Crawley Town: The Premier League aspirational "football team of the internet"
They describe themselves as "the internet's football team" and have ambitions to reach the Premier League by reinventing what they call the "broken", "legacy" model of club management.
Wagmi United, the American consortium who recently purchased League Two Crawley Town, are nothing if not storytellers.
Even their name reads like a manifesto. Wagmi is an acronym for 'We're All Going to Make it', an aspirational rallying cry familiar to cryptocurrency communities dreaming of striking it big.
Despite a first attempt to buy their way into English football with fellow fourth-tier side Bradford City failing in December 2021, Crawley's new owners now feel they have everything in place to become the "transformative sports success story of Web 3.0".
For those unfamiliar with the term, 'Web 3.0' is the so-called next generation of the internet which, depending on your perspective, is either a digital revolution driven by community empowerment or a buzzword that if anything might mean a strengthening of the status quo.
Back in April, traditional finance was used to complete Wagmi's purchase of Crawley - a West Sussex club that first entered the Football League in 2011 and has never been higher than the third tier - but what it plans to do next is different: harness the volatile crypto world and build a remote community of fans as it takes a modest team right to the very top.
And things are already changing, as a rookie team of football owners get their experiment under way.
Short presentational grey line
Back in 2020, Wagmi United co-founder and newly appointed Crawley co-chairman Preston Johnson helped launch a company called Pixel Vault.
Pixel Vault describes itself as an "intellectual property development group focused on elevating crypto-native assets".
They are behind a series of graphic novels called Punks Comic that are sold in the form of NFTs (non-fungible tokens) - one-of-a-kind digital assets whose existence is made possible by blockchain, the same technology that underpins cryptocurrencies such as Bitcoin.
Pixel Vault has driven about $200m worth of cryptocurrency transactions and in February received a $100m investment from venture capitalist firms.
Perhaps Punks Comic tapped into a global community of interested collectors who bought into its artistic value. Perhaps that value benefited from the hype around trading in NFTs - a highly risky and unregulated market.
For Johnson, it came down to "the narrative".
"We brought in this incredible illustrator who'd worked with DC and Marvel to build out the punks' characters and to depict them in comics and other media," he says.
"That was the genesis of the whole thing."
And he believes a similar mix of storytelling and digital speculation can bring the same success to Crawley Town.
On 8 July, Crawley launched sales of their own NFT. For the price of 0.35 Ether [worth £353 at the time of publication] buyers received what Johnson calls "a virtual season ticket".
It includes a range of benefits. Some of these mirror other clubs' equivalent digital subscriptions (which are typically not sold as NFTs) such as access to exclusive content, including interviews with players behind the scenes. Others are more unique, such as the promise of "special input and voting on the future".
An example of what this means in practice comes on Friday, with NFT-holders able to vote on whether the team should strengthen in attack, midfield or defence. The club's season ticket-holders are invited to take part too. And Johnson's own role - plus that of fellow co-chairman Eben Smith - will be subject to vote if they haven't won promotion in two seasons.
By Thursday night they had sold just under 10,000, representing a total value of about £3.5m.
It is a significant figure for a League Two side, plus the club will receive further revenue via a 7.5% royalty fee if NFT owners decide to sell them on.
When Liverpool partnered with auction house Sotheby's in March to sell NFTs - images based on manager Jurgen Klopp and first-team players priced from £57 - only 5.7% were bought. Still, the 9,721 sales earned the club a reported £1.1m, with £281,000 said to have been donated to its charitable foundation.
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In an interview with the Independent last month, Johnson said Wagmi's venture should be seen differently; that it was selling a football club to fans of NFTs rather than NFTs to football fans.
His hope is that what he calls the "Web 3.0 crypto audience" - who believe blockchain technology can be used to fundamentally change the way we use the internet, decentralising power from the tech giants - will appreciate their ambitions and want to play a part in what happens next.
This is the crucial part of Wagmi United's plan: to foster a remote community of new supporters around the club, to attract an audience willing to invest in their story.
"A lot of NFT projects are just speculation with no real tangible spine, no real true story," Johnson says.
"Having a football club to root for every week? That's a spine that people attach themselves to.
"If we can bring that to this Web 3.0 crypto audience, especially if we're able to actually achieve promotion and move up the ranks of the English football league, then it's an even bigger story people all around the world can be part of.
"Crawley only had 700 season ticket holders last year. So this is a club that we can embrace as ours, and then help to tell its story. As something that people can connect with on an emotional level. That's important to make any of this really have true success."
It should be said that others have a different take on what Web 3.0 means, including Twitter founder Jack Dorsey, who wrote in December last year that the only people who would truly profit are the "venture capitalists" behind its development, adding: "You don't own 'web3'… it's ultimately a centralized entity with a different label."
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It's also worth noting that members of the Wagmi United consortium were able to purchase the club's NFTs themselves, and that data available on trading platform OpenSea shows a large number of buyers have decided to sell it on rather than take up the option to 'burn' it by redeeming offers for Crawley merchandise (doing so renders the NFT untradeable). That would suggest strong interest in speculation, although the NFT's value has dropped from its launch price.
Whether those who purchased Crawley's NFT are more interested in storytelling or risking a shot at quick profit, Johnson and his fellow investors say they are "in it for the long haul".
They represent a range of personalities - "from dreamchasers to seasoned executives" - including YouTube influencer Gary Vaynerchuk, digital artist Snowfro and Daryl Morey, president of the NBA's Philadelphia 76ers.
In the months since the takeover, they have been busy.
First came the signing of a new manager at Crawley, Kevin Betsy. Then a kit and apparel deal with Adidas.
They held open Q&A sessions with fans and posted them on YouTube, they signed several new players including League Two's top goalscorer last season, Dom Telford.
They have also signed a fly-on-the-wall documentary deal with a major streaming platform to record their first year in charge.
On Saturday, they played a friendly at home to Queens Park Rangers and drew 3-3. Web 3.0, NFTs and the blockchain were probably not topics of conversation at Broadfield Stadium.
But there has been plenty of controversy about those subjects elsewhere.
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