The revision of Wrexham's Summer Team will be built around a 'no superstars and not ego's' policy like the club to the Premier League, although manager Phil Parkinson showed no surprise when the names of Jamie Vardy and Kevin De Bruyne were set as goals after a record -breaking third promotion.
When the victory was sealed with a 3-0 victory against fellow promotion challengers Charlton Athletic, the Hollywood-MEDE owner Ryan Reynolds of the club maintained his often repeated explanation that “our goal is to make the Premier League.”
The likely jump in sponsorship income and several new documentary series that Championship Football should bring, means that the club can aim former Premier League players.
Vardy and De Bruyne are free agents, although the Belgian salary of £ 400,000 a week a week a week manchester City seems to bring him out of reach.
Jonny Evans, Ashley Young and possibly Newcastle United's Callum Wilson could fall into the same category.
Parkinson's, who has now secured six promotions as a manager, said that the club “always notices players who are free transfers and will be available and will continue to do so.”
But he warned against the damage of collectivism that was a characteristic of the rise of Wrexham from the National League.
He said: 'I find it interesting because the jump in the salaries is incredible – amazing.
'Even went to [League One] Level, the leap to get players of championship quality is expensive, but of course I think with the next level, I don't think people outside of football are realizing.
'We have always tried to ensure that the culture in the club is right and I think that is the key – not superstars, no egos in the dressing room – and we have to try to get that balance good again.
“You always need extra quality if you go up a level to ensure that the right people enter the building.”
This promotion presents Wrexham, who has surpassed Swansea City and Wimbledon's records about three promotions in four years, with their biggest financial challenge so far under Hollywood -own.
The £ 200 million Steve Gibson has invested in Middlesbrough and the £ 160 million of Steve Lansdown in Bristol City demonstrates the scale of expenditure for those who try to make the promised land.
Asked if Wrexham would again recruit players who could enable them to compete at the top of their division, Parkinson said: 'We must evaluate in terms of the budget, the level of wages that players will demand and that quality will improve with the culture and what we have built here.
'Get up the good about it [early] We are now time to lean back, think about it and sit down with the owners. '
There had been no discussions about De Bruyne or Vardy, he said.
