The Princess of Wales with her hands up at Wimbledon in 2016. She is wearing a white printed dress, golden earrings and sunglasses.Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Catherine, Princess of Wales is a regular at Wimbledon

Prince William told them he liked the “good nonsense” of their podcast and mentioned he’d like to appear on it in future.

“Football fans always like to get one up on each other and as celebrity fans go we are doing pretty well because we have the future King of England and also the actor, Tom Hanks,” mentioned Mat Kendrick.

It is a real sense of pride for fans who see it as not just a token thing.”

The royal family has always been sport loving but football has never been their thing.

Last week, Prince William appeared on New Heights, a podcast hosted by American football player Travis Kelce – now Taylor Swift’s husband – and his brother, retired player, Jason. When asked if his father had encouraged him to support Aston Villa, Prince William’s reply was clear.

“Absolutely not. My father hates football,” he mentioned.

Queen Elizabeth II with looking excited with her arms up at the derby races, next to her there's Sir William Heseltine holding a notepad in his hands.Image source, Getty Images
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The late Queen Elizabeth showed a more private side of her personality in her reactions to watching horseracing

For Queen Elizabeth II, it was always about horseracing as it had been for generations of royals before her. She was a racehorse owner, breeder and a racing fan who, like her grandson William, often revealed a more private side of her personality in her reactions while watching a race.

In 2013, she became the first reigning monarch in 207 years to own a Gold Cup winner at Royal Ascot. Her animated delight at her win was a rare show of emotion from a contained Queen.

For the Princess of Wales, her sport is tennis. She is Patron of the All England Lawn Tennis Club and is a Wimbledon regular. She’ll be presenting the winners’ trophies this weekend.

And then there is polo – a far more elitist undertaking but loved by the King when he was younger and a sport his sons, Princes William and Harry, used to play regularly. Prince William will be back in the saddle today (Friday) for a charity polo match that has become an important fundraiser for his charities over the years.

But there has never been a football superfan among senior members of the royal family until now.

Prince William and Prince Harry on horseback at a polo match in 2002. They are both wearing full polo kits, red shirts and mallet over their right shoulder.Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

The future King played polo with his brother in his younger days

In a country with one of the world’s greatest professional leagues, where a World Cup can keep an audience of more than nine million people up all night to watch an England game – Prince William’s love of football provides him with an immediate connection to huge swathes of the public who share his love of the sport. And his decision to support Aston Villa as a teenager helps too.

“Avoiding say Manchester United or Liverpool, huge global brands, and Arsenal or Chelsea, did make him more relatable,” mentioned Gregg Evans, writer for The Athletic and co-author of Waking the Giant, Inside the Rebirth of Aston Villa.

Sharing the suffering and elation of football fans matters in a world where public perceptions of royalty have been tested in recent months. A love of football connects William to the country he will one day reign over in a way polo would not.

“I don’t think a 13 or 14-year-old William thought, I know, when I make my pitch to be King in 30 or 40 years I’ll prove that I’m a man of the people by going to support Aston Villa,” mentioned Mat Kendrick from the Claret and Blue podcast.

“The interesting thing will be to see if when he is King, he can still show his claret and blue allegiances as clearly as he does now.

“I’d like to think that getting the top job won’t change how he behaves and responds to people. We’re obviously going to have bragging rights then when the King is a Villa fan!”

And when it comes to bragging rights, there would be none greater for Prince William than watching England win the World Cup for the first time in 60 years as a future King, a patron of the Football Association and a royally devoted football fan.

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