Welcome to Wrexham: Glyndwr targets US student boost

Piggybacking on the Hollywood glitz surrounding its local football club, Wrexham Glyndwr University sets sights on America

May 24, 2023
Source: Getty

Wrexham’s university is hoping the Welsh city’s new-found fame after its football team was bought by Hollywood actors could help to boost its student recruitment in the US.

With American tourists flocking to visit the Racecourse Ground – home of Ryan Reynolds and Rob McElhenney’s Wrexham AFC – neighbouring Wrexham Glyndwr University has embarked on a mission to try to convince them to stay and study in the city.

Since August 2022, the plight of Wales’ oldest football club has featured in the Disney documentary Welcome to Wrexham, the second series of which will focus on its recent promotion back into the Football League after 15 years.

Wrexham Glyndwr’s head of international, Katy Davenport – herself originally from the US – said the impact of the show had been transformational for the area and she now hoped to capitalise.

“This city has just been getting on with it for years and globally slid under the radar, but suddenly has the spotlight on it,” she said.

“That will hopefully hook people in and we hope to show it’s not just a great place for football; it is a great place to come and get your education and be part of this community.”

Until now, the university has primarily served locally based students but has a sizeable international contingent, mostly from India, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and parts of west Africa.

Though plans to target the US are still in their infancy, Ms Davenport said she had recently welcomed a group of high school advisers whose trip finished with a drink in The Turf, the pub next to the Racecourse that regularly features in the documentary.

She said that when previously she introduced herself as being from Wrexham she had been met with blank faces, but now “everyone wants to talk about it – not just the football club, but the community and the people and the university”.

Ms Davenport said she felt the documentary had resonated with so many Americans because it was about people “quietly getting on with it in their communities, trying to build a good life for themselves and their families”.

But she said the university and city also had lots of “exciting” things to offer potential international students, highlighting an £80 million campus redevelopment.

Tired of flying back and forth from Los Angeles, Mr Reynolds reportedly just bought a £1.5 million house in the area. Whether others from North America will be tempted to join him remains to be seen, but Ms Davenport said she was already seeing a small uptick in interest.

“We are still in the early days, but we have that name recognition now and we are starting to see things pick up momentum,” she said. “It is not a huge jump yet, but there has been a steady increase in enquiries.”

tom.williams@timeshighereducation.com

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline: Follow Rob and Ryan to Wrexham

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