Welcome to Wrexham (2022) s01e06 Episode Script
Hamilton!
1
JACQUI: How old are you now?
ARTHUR: 96.
JACQUI:
Yeah, 96.
I'll be 97 next March.
First match I went to
was 1931.
I was seven.
JULIE:
So 90 years of following them?
- Up and down.
- [laughs]
Up and down.
SPENCER: A football team
is not just a football team.
It is something
that really brings together
the community in a way
that nothing else does.
SHAUN: There's a magic
about football
JACQUI: That's it.
- [Julie laughs]
SPENCER: It gives people
a real sense of community
and camaraderie
and belonging to something
in a way that, without it,
they just wouldn't have.
And-and-and how dare somebody
come from outside the area
and-and try to take that away
from people?
[Buddy Holly's "Everyday"]
BUDDY: [singing] Every day,
it's a-getting closer
Going faster
than a roller coaster
Love like yours
will surely come my way
A-hey, a-hey-hey
Every day,
it's a-getting faster
Everyone said,
"Go ahead and ask her"
Love like yours
will surely come my way
A-hey, a-hey-hey
Love like yours
will surely come my way
PERSON:
Is it teatime for you now?
Oh-ho-ho-ho.
Are you hungry?
Are you ready for your tea?
[gasps]
Right, buddy,
after we finish this
you're not going to be able
to sit and watch telly.
Mommy and Daddy have got
to watch something
on the telly.
And it's about the football.
PERSON:
Some people are worried
that Ryan Reynolds
and his friend
are just doing it
to make money.
[bright classical music]
So that's what people
want to know:
why have they chosen Wrexham?
Just to make sure
that they're
they're doing it for a reason
that's a good reason.
There were some people
who bought Wrexham Football
Club who didn't want it.
They wanted to knock
the football stadium down.
They wanted to knock?
So that they could
make money.
[light music]
[static crackling]
LOUISE:
These are turbulent times
for Wrexham Football Club.
Its future is on a knife-edge
amid talks of debts amounting
to millions
and asset stripping.
SPENCER:
Going back to the early 2000s,
the football club had a number
of challenges.
It had owners who, eh,
who-who frankly that-that
their sole reason for ownership
was not for the betterment
of the football club,
and the football club
was in danger.
LOUISE:
For the last two years,
this club has been owned
by one man,
and tonight we unravel
the truth
behind rumors surrounding
Alex Hamilton.
Alex Hamilton was actually
the-the owner
of the football club,
but another gentleman, eh,
was, eh, was-was sort
of fronting the ownership
for a while,
and-and we didn't know
Alex Hamilton
was in-in the background.
LOUISE: Two years ago,
Alex Hamilton
bought the controlling share
of Wrexham Football Club.
Keeping his own identity
secret,
he installed a business
associate as chairman.
Mark Guterman
was a controversial choice
among fans.
He'd already taken
local rivals Chester
into administration
and relegated
from the football league.
BRYN: The club was sold
to those two people,
and their, uh, idea of what
the value of this football club
didn't really revolve around it
being a football club.
LOUISE: A former solicitor
who lives here in Cheshire,
Alex Hamilton was struck off
by the Law Society
two years ago for charges
including allegations
of mortgage fraud.
He appealed, and most
of the charges against him,
including the mortgage fraud,
were withdrawn.
Reinstated last year,
Hamilton now describes himself
as a property developer.
BRYN:
This was a time of, you know,
a lot of redevelopment work
going on around the UK.
There was a bit more money
flowing around again
in the economy and people were
looking for opportunities.
Small football clubs are
always financially vulnerable,
and this has long been the case
in England and Wales.
Wrexham were in that position now.
They were vulnerable,
and I think these guys
spotted that vulnerability
and recognized
that in this big stadium site
that you have here,
which is on the edge of town,
it's a prime position
potentially for redevelopment.
LOUISE: The Racecourse
is the premier sports ground
in North Wales.
The Ground has a long history,
and fans recently invested
in its future by buying bricks
in the new stand.
There's lots of building work
going on here.
It's a prime site at the main
gateway to the town.
If it had planning permission,
the Racecourse could be worth
at least £10 million
just the kind of land
a property developer
might dream of finding.
[dark music]
SPENCER: The history,
the present,
and the future
of Wrexham Football Club
is interwoven
with the Racecourse stadium.
Without
the Racecourse stadium,
there is no Wrexham AFC.
If the stadium goes,
the football team goes.
[Spiro's
"We Will Be Absorbed"]
ROB: So the club doesn't
currently own the Racecourse.
We pay approximately $150,000
a year to lease the stadium.
Moreover, the club is also
on the hook for any updates,
refurbishments,
enhancements that we wanna do,
and we've been able
to do a few of those.
But what we really wanna do
is return the stadium
to being the crown jewel
of North Wales.
But sadly, we have an entire
stand called "the Kop"
that is, for all intents
and purposes, condemned,
and we can't do anything
with that
until the club once again
owns the Racecourse
which is proving to be
difficult?
[beep beep]
Hey, Shaun?
Can we get an update on, um,
where we are with the purchase
of the, uh, freehold
for the Racecourse?
Um, it's proving to be, uh,
a challenge.
The-the title deeds are old.
The Land Registry plans
aren't as clear as you'd hope.
Um, we're just reviewing them
all to get them all together,
and we're gonna get there
as quick as we can.
RYAN: There's nothing
that we can do to
to maybe to help speed it up
or-or expedite in some way?
Well, some of these laws were
drawn up in the 1400s,
so they-they didn't anticipate
the pace at which people
would want to do things.
It is frustrating,
and it's annoying
and, uh, it's hard to
it's hard to give you a
a rationale as to why
it should take this long
other than these things do.
I mean, I-I'm all
for due process,
but we-we made a promise.
It's in our original
mission statement.
The Racecourse needs to be back
in club hands.
Everybody wants it to be back
in club hands.
And yet months and months
and months go by.
And the-I-look,
my frustration
is that we can't start
on the development process.
Do we have a rough estimate
as to when we'll have
some kind of answer?
No, other than it can't take
that much longer.
RYAN: Holy
- [laughs] I mean, it's just
it's Kafkaesque.
Like, we are
we're-we're trapped.
And what-and what's worse
is we're even on record
since we promised it
that-that we're actually
on with it and we've got
everything in place.
I'm amazed we've not had any
had any more questions
from the public and the fans
as to why it's taking
why it's taking
this length of time.
Okay, well, I guess
we'll talk later.
Uh, bye, guys.
[beep beep]
ANNOUNCER:
Oh, he's all on his own.
Can he make it five?
GERAINT: We are, uh,
one of the oldest clubs
in the world.
[dramatic music]
Uh, and that's quite
impressive in itself.
ANNOUNCER: No doubt about that
in terms of Wrexham.
GERAINT: The Racecourse itself
is the oldest existing
international venue
that still hosts football.
HUGHIE: Better football,
better prospects
to get what we so desire
in Wrexham.
GERAINT:
The name "the Racecourse"
was 'cause the venue
was a racecourse.
ANNOUNCER:
Can he make it five?
And Jones makes it five!
[cheering]
GERAINT: It's just been our
home for all our existence.
[cheering, chanting]
[echo fades]
[static crackling]
LOUISE: When Alex Hamilton
took over the club,
the Ground was owned
by Wolverhampton
& Dudley Brewery.
They leased it to the club
for £1 a year.
The club approached the
brewery to buy the freehold.
And the very same day
that the brewery sold
the Ground
to Wrexham Football Club,
it was immediately transferred
to another company,
Damens Limited.
Damens is wholly owned
by Alex Hamilton.
So the Ground
belonged to one company
and the club
belonged to another.
But both were controlled
by Alex Hamilton.
SPENCER: Their idea
was to separate the club
from the stadium
and then bulldoze the stadium
and turn it into, um,
into a profit.
[Spiro's "Wolves"]
BRYN: So they had, um, a plan,
and it was a plan
to basically kill
the football club, effectively.
They took all the investment
out over a period
so it wasn't overt initially.
But it became apparent
that things weren't
bills weren't getting paid
effectively.
LOUISE: The Inland Revenue
is currently charging the club
£150 a day in interest
on a debt
of more than £800,000.
Earlier this year,
things got so bad
the bailiffs were called in.
They assessed
the club's assets
down to the last plastic seat,
floodlight, and lawn mower.
If the tax bill
remains unpaid,
those assets will be seized.
You know, I couldn't believe
that they would treat the fans
like that.
It's a
Sorry.
- [crew member laughs]
You know,
'cause we loved it so much
and they were just destroying
it for money.
And it was just so frustrating.
LOUISE: Mr. Hamilton refused
our requests for an interview.
We went to the Racecourse,
where he was attending
a board meeting.
Wales' Week In Week Out program.
We came here
Asset stripping as well.
Gop.
LOUISE: Please stop and talk
to us, Mr. Hamilton.
These are really
important issues
we want to discuss with you.
Mr. Hamilton
was not at the funeral.
He was attending a directors'
meeting at the club.
Fans were getting worried.
They organized mass opposition
to Alex Hamilton's plans.
He had dropped a bombshell.
He said the Racecourse
would have to be sold
if the club was to survive.
Last July, he served
a legal notice on the club
to leave the Racecourse
within a year.
[crowd chanting]
After 130 years,
this season could be the last
that Wrexham play there.
CROWD:
We will not surrender!
[chanting indistinctly]
SPENCER:
The supporters rallied round
and really fought hard.
And I was only a kid and we
were walking round the Ground
with-with banners
and, you know,
just anything
to save your club.
SPENCER:
There was a lot of
you could call it
guerilla warfare really.
BRYN: It was a
a campaign that was taken
to their front doorsteps.
JACQUI: Yeah, we did.
JULIE: Mm.
And so we did.
BRYN: The fans gathered
in the town in Cheshire
just over the border,
where Alex Hamilton lived,
and they marched
through the town
protesting against
his ownership
of the football club.
LOUISE: It signaled
a declaration of war
against the chairman.
[crowd chanting]
The very same day,
Alex Hamilton responded.
[crowd chanting]
LOUISE:
Fans thought his actions
were an attempt
to incite trouble.
[crowd chanting]
LOUISE: Hamilton has since
been advised by the police
not to attend home matches
at his own club.
BRYN:
In a fit of rage,
he decided
that he was gonna resign.
And he scrawled it down
on a napkin.
Basically, I think,
wrote, "I resign"
and signed it "Alex Hamilton."
That was him saying,
"I want out,"
and that was them saying,
"Great. Fine. Off you go."
[tense music]
[dramatic musical sting]
ROB:
Hey, hi, hi, hi, hi.
Have you heard
from Shaun recently
about the Racecourse purchase?
RYAN:
Yeah.
Yeah, it is taking
a long, long,
long, long, long fucking time.
Um, but I also, you know,
I also recognize
that this is not
a simple thing.
ROB: I think the thing
that drives me crazy
is that this is not a process
that is in place
to protect people.
In fact, the people
that are getting fucked
are the people
that are marginalized
that are the ones
that get fucked over
always in these kinds of
RYAN: Rob tends to be
a bit of a hothead.
Rob's like-if you were
in a burning building,
Rob is-Rob is the first guy
who's gonna run
into that building
and-and pull you out.
I might look
at, like, the version
where we all get out.
[laughs] Like, okay.
Like [laughs]
That window is molten lava.
I'm not gonna run through there
because I won't make it
to the person.
[laughing] Like, wait,
let's just take a second
and think about this.
So yeah.
So what I'm saying is,
everyone would die
in my version.
[both laugh]
Just Rob would die in his.
You're so much more patient
than meyou're so patient.
I'm not so much more patient.
I just drink more.
ROB: [laughs]
Is that what I need to do?
I should just drink.
And if you need
any, uh, any gin,
I-I got a guy.
ROB: Oh, okay. All right.
Well all right, I guess
we'll just keep waiting.
We'll just keep waiting.
Um, yeah.
Waiting is, uh,
my favorite color.
I will, uh, I will talk
to you very, very soon
and uh, miss ya, love ya.
- [sighs]
Miss you, love you,
miss you, love you, bye.
He's too nice.
He's too nice.
It just-it drives me crazy.
Not him being nice.
That doesn't drive me crazy.
It drives me crazy
that we have to
just keep waiting.
We're past the due process
of-of protecting everybody involved.
We're-we're, uh,
we're months past that.
It's-it's literally waiting
for some lawyer
to call another lawyer
who's then gotta call
a committee
and the committee meets
once every three months.
And if they miss that
because someone's got the flu,
then it gets kicked
to the bottom of the pile
and another lawyer
has to call another lawyer,
and in-and in the interim,
it's the team and the town
that get fucked over
because in-under the auspices
of protecting the club,
it's hurting the club
because we can't do
any renovation.
We can't do any real updating
because everything
has to go through this process.
And so we have this plan
to-to revitalize
the-the-the stadium,
and we can't do anything
until we get this information,
so needless to say,
I'm a little bit frustrated
and Ryan is not
because he's drunk or whatever.
[Spiro's "I Fear You
Just as I Fear Ghosts"]
JACQUI: But we survived.
ARTHUR: Yeah.
JACQUI: We survived.
JULIE: We did.
JACQUI: We survived.
Oh, gosh.
[laughs]
[soft music]
BRYN: On one hand, the club
was in safe hands again now,
but on the other, it's actually
quite an expensive business
running a football club.
SPENCER:
It's ordinary Joes
with whatever they can afford.
You know, the minimum
some people are putting in it
is £12 a year.
You know,
some people contribute
a lot more than that.
Some people only put
in the minimum amount
but then do lots
of volunteering
and-and-and contributing
in other ways.
JULIE: Yes. Yes. Yeah.
[overlapping chatter]
Yeah, pulled together
to pay wages.
JULIE: Kenny Pemberton,
locked in his house.
JACQUI: Gosh, yeah.
- Gosh.
Frankly, the club
has been struggling
from that point onwards
to this very day.
If the club
doesn't do so well
and the attendance goes down,
then the manager doesn't get
as much money
as he was expecting to get
to invest in his football side,
and so the football team
isn't quite as good again.
So it's been an issue
that's followed the club
through all the years
that the fans have been
in control.
[melancholic music]
Oh, God.
It's all leaking, isn't it?
BRYN: The club lost control
of the stadium
and the club began
this inexorable slide down
through the tiers
into this position
that it now finds itself in,
in this fifth tier.
So it had a-it had
a seismic impact on the club.
I didn't see a lot of hope
under the Trust ownership
and that's not a dig
at them because, you know,
they've put their time in
and I respect them for it.
So it's not a dig at them
in the slightest.
I just didn't see
an out for the club.
I didn't see a
I didn't see a way forward.
Um, a lot of fans didn't see
a way forward.
You know, those times
were real bad, real low,
really low because youyou
knew we didn't have the money
to get players.
You knew players
weren't getting paid on time.
So it was just
a knock-on effect
and it was-it was a terrible
time to be a fan.
It's been [laughs]
it's been a terrible time
to be a fan
for a long time now
to say the truth.
Sam walked in and he said,
"You'll never guess
who's bought
Wrexham Football Club."
And I said, "Who?"
He said, "Ryan Reynolds
and Rob McElhenney."
I said
"As in Ryan Reynolds
as in actor and Rob"
I said, "I don't know him."
He said, "Oh, yeah,
you wouldn't know him.
Always Sunny in Philadelphia."
I said,
"Oh, yes. Right, okay."
Uh, I said, "You're joking."
"Nope, that's right," he said.
"They've bought it."
[laughing] I said,
"I can't believe it."
Rubs off. Rubs off.
Yeah.
What's happening now for me
is reward, um,
for the-the effort
and the sacrifices
that supporters have put into
football club over the years.
- They better not.
- Yeah.
You-you wouldn't cross
a Wrexham fan.
No, 'cause Wrexham
Wrexham fans don't forgive
- They don't forgive easily.
- Very easily.
[light music]
[phone chimes]
ROB: You have some news
for us?
Is it good news?
- Well, it is.
After, uh, many months
of trying
and, uh, frustration,
I would like
to congratulate you.
You are now the proud owners
of the Racecourse Ground.
- Whoa!
- Yes!
Oh, my God!
RYAN: Come on!
There we go!
Wrexham AFC
owns the Racecourse Ground
and, uh,
you've made it possible
and, you know, and keeping
and keeping true to your words
in the mission statement,
so congratulations.
Truly, you have made it
possible
you, um, HK and Shaun
and-and-and Ryan.
Like, I-I've just
I-I hadn't
I lost my patience
with it so long ago
that I had to check out of it completely
and I just appreciate you guys.
This is why Shaun wanted
to do it over Zoom
is he-he wanted
to see your angry,
scrunched-up,
sad little face, Rob,
blossom into a smile.
RYAN: Having the oldest
international
football stadium on the planet
under our stewardship
is, like, both elation
and weirdly,
I can feel an ulcer growing
as we speak.
- [laughs]
Oh, have you got the email
I've just sent you?
'Cause there is a second bit
of news today.
Oh!
SHAUN: If you open
If you-so there you go.
So if you want to open it up,
they are your first
rendered images
of the new stand
the AFL architects
have put together for us.
- Wow!
- Oh.
Wow.
That is a big-time football
stadium right there.
That is a
- And that's just one stand.
That's just "the Kop" stand.
- Yeah.
So-so what would be
the next stand
that we would do?
- Ugh, give him an inch,
he'll take a mile, Shaun.
I'm so sorry about
Wait, when can wewhen can we
show this to the public?
Uh, I need to go through the
Council with Levelling Up Fund.
We probably need
to warn a couple of people
at the Council
it's coming out,
and then we can arrange
a public launch
and I think it'd be really
useful to do that
because you have
to have a pre
uh, a pre-application
consultation period
ROB: A pre-application
consultation period?
SHAUN:
More bureaucracy, I know.
But at least
- It's incredible.
Let's just put it out.
Let's just put it out.
Let's just put it out.
SHAUN: At least, at least
no, don't just put it out yet.
We-I'll-I'll give you the
I'll give you the nod
when you can put it out.
- Incredible.
Thank you, Shaun.
Thank you for that great news.
Pleasure.
RYAN: That is so neat.
We're putting out the video.
We're putting out the video,
we're putting out the video.
Bye, love you, love you, bye.
- Oh, boy.
- Okay, bye.
- Bye, bye, bye, bye.
[grand orchestral music]
[child giggles, seagull cries]
JACQUI: How old are you now?
ARTHUR: 96.
JACQUI:
Yeah, 96.
I'll be 97 next March.
First match I went to
was 1931.
I was seven.
JULIE:
So 90 years of following them?
- Up and down.
- [laughs]
Up and down.
SPENCER: A football team
is not just a football team.
It is something
that really brings together
the community in a way
that nothing else does.
SHAUN: There's a magic
about football
JACQUI: That's it.
- [Julie laughs]
SPENCER: It gives people
a real sense of community
and camaraderie
and belonging to something
in a way that, without it,
they just wouldn't have.
And-and-and how dare somebody
come from outside the area
and-and try to take that away
from people?
[Buddy Holly's "Everyday"]
BUDDY: [singing] Every day,
it's a-getting closer
Going faster
than a roller coaster
Love like yours
will surely come my way
A-hey, a-hey-hey
Every day,
it's a-getting faster
Everyone said,
"Go ahead and ask her"
Love like yours
will surely come my way
A-hey, a-hey-hey
Love like yours
will surely come my way
PERSON:
Is it teatime for you now?
Oh-ho-ho-ho.
Are you hungry?
Are you ready for your tea?
[gasps]
Right, buddy,
after we finish this
you're not going to be able
to sit and watch telly.
Mommy and Daddy have got
to watch something
on the telly.
And it's about the football.
PERSON:
Some people are worried
that Ryan Reynolds
and his friend
are just doing it
to make money.
[bright classical music]
So that's what people
want to know:
why have they chosen Wrexham?
Just to make sure
that they're
they're doing it for a reason
that's a good reason.
There were some people
who bought Wrexham Football
Club who didn't want it.
They wanted to knock
the football stadium down.
They wanted to knock?
So that they could
make money.
[light music]
[static crackling]
LOUISE:
These are turbulent times
for Wrexham Football Club.
Its future is on a knife-edge
amid talks of debts amounting
to millions
and asset stripping.
SPENCER:
Going back to the early 2000s,
the football club had a number
of challenges.
It had owners who, eh,
who-who frankly that-that
their sole reason for ownership
was not for the betterment
of the football club,
and the football club
was in danger.
LOUISE:
For the last two years,
this club has been owned
by one man,
and tonight we unravel
the truth
behind rumors surrounding
Alex Hamilton.
Alex Hamilton was actually
the-the owner
of the football club,
but another gentleman, eh,
was, eh, was-was sort
of fronting the ownership
for a while,
and-and we didn't know
Alex Hamilton
was in-in the background.
LOUISE: Two years ago,
Alex Hamilton
bought the controlling share
of Wrexham Football Club.
Keeping his own identity
secret,
he installed a business
associate as chairman.
Mark Guterman
was a controversial choice
among fans.
He'd already taken
local rivals Chester
into administration
and relegated
from the football league.
BRYN: The club was sold
to those two people,
and their, uh, idea of what
the value of this football club
didn't really revolve around it
being a football club.
LOUISE: A former solicitor
who lives here in Cheshire,
Alex Hamilton was struck off
by the Law Society
two years ago for charges
including allegations
of mortgage fraud.
He appealed, and most
of the charges against him,
including the mortgage fraud,
were withdrawn.
Reinstated last year,
Hamilton now describes himself
as a property developer.
BRYN:
This was a time of, you know,
a lot of redevelopment work
going on around the UK.
There was a bit more money
flowing around again
in the economy and people were
looking for opportunities.
Small football clubs are
always financially vulnerable,
and this has long been the case
in England and Wales.
Wrexham were in that position now.
They were vulnerable,
and I think these guys
spotted that vulnerability
and recognized
that in this big stadium site
that you have here,
which is on the edge of town,
it's a prime position
potentially for redevelopment.
LOUISE: The Racecourse
is the premier sports ground
in North Wales.
The Ground has a long history,
and fans recently invested
in its future by buying bricks
in the new stand.
There's lots of building work
going on here.
It's a prime site at the main
gateway to the town.
If it had planning permission,
the Racecourse could be worth
at least £10 million
just the kind of land
a property developer
might dream of finding.
[dark music]
SPENCER: The history,
the present,
and the future
of Wrexham Football Club
is interwoven
with the Racecourse stadium.
Without
the Racecourse stadium,
there is no Wrexham AFC.
If the stadium goes,
the football team goes.
[Spiro's
"We Will Be Absorbed"]
ROB: So the club doesn't
currently own the Racecourse.
We pay approximately $150,000
a year to lease the stadium.
Moreover, the club is also
on the hook for any updates,
refurbishments,
enhancements that we wanna do,
and we've been able
to do a few of those.
But what we really wanna do
is return the stadium
to being the crown jewel
of North Wales.
But sadly, we have an entire
stand called "the Kop"
that is, for all intents
and purposes, condemned,
and we can't do anything
with that
until the club once again
owns the Racecourse
which is proving to be
difficult?
[beep beep]
Hey, Shaun?
Can we get an update on, um,
where we are with the purchase
of the, uh, freehold
for the Racecourse?
Um, it's proving to be, uh,
a challenge.
The-the title deeds are old.
The Land Registry plans
aren't as clear as you'd hope.
Um, we're just reviewing them
all to get them all together,
and we're gonna get there
as quick as we can.
RYAN: There's nothing
that we can do to
to maybe to help speed it up
or-or expedite in some way?
Well, some of these laws were
drawn up in the 1400s,
so they-they didn't anticipate
the pace at which people
would want to do things.
It is frustrating,
and it's annoying
and, uh, it's hard to
it's hard to give you a
a rationale as to why
it should take this long
other than these things do.
I mean, I-I'm all
for due process,
but we-we made a promise.
It's in our original
mission statement.
The Racecourse needs to be back
in club hands.
Everybody wants it to be back
in club hands.
And yet months and months
and months go by.
And the-I-look,
my frustration
is that we can't start
on the development process.
Do we have a rough estimate
as to when we'll have
some kind of answer?
No, other than it can't take
that much longer.
RYAN: Holy
- [laughs] I mean, it's just
it's Kafkaesque.
Like, we are
we're-we're trapped.
And what-and what's worse
is we're even on record
since we promised it
that-that we're actually
on with it and we've got
everything in place.
I'm amazed we've not had any
had any more questions
from the public and the fans
as to why it's taking
why it's taking
this length of time.
Okay, well, I guess
we'll talk later.
Uh, bye, guys.
[beep beep]
ANNOUNCER:
Oh, he's all on his own.
Can he make it five?
GERAINT: We are, uh,
one of the oldest clubs
in the world.
[dramatic music]
Uh, and that's quite
impressive in itself.
ANNOUNCER: No doubt about that
in terms of Wrexham.
GERAINT: The Racecourse itself
is the oldest existing
international venue
that still hosts football.
HUGHIE: Better football,
better prospects
to get what we so desire
in Wrexham.
GERAINT:
The name "the Racecourse"
was 'cause the venue
was a racecourse.
ANNOUNCER:
Can he make it five?
And Jones makes it five!
[cheering]
GERAINT: It's just been our
home for all our existence.
[cheering, chanting]
[echo fades]
[static crackling]
LOUISE: When Alex Hamilton
took over the club,
the Ground was owned
by Wolverhampton
& Dudley Brewery.
They leased it to the club
for £1 a year.
The club approached the
brewery to buy the freehold.
And the very same day
that the brewery sold
the Ground
to Wrexham Football Club,
it was immediately transferred
to another company,
Damens Limited.
Damens is wholly owned
by Alex Hamilton.
So the Ground
belonged to one company
and the club
belonged to another.
But both were controlled
by Alex Hamilton.
SPENCER: Their idea
was to separate the club
from the stadium
and then bulldoze the stadium
and turn it into, um,
into a profit.
[Spiro's "Wolves"]
BRYN: So they had, um, a plan,
and it was a plan
to basically kill
the football club, effectively.
They took all the investment
out over a period
so it wasn't overt initially.
But it became apparent
that things weren't
bills weren't getting paid
effectively.
LOUISE: The Inland Revenue
is currently charging the club
£150 a day in interest
on a debt
of more than £800,000.
Earlier this year,
things got so bad
the bailiffs were called in.
They assessed
the club's assets
down to the last plastic seat,
floodlight, and lawn mower.
If the tax bill
remains unpaid,
those assets will be seized.
You know, I couldn't believe
that they would treat the fans
like that.
It's a
Sorry.
- [crew member laughs]
You know,
'cause we loved it so much
and they were just destroying
it for money.
And it was just so frustrating.
LOUISE: Mr. Hamilton refused
our requests for an interview.
We went to the Racecourse,
where he was attending
a board meeting.
Wales' Week In Week Out program.
We came here
Asset stripping as well.
Gop.
LOUISE: Please stop and talk
to us, Mr. Hamilton.
These are really
important issues
we want to discuss with you.
Mr. Hamilton
was not at the funeral.
He was attending a directors'
meeting at the club.
Fans were getting worried.
They organized mass opposition
to Alex Hamilton's plans.
He had dropped a bombshell.
He said the Racecourse
would have to be sold
if the club was to survive.
Last July, he served
a legal notice on the club
to leave the Racecourse
within a year.
[crowd chanting]
After 130 years,
this season could be the last
that Wrexham play there.
CROWD:
We will not surrender!
[chanting indistinctly]
SPENCER:
The supporters rallied round
and really fought hard.
And I was only a kid and we
were walking round the Ground
with-with banners
and, you know,
just anything
to save your club.
SPENCER:
There was a lot of
you could call it
guerilla warfare really.
BRYN: It was a
a campaign that was taken
to their front doorsteps.
JACQUI: Yeah, we did.
JULIE: Mm.
And so we did.
BRYN: The fans gathered
in the town in Cheshire
just over the border,
where Alex Hamilton lived,
and they marched
through the town
protesting against
his ownership
of the football club.
LOUISE: It signaled
a declaration of war
against the chairman.
[crowd chanting]
The very same day,
Alex Hamilton responded.
[crowd chanting]
LOUISE:
Fans thought his actions
were an attempt
to incite trouble.
[crowd chanting]
LOUISE: Hamilton has since
been advised by the police
not to attend home matches
at his own club.
BRYN:
In a fit of rage,
he decided
that he was gonna resign.
And he scrawled it down
on a napkin.
Basically, I think,
wrote, "I resign"
and signed it "Alex Hamilton."
That was him saying,
"I want out,"
and that was them saying,
"Great. Fine. Off you go."
[tense music]
[dramatic musical sting]
ROB:
Hey, hi, hi, hi, hi.
Have you heard
from Shaun recently
about the Racecourse purchase?
RYAN:
Yeah.
Yeah, it is taking
a long, long,
long, long, long fucking time.
Um, but I also, you know,
I also recognize
that this is not
a simple thing.
ROB: I think the thing
that drives me crazy
is that this is not a process
that is in place
to protect people.
In fact, the people
that are getting fucked
are the people
that are marginalized
that are the ones
that get fucked over
always in these kinds of
RYAN: Rob tends to be
a bit of a hothead.
Rob's like-if you were
in a burning building,
Rob is-Rob is the first guy
who's gonna run
into that building
and-and pull you out.
I might look
at, like, the version
where we all get out.
[laughs] Like, okay.
Like [laughs]
That window is molten lava.
I'm not gonna run through there
because I won't make it
to the person.
[laughing] Like, wait,
let's just take a second
and think about this.
So yeah.
So what I'm saying is,
everyone would die
in my version.
[both laugh]
Just Rob would die in his.
You're so much more patient
than meyou're so patient.
I'm not so much more patient.
I just drink more.
ROB: [laughs]
Is that what I need to do?
I should just drink.
And if you need
any, uh, any gin,
I-I got a guy.
ROB: Oh, okay. All right.
Well all right, I guess
we'll just keep waiting.
We'll just keep waiting.
Um, yeah.
Waiting is, uh,
my favorite color.
I will, uh, I will talk
to you very, very soon
and uh, miss ya, love ya.
- [sighs]
Miss you, love you,
miss you, love you, bye.
He's too nice.
He's too nice.
It just-it drives me crazy.
Not him being nice.
That doesn't drive me crazy.
It drives me crazy
that we have to
just keep waiting.
We're past the due process
of-of protecting everybody involved.
We're-we're, uh,
we're months past that.
It's-it's literally waiting
for some lawyer
to call another lawyer
who's then gotta call
a committee
and the committee meets
once every three months.
And if they miss that
because someone's got the flu,
then it gets kicked
to the bottom of the pile
and another lawyer
has to call another lawyer,
and in-and in the interim,
it's the team and the town
that get fucked over
because in-under the auspices
of protecting the club,
it's hurting the club
because we can't do
any renovation.
We can't do any real updating
because everything
has to go through this process.
And so we have this plan
to-to revitalize
the-the-the stadium,
and we can't do anything
until we get this information,
so needless to say,
I'm a little bit frustrated
and Ryan is not
because he's drunk or whatever.
[Spiro's "I Fear You
Just as I Fear Ghosts"]
JACQUI: But we survived.
ARTHUR: Yeah.
JACQUI: We survived.
JULIE: We did.
JACQUI: We survived.
Oh, gosh.
[laughs]
[soft music]
BRYN: On one hand, the club
was in safe hands again now,
but on the other, it's actually
quite an expensive business
running a football club.
SPENCER:
It's ordinary Joes
with whatever they can afford.
You know, the minimum
some people are putting in it
is £12 a year.
You know,
some people contribute
a lot more than that.
Some people only put
in the minimum amount
but then do lots
of volunteering
and-and-and contributing
in other ways.
JULIE: Yes. Yes. Yeah.
[overlapping chatter]
Yeah, pulled together
to pay wages.
JULIE: Kenny Pemberton,
locked in his house.
JACQUI: Gosh, yeah.
- Gosh.
Frankly, the club
has been struggling
from that point onwards
to this very day.
If the club
doesn't do so well
and the attendance goes down,
then the manager doesn't get
as much money
as he was expecting to get
to invest in his football side,
and so the football team
isn't quite as good again.
So it's been an issue
that's followed the club
through all the years
that the fans have been
in control.
[melancholic music]
Oh, God.
It's all leaking, isn't it?
BRYN: The club lost control
of the stadium
and the club began
this inexorable slide down
through the tiers
into this position
that it now finds itself in,
in this fifth tier.
So it had a-it had
a seismic impact on the club.
I didn't see a lot of hope
under the Trust ownership
and that's not a dig
at them because, you know,
they've put their time in
and I respect them for it.
So it's not a dig at them
in the slightest.
I just didn't see
an out for the club.
I didn't see a
I didn't see a way forward.
Um, a lot of fans didn't see
a way forward.
You know, those times
were real bad, real low,
really low because youyou
knew we didn't have the money
to get players.
You knew players
weren't getting paid on time.
So it was just
a knock-on effect
and it was-it was a terrible
time to be a fan.
It's been [laughs]
it's been a terrible time
to be a fan
for a long time now
to say the truth.
Sam walked in and he said,
"You'll never guess
who's bought
Wrexham Football Club."
And I said, "Who?"
He said, "Ryan Reynolds
and Rob McElhenney."
I said
"As in Ryan Reynolds
as in actor and Rob"
I said, "I don't know him."
He said, "Oh, yeah,
you wouldn't know him.
Always Sunny in Philadelphia."
I said,
"Oh, yes. Right, okay."
Uh, I said, "You're joking."
"Nope, that's right," he said.
"They've bought it."
[laughing] I said,
"I can't believe it."
Rubs off. Rubs off.
Yeah.
What's happening now for me
is reward, um,
for the-the effort
and the sacrifices
that supporters have put into
football club over the years.
- They better not.
- Yeah.
You-you wouldn't cross
a Wrexham fan.
No, 'cause Wrexham
Wrexham fans don't forgive
- They don't forgive easily.
- Very easily.
[light music]
[phone chimes]
ROB: You have some news
for us?
Is it good news?
- Well, it is.
After, uh, many months
of trying
and, uh, frustration,
I would like
to congratulate you.
You are now the proud owners
of the Racecourse Ground.
- Whoa!
- Yes!
Oh, my God!
RYAN: Come on!
There we go!
Wrexham AFC
owns the Racecourse Ground
and, uh,
you've made it possible
and, you know, and keeping
and keeping true to your words
in the mission statement,
so congratulations.
Truly, you have made it
possible
you, um, HK and Shaun
and-and-and Ryan.
Like, I-I've just
I-I hadn't
I lost my patience
with it so long ago
that I had to check out of it completely
and I just appreciate you guys.
This is why Shaun wanted
to do it over Zoom
is he-he wanted
to see your angry,
scrunched-up,
sad little face, Rob,
blossom into a smile.
RYAN: Having the oldest
international
football stadium on the planet
under our stewardship
is, like, both elation
and weirdly,
I can feel an ulcer growing
as we speak.
- [laughs]
Oh, have you got the email
I've just sent you?
'Cause there is a second bit
of news today.
Oh!
SHAUN: If you open
If you-so there you go.
So if you want to open it up,
they are your first
rendered images
of the new stand
the AFL architects
have put together for us.
- Wow!
- Oh.
Wow.
That is a big-time football
stadium right there.
That is a
- And that's just one stand.
That's just "the Kop" stand.
- Yeah.
So-so what would be
the next stand
that we would do?
- Ugh, give him an inch,
he'll take a mile, Shaun.
I'm so sorry about
Wait, when can wewhen can we
show this to the public?
Uh, I need to go through the
Council with Levelling Up Fund.
We probably need
to warn a couple of people
at the Council
it's coming out,
and then we can arrange
a public launch
and I think it'd be really
useful to do that
because you have
to have a pre
uh, a pre-application
consultation period
ROB: A pre-application
consultation period?
SHAUN:
More bureaucracy, I know.
But at least
- It's incredible.
Let's just put it out.
Let's just put it out.
Let's just put it out.
SHAUN: At least, at least
no, don't just put it out yet.
We-I'll-I'll give you the
I'll give you the nod
when you can put it out.
- Incredible.
Thank you, Shaun.
Thank you for that great news.
Pleasure.
RYAN: That is so neat.
We're putting out the video.
We're putting out the video,
we're putting out the video.
Bye, love you, love you, bye.
- Oh, boy.
- Okay, bye.
- Bye, bye, bye, bye.
[grand orchestral music]
[child giggles, seagull cries]