That's how I see it too Pete.
I wish I could think like that.
Unfortunately I can't think that way.
Something happened to me in June 1976 that changed my belief in Sheffield United Football Club. We sold the best player we've ever had to Leeds United. That was like losing your wife to the bloke next door. Up until then I felt very differently about my club. It was like a big family - we knew, or at least, we felt we knew, every player personally. The team was the same, week in, week out. Hodgkinson, Badger, Hemsley, Flynn, Colquhon, Hockey, Woodward, Salmons, Dearden, Currie, Reece, (give or take the odd change due to injuries/suspensions). Players notched up hundreds of appearances for their clubs back in those days - there was a sense of "loyalty" from player to club, and from club to player. Same with managers. Managers spent decades at one club. It was a different world.
When Currie was sold to Leeds there was uproar, to put it mildly. I remember being driven past the ground and seeing it daubed in graffiti cursing the Board for the sale of Currie. I remember hearing of fans nailing their season ticket books to the gates of the club. And I remember the supporters club bus which took fans from our village to the match, being half empty in the weeks that followed his sale. "That's it - I'm finished with them" - was a phrase I heard from long-standing supporters. "Always been a bloody selling club - always will!".
Sheffield United FC broke "The psychological contract" with its fans when they did that. That was the thin end of the wedge of course, since then we've sold other outstanding players (though none of TC's quality) to Leeds, such as Gary Hamson, Alex Sabella, Keith Edwards. For some, this breach of trust between Sheffield United FC and the fans started even earlier than this, with the sale of Mick Jones to Leeds (but that was just before my time).
This is why I don't get attached to any players - not at all. I don't worship or adore them. I don't make songs up about them. I don't go seeking their autographs or having my photo taken with them. I appreciate them for what they are - providers of entertainment on a football field. And the admiration stops there. I fully expect that any player who is any good at all will not play for Sheffield United for very long. We'll snap someone's hand off the first time a decent sum of money is offered. So, my attitude is, enjoy them whilst they are here - because they won't be here for long if they are any good.
I think this is exactly the situation with Brooks and quite possibly the main motive behind cancelling his season long loan to Chesterfield. I hope I am wrong, because I've no doubt that Brooks will be worth an awful lot more to United in a few years time than he is now. Don't sell your stock when the price is low - if you are going to sell, then sell high, and holding onto Brooks for another couple of seasons will make a massive difference both on the field and later in the bank account.