Quizzed on whether that dream will become reality over the course of the next decade, Reynolds told the Men In Blazers podcast: “Ten years from now, we would be morons to not want to see this club in the Premier League. But also be unique in that everything about the place has stayed true to what it originally was. That’s the perfect scenario.
“It should be a wild adventure. If it was all predictable and we knew exactly what was going to happen, this would be miserable. You can’t understand happiness and joy and elation unless you understand what it feels like to fail and be miserable. Thankfully this sport offers all of those emotions inside each and every f*cking minute of a match. You get to go on that ride.
“Ten years? I hope Wrexham is Wrexham and I hope that the change that is taking place is for the better and that people are proud of it and that the change doesn’t feel like it was too big, too soon.
“There is an underdog nature to the town and Rob and I always think that you can hate me and Rob, or not root for us, but I find it’s very hard not to root for that community and that place. When we first got there, there was a lot of ‘why Wrexham?’ and you don’t hear that any more. That’s probably the thing I’m most proud of.”