Queens Park Rangers will be looking to get themselves a top ten finish this season and then build from that in the summer window.

Mark Warburton will be fairly content with what he has seen, too, and will be eager to try and add to his squad if he can with a few more players to really improve the depth that they have perhaps not got right now.

With that in mind, then, we're taking a look at some of the best players to have arrived at the club that do not hail from these shores.

They can be players that either arrived from a foreign country or simply just signed from a club in the UK but that were born further afield.

There are ten that we've picked, take a look at our list and see if you agree with our picks as well as thinking of your own potential selections...

Loic Remy wasn't at the club long but he really impressed during his time at QPR and that is why he's on the list.

Six league goals in 16 league games quickly got the attention of Newcastle United who took him on loan where he excelled further in the Premier League, with Chelsea then signing him up quickly on a permanent deal.

Indeed, it was a smart move from Rangers to sign him from Marseille but his impressive displays ended up being the cause behind his swift exit.

Junior Hoilett arrived from Blackburn Rovers in 2012 and was at QPR for four years before moving on to Cardiff City.

In that time, the winger showed his ability to score some fine long-range goals with him notching a total of 12 strikes from 112 league games up until 2016.

Injuries sometimes frustrated his time at QPR but he earned a slice of recent Hoops history with him providing the cross in the play-off final against Derby for Bobby Zamora to slam home, sending Rangers back to the Premier League.

Heidar Helguson scored 13 goals during the Championship-winning campaign in 2010/11 and also hit another nine goals the following year as Rangers just about remained in the Premier League on the final day.

The Icelandic forward was a hard-working presence that always put in 100% up top and achieved a bit of cult hero status during his time in west London.

He was also a real favourite at Watford during his playing days whilst he also spent time at Cardiff City towards the end of his career.

Akos Buzsaky was a real bright spark for QPR with him showing his quality in English football with Plymouth Argyle too.

The player joined QPR in 2008 and made over 100 league appearances between then and his departure in 2012.

He played for the likes of Portsmouth and Barnsley as well in his career in this country but it is his days in west London and the West Country that he best remembered for.

He also earned 20 caps for Hungary during his career.

Nahki Wells had a fine time during his years at QPR and replacing his goals was always going to be tough once he left the club.

Wells has scored goals for the likes of Bradford and Huddersfield during his time in England whilst a spell at Burnley did not perhaps go how he would have liked.

However, he arrived at Rangers with a point to prove and did that with 20 league goals in 66 league appearances across two loans.

Unfortunately, Rangers couldn't get a permanent deal done and Bristol City swooped.

Ilias Chair has hit the 100-appearance mark for Queens Park Rangers now and it seems unlikely that he's going to stop there.

The Belgian-Moroccan footballer arrived in 2017 from Lierse and has progressed nicely in the years since.

A spell at Stevenage on loan showed what he might be able to do and in the last couple of seasons he's started to come of age - particularly this season.

Indeed, if he can keep improving and learning he is going to become a really good player in the years to follow.

Alejandro Faurlin was a very clever, technical player in the middle of the park and really had his part to play in the Championship winning season of 2010/11, with him making 40 appearances in the league during that campaign.

In 2009/10, the year prior, he won the QPR Fans' Player of the Year award and that underlined how highly regarded he was at the club.

Injuries played their part in hampering him at times but on song he was a classy footballer in the middle of the pitch.

Kaspars Gorkšs was a rock at the back for Queens Park Rangers.

The Latvian defender helped the Hoops keep 25 clean sheets during their run to promotion in 2010/11 with his non-nonsense, committed performances at the back.

Indeed, he was a typical Neil Warnock centre-back and enjoyed a fine time in west London, whilst he was also a big figure in Latvian football during his playing days and remains so now.

He earned over 80 caps for Latvia during his playing career and has since served as the president of the Latvian Football Federation.

Massimo Luongo was a class player for Queens Park Rangers with his dominant displays in the middle of the park.

Sheffield Wednesday ended up signing him as they pushed for Premier League promotion but, of course, they are now fighting to stay in the Championship after a couple of tough years.

Even so, Luongo is a player that really brought quality to the QPR side during his time at the club and the Australian international should feel that his level is higher than League One if the Owls do end up dropping this year.

He made 145 league appearances for Rangers.

Adel Taarabt perhaps predictably tops the list.

The Moroccan born footballer spent a lot of his formative years as a player in this country with Tottenham signing him from Lens in 2007 when he was a teenager.

Of course, he never really got the chance to shine at Spurs but certainly did at Queens Park Rangers with countless jaw-dropping displays.

His trickery and mesmerising ability regularly embarrassed defenders and his starring role in promotion from the Championship in 10/11 may well never be forgotten by Hoops fans and supporters of other Championship clubs that saw him alike.