
Nasser Djiga: Rangers can sway Wolves with £7m and additional incentives for permanent transfer
Nasser Djiga will be high up on Rangers‘ list of priorities this summer, and a £7million package deal might be enough to make Wolves sell up.
The Bears have already been backed to make an offer in the region of £6m to £8m for the centre-back this summer, as they do not hold a buy option in his loan deal.
Wolves are still a Premier League club but are now on the verge of relegation, which makes them an interesting club to deal with in terms of transfers this summer.
Danny Rohl may be short of central defenders this summer with deals expiring, and he may want to stick with what he knows will work at Ibrox by signing the 23-year-old permanently.
Rangers will most likely face competition for Djiga, but a £7m plus additional incentives could be the sweet spot for Wolves to sell.
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Hefty sell-on could keep Nasser Djiga at Rangers
The 49ers will have more money available for Rohl this summer, though a clear budget has not been laid out yet.
Plans will already be in place with the likes of Stig Igne Bjornebye working on things behind the scenes, as Djiga is most likely in his thoughts.
| Area of game | Stats |
| Games | 20 |
| Pass accuracy | 92.9% |
| Duels won | 64.6% |
| Defensive contributions | 165 |
Wolves could potentially sell the Burkina Faso star for an up-front fee of £7m, so long as there is a hefty sell-on clause added.
To make the deal seem appealing, Gers could offer Wolves 20 per cent on any future sale of the player, plus performance-related add-ons.

Rangers already know they can make a big profit on Djiga, and though Wolves paid £10m to sign him, relegation could mean a cheaper sale for Rob Edwards’ side.
Djiga likely to force move due to wages
With this potential financial package, Wolves would get their money back and more over the long-term, with £7m most likely enough to fund a search for a replacement in the meantime.
The Bears already paid them a reported figure in loan fees to land the defender, which also can be subtracted from the money that Wolves initially paid for him.
However, with him coming to the Molineux at a young age from a much lesser division in Serbia, it’s highly likely that his wages are on the lower end of the spectrum.
That works for Rangers because they won’t have to necessarily pay him Premier League wages if he were to come back to Ibrox this summer, but it may also mean that he could seek a quick improvement on his salary by leaving.
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