AFC Bournemouth are set to offer Scott a deserved new contract on improved terms to reflect his importance to the club, while Kroupi and Rayan do not have active release clauses this summer.
The Brazilian does have a €100million release clause in the deal he signed in January, but that is not active until the summer of 2027.
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Keeping Scott at the club is seen as one of the most important parts of the upcoming summer, but there is confidence at Bournemouth, with the players and agents involved, that those three players will remain at the club heading into next season.
They are likely to be in demand this summer after superb campaigns in a record-breaking season for the club.
(Image: Richard Crease)
Scott has forced his way firmly into the England conversation, while Kroupi set the record for the most goals from a teenager in a debut Premier League season and Rayan made a big impact since joining in January.
The intention of the club is to not sell any of their mainstay first team players, and financially they do not need to, while looking to bring in three or four new faces to the group in preparation for Europa League football.
Priorities will be a centre back to replace Marcos Senesi and possibly a striker, with Enes Unal likely to depart the club in the window.
(Image: Richard Crease)
Replacing Senesi will not be easy, but they are looking for ideally a left-footed central defender, or at least one who is comfortable playing on the left.
Bournemouth have spoken with Oliver Glasner at Crystal Palace and members of the board at Nottingham Forest over the demands of European football on a squad for a club of a similar size to the Cherries.
Much of the window will depend on what incoming boss Marco Rose sees in his first three weeks of pre-season, with a number of squad players he has not seen play many minutes, the likes of Julio Soler and Ben Gannon-Doak.
(Image: Richard Crease)
Bournemouth are aiming to have two players to fight for each position, with fitness seen as the key to a successful campaign next term both domestically and on the continent.
The level of the squad is not a concern to compete in Europe, with the likes of Alex Toth, Amine Adli and Veljko Milosavljevic, who were all not regular first team starters last term, having experience in Europe for their previous teams.
They feel they are in a good place for that at this stage, with potential European qualification in the back of their minds for recent recruitment.
That also applies to backroom staff, with Dr Robert Percy Marshall brought in last summer partly down to his experience with European football, and further staff hires from clubs who have played in continental competition.