HOLLYWOOD superstar Ryan Reynolds wants to turn Wrexham AFC into a global brand after trademarking the club’s name.
He’s been granted copyright protection in the US and the UK to flog goods using the club’s branding.
The A-lister wants to make the tiny Welsh outfit a household name across the planet with a range of household goods, clothes and toys.
He has trademarked’ Wrexham FC 1864’ and ‘Wrexham FC’ in the UK, plus ‘Wrexham is the Name’ and ‘Wrexham FC 1864’ in the US.
And he has an application for ‘Welcome to Wrexham’ to be trademarked with the US Patent and Trademark Office currently being examined.
The protection in the UK has been granted by the Intellectual Property Office and will stay in place for ten years.
read more on Ryan Reynolds
Wrexham owner Reynolds joins pub singalong before £100k flight back to US
Watch Ben Foster reply as Ryan Reynolds says ‘you’re too old’ after penalty save
His holding firm R.R. McReynolds Company LLC asked for the rights to market goods in five different classes.
These include flogging gear like clothes and sportswear, luggage, games and toys and the making of TV programmes, laying on football coaching services.
The star was in the UK this week to see Wrexham’s dramatic win over promotion rivals Notts County on Easter Monday.
The Hollywood actor was at the Racecourse Ground alongside co-owner Rob McElhenney to watch Wrexham clinch a thrilling 3-2 victory after goalkeeper Ben Foster made a 97th-minute penalty save.
Most read in Football
Ex-Everton star arrested on suspicion of child sex offences has case DROPPED
Ex-Premier League star admits ploughing Land Rover into Co-op shop while drunk
Brit West Ham fan, 57, killed after being hit by train following Gent draw
How Man Utd will be forced to line up without KEY trio for Brighton FA Cup tie
The pair bought the club in 2020.
The win leaves Wrexham on the verge of clinching the single automatic promotion spot to League Two and a return to the Football League for the first time since relegation in 2008, and means Notts County will need to go through the play-offs despite amassing more than 100 points this season.
Source: Read Full Article