Fulham manager Scott Parker is shaping his squad at Craven Cottage as he prepares for life in the Championship next season, and he will not stand in the way of 31-year-old goalkeeper Fabri moving back to Besiktas if they act on their alleged interest, as reported by Turkish media outlet Fanatik.

Fabri has had a disappointing spell at Craven Cottage only making two appearances in the Premier League last season following a summer from the Turkish giants.

So are Fulham making a good call by letting Fabri move on?

We discuss.........

George Brooks

"I think so.

"Fabri only played two games for Fulham last season and still conceded five goals.

"He was never really given a proper chance to make an impact at Craven Cottage and I think moving back to Besiktas would be a good option for him.

"He's already got plenty of experience in Turkey and could be able to make an impact, whereas it's difficult to tell whether he'd be able to make an impact in the Championship next season.

"Fulham will be hoping to challenge for promotion next season and they need a good goalkeeper.

"Fabri is yet to make an impact in English football, so it could be a bit of a risk playing him and moving him on makes sense."

Kealan Hughes

“Fulham have two good goalkeepers in Sergio Rico and Bettenelli so there is little chance Fabri will get a look in.

“Added to that, the club have been linked with former keeper Neil Etheridge, and if he was to sign he would undoubtedly be the no.1.

“Fabri is a good goalkeeper but he had never really shown it in England for a variety of reasons, and Fulham would benefit more from the money they get from his sale than from him playing.”

Gary Hutchinson

“Absolutely, I can’t see what he’s offered to them at all.

“He played twice in the Premier League last season. He’s been a huge flop and players like him eroded the spirit of the side that got them promoted.

“Too much was changed. Jokanovic had a good side 12 months ago but players like Fabri came in and it got diluted. That’s why they came down.

“He’s done nothing in England and the sooner they shift the wage on, the better. That money can be spent on players from these shores who will understand the English game and perhaps more pertinently, the second tier.”