Will the Wrexham Juggernaut Stop This Season? League One Odds and Betting Sign-Up Offers
Wrexham AFC will begin the 2024/2025 season aiming for their third promotion in as many years. It would be a historic achievement if the club managed to accomplish the feat and it would represent a tale that might rival the most triumphant underdog stories that Hollywood has ever produced.
Indeed, owners Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney have sprinkled their stardust on this corner of the lower Dee Valley and turned Wrexham into an unstoppable juggernaut, powering its way through the lower divisions of the football pyramid.
Fearless in DevotionâŚ. RISING TO PROMOTION!
đ´âŞď¸ #WxmAFC pic.twitter.com/ymwzu7e9U8
â Wrexham AFC (@Wrexham_AFC) April 13, 2024
The question is, will this momentum finally stop during the 2024/2025 season as the club consolidates after 24 months of unprecedented success? Or, will it be business as usual for the Racecourse Ground club over the next nine months?
he latest odds for League One promotion might shine a better light on this eventuality.
The Odds on Success
The Dragons have been priced at 4/1 to secure a third consecutive promotion during the upcoming season and are at odds of 11/1 to win the League One title. A top-two finish for Phil Parkinsonâs men has been priced at 5/1 while Wrexham are at just 11/8 for a top-six finish.
Decoding what this all means is that Wrexham are expected to be in the thick of the League One promotion race with promotion via the play-offs the most likely scenario for the Welsh club.
Fans who feel that Wrexham will record a hat-trick of promotions can access these betting sign-up offers from the best bookmakers in the United Kingdom. In some cases, bookies such as Betfred, Tote, and Copybet are offering as much as £50 in free bets that can be used on the League One promotion markets.
Wrexham’s League One Promotion Rivals
While the Dragons are tipped to hold their own at the top end of the table in League One, they will for the first time in a few seasons, come up against teams with bigger budgets, namely Birmingham City who have spent over ÂŁ13 million in the summer transfer window. At odds of 4/6 to be promoted, Birmingham are the overwhelming favourites to go up.
The Blues were of course relegated from the Championship last season which was an unexpected setback after being bought out by American inventors who included hedge fund manager Tom Wagner and National Football League (NFL) icon Tom Brady.
It was a baptism of fire for the American ownership at St. Andrewâs after making repeated mistakes which led to relegation.
For better context, Birmingham were in sixth place in the table and amid the promotion conversation when they were bought out by their current owners.
What this essentially means is that despite having deep pockets, the Blues have an ownership that are yet to prove themselves which might open the door for Wrexham as far as a top-two finish goes.
The Dragons are, after all, far more settled off the pitch, having an established management team headed by coach Parkinson. To that end, both Reynolds and McElhenney have provided the stability and vision needed to support this ambitious quest for promotion.
Brand new sponsor, same team culture. Welcome @Stokcoldbrew, @Wrexham_AFCâs newest sponsor of the worldâs oldest international football stadium. pic.twitter.com/a4A5NbqOia
â Ryan Reynolds (@VancityReynolds) May 25, 2023
This is where Wrexham as a club has demonstrated a better understanding of what is needed for promotion compared to other clubs with similar ambitions and big budgets.
Wrexham Buck the Stagnation Trend and Show No Signs of Stopping
Salford City, for example, owned by former Manchester United stars like Gary Neville, Ryan Giggs, Nicky Butt, David Beckham, and Paul Scholes, reached League Two in 2019 but have stalled since.
Although Salford enjoyed four promotions in five years prior, they seem to have lost the recipe for further progress.
In short, these cautionary case studies prove that the Dragons are perhaps better equipped to achieve promotion to the Championship than their odds currently suggest.
Should they go up then it would be a return to the second division of English football for the first time since 2004.
There would be letting up from there as Reynolds and McElhenney have publicly said that they plan for Wrexham to earn promotion to the Premier League by the start of 2030.
This would be a monumental achievement for a club of Wrexhamâs size and after the success the Hollywood duo have overseen in northeast Wales, you’re inclined to take them at their word.
For now, though, the challenge of climbing out of Englandâs third tier remains the task at hand. From Los Angeles to the Dee Valley and beyond, the world will be watching as the next chapter in one of footballâs greatest stories unfolds.
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