Rangers' Raskin draws Serie A interest as Bologna open talks — transfer window opens across borders
Bologna have opened talks with Rangers over midfielder Nicolas Raskin, with Premier League clubs also circling the Belgian. The interest underscores how thinner scouting pipelines and tighter PSR rules are reshaping Europe's mid-market.
Bologna have opened formal talks with Rangers over midfielder Nicolas Raskin, according to BBC Sport's gossip column published at 07:06 UTC on 25 June 2026, with Premier League clubs in England also monitoring the Belgian international. The opening of negotiations — rather than a formal bid — signals the earliest stage of a window in which Scottish Premiership talent is once again being priced into cross-Channel deals before the English top flight has even finished its summer reset.
The Raskin file is a useful lens on a quieter reality of European football's mid-market: the scouting networks that once treated the Scottish league as a finishing school have thinned, but the league's wage base and Rangers' willingness to sell mean the pipeline still works — for a price. What has changed is who is willing to pay, and when.
Bologna lead, but the Premier League shadow is the real story
Bologna's approach is the visible move. The Italian club, freshly re-established in European competition under their current ownership and manager, have made the Belgian one of the first names on their summer shortlist. The Serie A side's model is now familiar: identify undervalued midfielders in physically demanding leagues, develop them inside a coherent tactical structure, and sell on at a multiple.
The shadow, however, is English. According to BBC Sport's same column, Premier League clubs are tracking the situation even as Bologna try to land the player. That parallel interest is the structural detail that matters: Italian clubs no longer operate in a market of their own. They are bidding into a single European pool where the Premier League's broadcast revenues set the marginal price for any player with a credible top-six ceiling.
That dynamic is not new, but it has sharpened in the 2025-26 cycle. Profit and Sustainability Rules have reduced the room for English clubs to stockpile options on long contracts. The response has been a move earlier in the window and a willingness to let foreign clubs do the developmental work, signing later or on structured deals with buy-back clauses.
What Raskin actually is — and isn't
The temptation in any transfer story is to read the destination as a verdict on the player. Raskin is a 25-year-old central midfielder who arrived at Ibrox in January 2023 from Standard Liège, an international with Belgium, and a player Rangers paid a fee reported at the time as the largest of their post-relegation rebuild. He is not, on any honest reading, a project. He is a finished top-flight operator whose ceiling is being tested.
What makes him attractive to a Bologna-type buyer is the package: positional discipline, ball-carrying under pressure, and a frame that holds up in Serie A's tactical density. What makes him expensive is the same thing Premier League scouts see — Premier League athleticism married to continental tactical literacy. Rangers, for their part, are not under pressure to sell before 30 June. They will price accordingly.
The Scottish league's structural position
The framing that matters here is not the transfer itself but the league's place in the food chain. The Scottish Premiership sits beneath the Premier League on broadcast revenue by a factor of roughly forty, beneath the Eredivisie on player-development revenue, and roughly level with the Belgian Pro League on European-coefficient points. Every transfer story out of Ibrox or Parkhead is, structurally, a story about a buyer in a richer league arbitraging a price set by a seller that cannot afford to say no at the right number.
That does not make Scottish football broken. It makes Scottish football a developmental tributary. The same tributary that produced Virgil van Dijk, Andy Robertson, John McGinn and Nathan Patterson continues to produce. What has changed is the speed: clubs at the top of the pyramid in England and Italy now identify targets two transfer windows earlier than they did a decade ago, and the asking prices have adjusted upward to reflect that.
What remains uncertain
Two questions are genuinely open. First, the fee. BBC Sport's column reports talks, not terms, and Rangers have not publicly set a price. Second, the destination. Bologna are credible but Premier League interest, even without a named club, is rarely idle in late June. Either outcome leaves Rangers in the same position: replacing a player whose resale value just got marked up by the market's behaviour. The structural pressure on the Scottish game does not move with this one deal — but it does become a little more legible.
Monexus treats this window as a data point on European football's mid-market rather than as a transfer rumour. The wire version leads on who is in talks; we are interested in who can afford to be.
