Rangers saw a total of seven players leave the club in the January transfer window.
Danny Rohl saw the board help him rebalance the squad as four new players moved to Ibrox over the last month.
Rangers have seen their new signings thrive, and Rohl will hope that they can deliver when it matters most and guide the team to their 56th SPFL title.

Mason Munn could follow Rabbi Matondo out the door
Rabbi Matondo is in talks to leave Ibrox six months before his contract expires.
The Welshman’s deal at the Govan outfit runs until the end of the season, but it is understood that he could part ways with them in the coming days.
That would take the total winter departures to eight, but there could be yet another player who follows him out the door.
Mason Munn has returned from his loan spell at Dunfermline, despite being initially contracted to be there until the end of the season.

The Gers hierarchy made a behind-the-scenes call and exercised the option to recall him in the January transfer window.
The decision was made taking his game time into consideration, as the Northern Ireland international needs to be playing regularly to develop.
At the Scottish Championship outfit, the 19-year-old played eight games, starting the first six matches of the season.
However, since the end of October, he has either been named on the bench or has been left out of the matchday squad altogether.
With him back at Ibrox, Rangers could look to loan him out again before the end of February, as there are expected to be takers in the second tier of Scotland.

What has been said about Rangers hot prospect Mason Munn?
Former Celtic manager Neil Lennon is in charge of Dunfermline and stated that his return to Glasgow was in the best interests of all parties.
As Lennon did not envisage starting him ahead of first-choice goalkeeper Deniz Mehmet, who recently returned from injury, he believes that an exit made sense for the Northern Ireland international.
He said: “Mason’s a young goalkeeper, on his first loan. There’s going to be highs and lows. I hope he’s learned something from the experience and it will stand him in good stead.
“I’m sure he’ll want to go out and play again. For us, it was probably best to let him go back because he’s third choice at the minute.”
BBC Scotland pundit Richard Foster also watched Munn back in 2024, representing the Under-18s and was blown away by the young keeper’s ability between the sticks.
He said: “What a save. What an unbelievable save.
“It’s so poor from, I think it’s Connor Campbell, [who] just leaves the ball [and] Leyton Grant is then in all kinds of trouble – expects his mate to go and head it.
“Tell you what, [Bavidge] gets away a fantastic strike – that is an unbelievable save. That should be two each.”
