Wire)
Having earned three successive promotions from the National League into the Championship, Wrexham could yet have a shot at a fourth in four years after they take on Middlesbrough on the final day.
And Shaun Harvey, a former chief executive of the English Football League (EFL), has boldly claimed that it would rank as the best story in sport were promotion to materialise.
“Whatever happens, we’ve gone from being a non-league team to the best team in Wales by virtue of league position,” Harvey said at SportsPro London. “Our women’s team have won the league and are going to play in the Champions League.
“In any circumstances, our season should be viewed as, ‘we nearly made it’, rather than ‘we just missed out’. And whilst that’s a subtle difference, the reality is we have no right to actually achieve what we have done so far this season

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Shaun Harvey is a director at Wrexham having previously been chief executive of the EFL (Getty)
“If we do make it to the play-offs on Saturday afternoon, we have the chance of going back-to-back-to-back-to-back promotions. If we achieve it – as others have said, and I agree – it would be the greatest sports story ever.”
Wrexham are projecting to turnover between £45m and £50m this year, the most of any Championship club not benefitting from Premier League parachute payments.
Club data suggests that they now have 27.6m fans globally, with 39 per cent female, and 9.5m supporters in the United States. That has, in part, been driven by the FX documentary series, Welcome to Wrexham.
Ipswich, Millwall and Middlesbrough are vying for the second automatic promotion place behind league winners Coventry City, with Southampton assured of a play-off spot. Derby County are also within striking distance of Wrexham in sixth.
Last year’s Championship play-off winners Sunderland banked an estimated £200m from promotion.







































