Wrexham co-owner Rob McElhenney has told Jason Kelce he is “incredibly wrong” after the NFL great was forced to apologise for comments he made about Wales.
Kelce, whose brother Travis Kelce will be playing alongside Louis Rees-Zammit at the Kansas City Chiefs from next season, made comments about Welsh culture, saying he thought Wales was “posh” and full of “upper class, beautiful white people”. He claimed the former Wales rugby star was “the running stereotype of what I would think of with a Welsh person”.
Kelce was, however, also excited about Rees-Zammit’s transition from rugby to American football, saying he could become “the most marketable player of all time” in the sport. But it is the comments about Wales which seemed to irk Welsh people on social media.
READ MORE: Travis Kelce tells Louis Rees-Zammit his Kansas City Chiefs move will be ‘humbling’
READ MORE: Louis Rees-Zammit starts new life in America as entire family to move with him
The former Philadelphia Eagles Super Bowl winner had to address the comments on X following a barrage of comments from baffled Welsh people, to which he responded: “Yea, I’ve come to understand, I was very incorrect on this.
“Based on further assessment since these incorrect statements, not sure why I had these preconceptions in my mind, but I have found that the Welsh seem exactly like my kind of people. Happy to be incredibly wrong.”
McElhenney, who owns Wrexham alongside fellow Hollywood star Ryan Reynolds, is a huge Philadelphia Eagles fan and a proud Philly native.
But he has immersed himself in Welsh culture since he took over the soon-to-be League One club and he and Reynolds have earned praise for taking the time to get to know the people and history of Wrexham and Wales as a whole.
As such, McElhenney felt compelled to leap to the defence of the Welsh and responded to Kelce by telling him that his initial comments were wrong and he would be happy to show him around Wales to prove it.
“Yes, incredibly wrong,” McElhenney replied. “I should show you around someday. I might know a few people. See for yourself.”
The Kelce brothers’ endorsement comes after legendary coach Andy Reid spoke publicly about Rees-Zammit for the first time and revealed the Super Bowl champions’ plan for the former Wales star. You can read more about that here.
News
Hoop fans were bummed they couldn’t play as MJ in ‘NBA Live.’ Here’s why
THESE days, the franchise has long been eclipsed by 2K Sports’ NBA 2K series, but back in the late ‘90s, NBA Live was the basketball game to beat. As the 1996-1997 NBA season opened, NBA Live 97 was released to much fanfare. It was the first…
Michael Jordan: Why He’s a 6-Time Finals MVP, 6-for-6 Champion and G.O.A.T.
Michael Jordan is the only player in NBA history to never score less than 20 points in any of his Finals games but that is just one reason that every time the greatest player ever never once let his team…
14 Amazing Tales of Michael Jordan Being a Hypercompetitive Weirdo
As the ESPN documentary The Last Dance proves over and over, Michael Jordan’s life and career are full of stories that would be hard to believe if there weren’t cameras there to capture them. The intense, pathologic competitiveness, the ability to transcend…
A history of Michael Jordan in video games
Michael Jordan is a name that’s synonymous with basketball. Here’s his history with video games, which is as extensive as his professional career. Michael Jordan, a legend of the sport of basketball, and less so of baseball, turns 53 today….
‘That’s where the game changed’: When Michael Jordan credited THIS player for taking the NBA to the next level
The TV series, “They Call Me Magic” dropped in 2022. It narrates the early days of the Lakers legend, Magic Johnson’s NBA journey, from high school to college and the big leagues. Interestingly, Magic was inspired by Michael Jordan’s “The…
On this date: Michael Jordan makes his NBA debut for the Chicago Bulls
On this date, Michael Jordan started his NBA journey. However, his performance against the Washington Bullets was in no way a sign of things to come. MJ’s NBA debut Coming off the 1984 Olympics — Jordan averaged team-high 17.1 points to lead…
End of content
No more pages to load