Wylde and Celik walk out on Rangers

Gregg Wylde and Mervan Celik have become the first players to leave financially stricken Scottish champions Rangers after administrators rejected a proposal by the squad to have wages deferred.

Midfielders Wylde, 20, and Celik, 21, had their offers for voluntary redundancy with no pay-off accepted.

Administrators Duff and Phelps were meeting Rangers players at the club’s Murray Park training ground on Tuesday in a final bid to reach agreement on wage cuts, with the club reported to be needing monthly savings of STG1 million ($A1.5 million).

“I volunteered to walk with no redundancy package today to help the other people in the club who have families, like the kitchen staff,” Wylde told BBC Scotland.

“I offered to walk away yesterday and the club told me today that they would accept that offer.

“At the moment I have nowhere to go and I don’t have another club.

“I don’t know what is going to happen next but I thought it was important to play my part in saving Rangers.”

Celik is a Sweden Under-21 midfielder who moved to Ibrox from Gothenburg club GAIS on a three-and-a-half-year deal in January.

In a statement released late on Monday, Paul Clark, a joint administrator of Rangers, said: “Everyone involved in the administration process has been attempting to reach a consensual solution in regard to job losses within the playing squad.

“The prime reason for this has been to achieve essential cost savings while preserving the fabric of the first team.

“Regrettably, it has not been possible thus far to reach a consensus where players could accept the necessary level of wage cuts to prevent job losses within the squad.

“We do not for a moment criticise the players for this as the wage reductions that would be required are very substantial and would have a significant impact on each individual.

“For clarity, we cannot enforce wage cuts. The players have to agree to this course of action.”

Rangers were placed in administration last month after British tax authorities went to court to see payment of an unpaid bill of STG9 million.

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