Rangers have received an approach for the sale of Oliver Antman despite him being at Ibrox only for a season.
Danny Rohl is open to parting ways with Antman should an offer arrive that meets the club’s valuation.
Rangers paid £3.5m to sign the 24-year-old 12 months ago, so they will likely look to recoup that money or even make a profit from his sale.
How much should Rangers demand for Oliver Antman?
He is a man in demand this summer…
Club Brugge make approach to sign Oliver Antman
Belgian side Club Brugge have made an approach to secure the services of Antman on a permanent basis this summer, according to Transfer Feed.
It has been claimed that the Gers are reportedly open to negotiating with Brugge over a transfer fee in the coming weeks.
Despite him being contracted at Ibrox until 2029, the Light Blues are willing to cash in on the Finland international after an underwhelming first season at the club.
In 28 games, the 24-year-old managed to score just one goal and he also provided five assists.

Why Rangers keeping Antman may not be the worst thing this summer
Despite Brugge’s interest in Antman, there still remains a strong case for keeping him at Rangers.
Brugge are a club renowned for spotting undervalued gems and flipping them for huge profits, and there is no reason why the Gers cannot do that.
Writing him off after one season in which the manager who signed him was sacked within months may be a tad premature.
Also, with Lawrence Shankland arriving as a prolific poacher, having the Finland international’s creativity may not be the worst thing in the world.
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Antman boasts the best assist-per-minute ratio in Scotland among players with 4+ assists this season (5 assists at 1 every 252 minutes), ahead of several higher-volume creators.
Despite not being a first-team regular, he has already shown his sharp and creative output.
Had he played a full 45-game season at that rate, there’s a high chance that he would be close to the top of the assist charts, yet many overlook this due to limited game time.
Pairing him with Shankland could be transformative as the Scotland international is a clinical finisher who converts the big chances Ryan Naderi and Youssef Chermiti have squandered.


