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While Harris currently holds the title of Honorary Vice President at Wrexham, coach Dean Keates is shown out the door by the FC 25 Coins time the second episode wraps up. Keates was hired by Wrexham in late 2022 when the club was at an all-time low, sitting at the bottom of the National League, and although his efforts see Wrexham fight until the very end of the 2020-21 season for a place in promotion play-offs, that is simply not enough for the club's new ambitions.
Several people are brought in such as Humphrey Ker, McElhenney‘s British pal that got him into football, or Shaun Harvey, a seasoned football executive, who‘s hired to help Wrexham progress. The fact is that the series makes sure to emphasize that football at these lower levels is very uncertain for all parties involved, which probably explains why Wrexham‘s current squad only retains 9 players from the 2020-21 team featured here.
Among the lucky ones is Jordan Davies, who not only enjoyed a great season when the Hollywood duo took over, but also happens to be born and raised in Wrexham, thus making him the perfect poster boy for the team‘s current story. On the other hand, there‘s Paul Rutherford, a veteran who‘s entered the final stage of his career and whose actions see him cut from the club after a season-defining error causes him to burst into tears after seeing a red card in the worst possible moment.
All in all, Welcome to Wrexham does a fine job of depicting the ups and downs that come with running a professional football club on a level that feels much closer to home than even what Ted Lasso portrays. As of now, Wrexham has entered the 2022-2023 season still stuck in English football‘s fifth-tier competition (so no cheap FC 25 Coins guarantees), and what happened in the first year of Reynolds and McElhenney does not deserve spoiling, but rather it‘s well worth watching.