I must confess to have taken my time in writing about Aleksandar Mitrovic. As adults, we’re supposed to be smart. Heroes, especially those of a sporting variety, are for children. Loyalty as a concept should really be retired. Contracts aren’t worth the paper they are printed on. But occasionally along comes someone who seems different. I should know better. As a young fan, one of my first heroes was Louis Saha. He was sublime, skilful, French and fired Fulham to the top flight. After battling injuries and the rarefied air of the Premier League, it looked like his goals could carry Chris Coleman’s Whites to the Champions’ League. And then he was tapped up by Sir Alex Fergsuon. Saha threatened to go on strike – and score own goals – to get his move to Old Trafford.

He was a talismanic former Newcastle United centre forward, like Mitrovic. Fast forward twenty years and there’s speculation about the Serbian striker, who has carved out a very special place in Fulham folklore, wanting to secure a big-money move to Saudi Arabia. The hulking striker, supported by the club and its supporters through a period after he lost control whilst the Whites were winning an FA Cup quarter final at Manchester United, has – if you believe Sky Sports News – indicated that he feels the time is right for Fulham to accept an offer from Al-Hilal for his services. There’s no doubt Mitrovic has repaid the £22m Fulham paid for his services in 2018, but this isn’t a move to further his career – like Saha’s. Nobody could argue that the sportswashing Saudis will help him become a better player: this is all about cold, hard cash.

Mitrovic’s goals have been both a key component of Fulham’s return to the top flight, as he broke the second-tier post-war goalscoring record during Marco Silva’s first season in SW6, and one of the reasons why they comfortably survived last time. It feels a little bit premature for a forward still so adept at scoring to put his bank balance first – especially when he’s scored 111 goals in 204 games and has a decent shot at overhauling the club’s record goalscorer Gordon Davies. Do Fulham deserve more having given a mistrusted hothead a chance to establish himself again after he had been frozen out by Rafa Benitez? Possibly, but I didn’t think Mitrovic would remain with the club after one relegation, never mind two.

Fulham’s stance in response to repeated bids from Al-Hilal is that the player isn’t for sale. That’s the correct public position. Mitrovic is so crucial to the way that Silva’s side plays that selling him for anything short of his value would be malpractice – and a shrewd businessman like Shahid Khan hasn’t become successful by doing that. Then, there’s the impact a sale would have on a squad that is already smaller than it was three weeks ago. For one thing, number nines like Mitrovic are a throwback and not easily obtainable. Buying proven Premier League strikers will cost money, especially right at the start of the season. Confirmation that the Cottagers are a selling club could leave the likes of Silva – or even Joao Palhinha – to consider their future.

The silly season, as we’ve written about before, is always full of frenzied and inaccurate takes. But this summer always felt pivotal for Fulham. They could build on a brilliant first campaign back in the top tier, back a head coach who has swiftly restored stylish football to the Cottage and proven himself amongst English football’s elite, and make good on Khan’s ambition in his tenth year of owning London’s oldest professional football club. With under a week to go until the start of the Premier League Summer Series, a flagship opportunity to market Fulham on American soil, they have failed to do so. Silva has not put pen to paper on his new contract as the Portuguese boss waits to see whether the club’s ambition matches his own. Perhaps he has already got his answer.

The fans, of course, are left until last with clubs considered commodities these days. The fans who ultimately empower owners to spend so much on footballers because they’ll dutifully buy those tickets, programmes, replica strips and everything else pumped own by their beloved club. How many of you reading this are delighted that you splashed out on those season tickets – increased by an average of 18.5% during a cost of living crisis – with the club still yet to sign a senior player this summer? The chairman should be praised for his generosity, the rebuilding of a Riverside Stand that remains unfinished, apparently and not question why it is that the long-term future of the club’s head coach, leading scorer and the strengthening of a squad that needs reinforcement haven’t been advanced over the summer months. Pull the other one.

There are questions too for Mitrovic here. He’s a cult hero at Craven Cottage, a place he was happy to proclaim as home earlier this year, but if he is seeking to force through a move to Saudi Arabia as his team-mates prepare for the new season then that might not last long. He might be able to set aside the fact that torture is used as punishment, executions are on the rise, there’s no free speech or protests, women are discriminated against and migrant workers are deported en masse but no amount of sportswashing will make these things vanish. All those goals were glorious but how you leave matters. To exit in this fashion would stand in stark contrast to Joe Bryan’s recent departure, for instance. Mitrovic might even endanger his international career by seeking to join his mate Sergej Milinkovi?-Savi? in Saudi Arabia.

Who knows what the true position is? Will Mitrovic agitate for the move he is apparently so attracted to? Will Fulham be forced to sell? The football club will outlive owners and centre forwards and even ourselves eventually. It isn’t an exact parallel but I remember people suggesting that the sale of Ross McCormack would be disastrous. Slavisa Jokanovic, a man whose role in enticing Mitrovic to Fulham in the first place is always underwritten, then constructed one of the most watchable Whites’ sides I’ve ever seen. Whether those in charge of the club’s recruitment can sign a striker fit to succeed the current occupant of the number nine shirt might be the most pertinent question over the next few weeks. For Fulham’s sake, let’s hope it isn’t.