Article body analysed
Kieffer Moore has also played for Bournemouth, Cardiff City, Ipswich Town and Wigan Athletic Wales forward Kieffer Moore is among a number of players Wrexham are interested in, manager Phil Parkinson has confirmed. Moore, 32, joined Sheffield United on a three-year deal in July 2024 and scored five goals in 28 Championship appearances for the Blades last season. Wrexham, promoted back to the second tier of English football for the first time in 44 years, have been linked with the 49-times capped international. "Kieffer's under contract at Sheffield United. He's one of a number of players we've looked at over the summer, " Parkinson said. "Like I said, the landscape changes in the transfer market very quickly from one week to the next. "We're looking at lots of options here and abroad. " Wrexham have signed goalkeeper Danny Ward, forward Ryan Hardie, defender Liberato Cacace, midfielders George Thomason and Lewis O'Brien and forward Josh Windass during the close season. Parkinson said the club have had dialogue over the idea of signing Denmark midfielder Christian Eriksen, but it "had not gone further". The Wrexham boss is still hoping to add to his squad before their Championship opener at Southampton on Saturday, 9 August. "Obviously in an ideal world you want all your signers in prior to pre-season to work with, " Parkinson told BBC Sport Wales. "But it just doesn't work like that. People sometimes say, why doesn't it? "It's just a variety of reasons - clubs don't want to sell players, competition for players, negotiations over transfer fee or wages. "Of course, ideally, we'd like to make a couple more additions. Is that going to happen before the start of the season? It's difficult to say. "But the most important thing is by the end of August we've got a squad in here which we feel can compete. " London to celebrate Lionesses with open-top bus parade Watkins and Sesko head Man Utd's striker wishlist How personal tragedy motivates India seamer Deep Toby Jones presents must-see Dad's Army moments Comedian Bob Mortimer chooses his desert island tracks Twelve football fans get a shot at their dream BBC Sport job Stevie Wonder sits down with Annie Macmanus Lego, lash lifts and Reggie the dog - inside England's Euro 2025 success The fall of Felix - inside one of football's most confusing careers Does FIA need to rethink approach to wet race conditions? - F1 Q&A 'Kelly is more than the next Beckham' - the Lioness shifting the culture Show of Mancunian grit could be making of India captain Gill How did Bronze play Euro 2025 with fractured tibia? Lionesses defy odds to create English football history Relive the penalty shootout from England's Euro 2025 win. Video Relive the penalty shootout from England's Euro 2025 win 'Lions need whitewash to be lauded for decades' - Dawson column What makes Euro 2025-winning manager Wiegman so successful? No-one can stop Stokes overdoing it but himself - Agnew Fine margins: How Norris lost out to Piastri in Belgium Ray French - dual-code international and iconic voice of rugby league India refuse to end Test before Jadeja and Sundar reach centuries. Video India refuse to end Test before Jadeja and Sundar reach centuries Dodgers' journey from 'best ever' to 'rock bottom' Catchin' Sachin - Joe's route to 15, 921 Hey big spenders - Liverpool lead top-four domination of £1bn deals Champions and fearless youth - who's in England's World Cup squad? Copyright © 2025 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.