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Parkinson has held onto his Wrexham post to this day after a rough start, and this FC 25 Coins episode gives viewers some further insight to his management style, as well as highlighting how lengthy of a process getting a team to gel together really is. Welcome to Wrexham has shown before that football at this level is defined by its lack of stability, with players swapping teams constantly and short contacts being the norm, so again, more football knowledge is to be found here.
Unfortunately, more casual football fans who enjoy watching Welcome to Wrexham for its people stories won‘t find much to enjoy as the interviews with fans and those close to the club come off as a bit of an afterthought in these two entries. Such is the case for defender Aaron Hayden (still a Wrexham player), who gets some family spotlight before putting on a bad performance in the only game covered here without his spotlight getting any direct tie-in, resolution or purpose like in other episodes.
The nod to away game culture in European football is nice too because, as McElhenney points out, the continent‘s size and transports network usually makes it easier for fans to keep up with the tradition of supporting their teams abroad. Unfortunately, Reynolds and McElhenney are witnesses to a disastrous Wrexham loss that throws some perspective at them, even in the latter doesn't know the game's rules concerning throw-ins.
Football is arguably a much more volatile competition than the buy FIFA 25 Coins, and the pair‘s musings on the way back home about how the game toys with fans‘ emotions is a great summary of why it‘s the world's most popular sport. Randomness and luck play a bigger role in low-scoring sports like football, and that lesson will surely resonate in Welcome to Wrexham later episodes as the season progresses and the potential for heartbreak grow bigger.