Former Fulham striker Bobby Zamora has been passed fit to tonight face his old team-mates in a must-win game for QPR.
Zamora left Craven Cottage for Loftus Road in January 2012 but his former manager Martin Jol has few regrets at losing a player with a dubious fitness record.
'Bobby wanted to move,' said Jol ahead of the west London derby. 'He felt he could help QPR. Hopefully, after our game, he will help them. If he is fit he can help any team because he is a good striker.
'He has got all the qualities, but when Bobby was not there we had a problem up front and that is why we changed it and now we have Bryan Ruiz and Hugo Rodallega and Dimitar Berbatov and most of the time they are fit to select.'
QPR boss Harry Redknapp, meanwhile, has told Fulham fans that Zamora deserves a hero's welcome on his return to Craven Cottage.
Zamora's goals helped fire Fulham into the 2010 Europa League final and he spent four years at the club before moving to QPR in January 2010.
Redknapp despairs at the way modern-day football supporters abuse the players they once cheered - and he hopes Zamora gets the reception he deserves.
'I don't know why you should get stick when you go back to a club where you have done so fantastically well,' Redknapp said.
'I went to watch them play Juventus that night (in the Europa League). That was one of the best footballing nights I have ever been to.
'Fulham went 1-0 down and they were something like 4-1 down on aggregate (but came back to win 4-1 on the night) and Bobby ripped them to pieces.
'Years ago people would go back to their old club and they would get a lovely ovation. Dear oh Lord, what has happened?'
After starting the season with a bang, scoring four times in his first five matches, Zamora has only found the net once since last September.
But Redknapp believes his return to fitness after overcoming an ankle injury and a dose of the flu is vital to QPR's chances of Premier League survival.
'He is important to us. He holds the ball up, he knows what he is doing and he knows how to play. Going back to Fulham will be interesting for him,' Redknapp said.
Jol and Redknapp are big pals away from the managerial dugout, incidentally, but there will be precious little goodwill on show when their two teams meet at Craven Cottage tonight.
A win will place mid-table Fulham just one short of Jol's 40-point safety target while QPR, who lie second from bottom on goal difference, are scrapping for their Premier League lives.
'I have no preference [who goes down],' said Jol. 'But I won't say I would like them [QPR] to go down because I like Harry Redknapp - he's a fantastic man and good manager.
'At the end the league won't lie. They will fight to the end because there's still 24 points (to play for) and that's a lot.
Asked about his target, he said: 'The higher the better for the club and for the players, because some of them have bonuses in their contract if they are in the top six, top eight, top 10.
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