Rangers will weigh up contract offers to Reece Wabara and Andy Halliday after seeing them feature in a closed-doors game against Tottenham.

The Ibrox squad head to Spurs' training ground on Friday as they continue their pre-season preparations under Mark Warburton's management.

Former Doncaster right back Wabara has been training with Rangers for the past 10 days, while Halliday – previously at Livingston, Middlesbrough and Bradford – has also been attempting to impress at Murray Park.

Rangers assistant manager David Weir (centre) says the club will weigh up contract offers in the coming days

Mark Warburton (centre) and his staff have had both Andy Halliday and Reece Wabara training with them

Rangers have so far added Danny Wilson, Rob Kiernan and Wes Foderingham to a squad which lost 11 players at the end of last season.

And assistant manager Weir feels they will be better positioned to decide whether Wabara and Halliday will join their ranks following the visit to London.

'Ideally we want to see these guys in a match situation and that works both ways,' said Weir. 'They'll want to have a look at us, too.

'Hopefully we can have a look at them this week and we'll take things from there.

Wabara left Manchester City in 2014, playing for Doncaster (pictured) for a season but is now without a club

Halliday, previously at Middlesbrough and Bradford (pictured) has also been training with Rangers

'It can't be an indefinite thing because the players coming here are looking for a contract. We need to get players in who can help the club. There has to come a point when a decision is made but, from our point of view, that ideally happens after a game.'

Rangers' season opens a fortnight on Saturday with a trip to face Championship promotion rivals Hibs in the Petrofac Training Cup.

The clock is ticking in terms of strengthening the squad, but Weir remains adamant they will not panic into making additions.

'I wouldn't say we're relaxed about it because it's a really important part of the job,' he added. 'We know there has to be additions but we want good quality additions and players who will help Rangers for a long time.

'Part of the reason we've got the job is perhaps we know a different market from the one Rangers may have been used to.

'We've been working in the (English) Championship and we know that league well. That's probably the market we are looking at but we're conscious of making good decisions and doing our homework with regard to new signings.

Warburton has been working his players ahead of their opening game of the season a fortnight on Saturday

Warburton (left, pictured alongside Weir) left Championship side Brentford at the end of last season

'We are working on getting players in. When we are at the stage when we've done it, we will talk about it then.

'Mark and I know the type of players we like. We know how we want to play and the type of players who will fit that style of play.

'It is different playing for Rangers, though, and that's why Danny Wilson was such a good signing. He's done it before here and we know he can do it again. Sometimes it can be difficult playing for Rangers, so to get someone like that is a big help.'

Moves to begin rebuilding the club's scouting network are only just starting after it was comprehensively dismantled during recent years. Rangers' last chief scout was former player Neil Murray, who departed in April 2013.

That situation is something Weir admits is a handicap in terms of the current recruitment drive.

'Scouting is a fundamental part of any football club and it's a big thing Rangers have lacked,' said the former club captain, who was helping promote the launch of public sale season tickets.

Weir admits a decision will be made on Wabara and Halliday after they have played against Tottenham

Warburton keeps a close eye on his Rangers players as they begin their gruelling pre-season regime

'The scouting structure hasn't been as thorough as it needs to be and my experience is that the best clubs have the best scouting structures. It is something that over a period of time the club needs to put in place.

'It is definitely one thing we are working on but there have been no changes as of yet.

'Is that having an impact on attempts to rebuild the squad? Yeah, it makes it harder obviously.

'If you have people and a structure in place that helps. But that takes time. It's important that with players we make the right decisions and it's the same staffing wise.'

The coaching team within Rangers is also being given an overhaul following the departure of fitness coach Jim Henry and first-team coach Gordon Durie.

Some Ibrox fans were critical of the sluggish nature of the team at times last season, as they finished third in the Championship before losing comprehensively to Motherwell in the Play-Off Final.

Warburton has swapped England for Scotland to begin a new challenge with Rangers in Glasgow

Weir (left) says fitness is a fundamental part of football in the modern age, and training has been intense

Weir wasn't about to offer an opinion on what went before, but made it clear that Warburton's style of play demands those under his command are in peak condition.

'All I can say is that fitness is fundamental to playing football in the modern age. All of our training sessions are intense. They are measured with set periods of time assigned to getting players to the fitness level we believe is needed.

'We have done that in the past couple of years with similar methods at Brentford and have decent results.

'A dynamic style of play is ideally what we want. We have youth and energy in the squad and people want to see effort.

'In terms of the coaching staff, we have to put our own stamp on it and work within our own parameters. Gordon has been a great servant to Rangers but it was just a case of his role coming under what Mark and myself do.