For Macedonian born and Melbourne resident Nikola Markovski the road to playing in
Victorian football has been a part of a greater journey that has seen him
constantly challenged to be the best player he can be. His journey has seen him play with a number
of Victorian clubs while establishing a Football Academy focused on skills
training. Sit back and enjoy Nikola’s take on life in football.
Football is:
So, tell me how you started in
football.
Nikola Markovski:
With football, I was pretty
young and I started as a six year old with a local club. The biggest club in my
city is FK Pelister who have produced a lot of good players, who have gone on
to play in many of the top leagues in Europe. I start like a goalkeeper. My
father was goalkeeper for 20 years and I wanted to follow his footsteps playing
in this position but one day, I remember the coach played me as a striker. I did
very well and from that moment, I realised that my body structure is not suited
to play as a goalkeeper. So, I start playing as a striker.
Football is:
How old were you when you
became a striker?
Nikola Markovski:
I was nine years old.
Football is:
So, from the age of nine, you
were playing football. When you were at school, did you have another career in
mind or was it always football?
Nikola Markovski:
Outside of football I did one
and a half years of traditional Japanese Judo for fitness. I was lucky to get an
opportunity at the age of 16 to get in the senior system. That's pretty early
and I had one trial in the Macedonian, Albanian team. It’s name Baskimi and I
remember their coach called me up for trials. I was there training for a couple
days and then I was signed. The club were looking to a UEFA spot and the coach pulled
me aside and said, ‘Listen, you are pretty young. You’re lucky to be part of
the squad but don't expect that you will start because we have a lot of players
with experience, so enjoy the experience and learn from it.’ I trained a couple
extra weeks with them and they sent me into their second division. Before I got
an opportunity with the senior squad, I was in the Junior League and became one
of the top ten strikers in all country.
After that, I went to the Academy
Hristov. This lead to me playing in the Macedonian second division for two to
three years, where I developed myself as a player and got the opportunity to go
play in Greece and Italy. During my first year, I struggled with some visa issues.
As Macedonia is not part of the European Union, the cost of the visa was
expensive. So unless you were a really, really good player, the club wouldn’t
give you a spot. While I was waiting for my visa to be confirmed, I didn't have
the right to play for six months and after that when I got my visa, there was only
six or seven games left in the season. I scored a couple of goals and next season
I start from the beginning. So that year I won the MVP award six times and was
the top striker in the league.
Football is:
So, how old were you at this
time?
Nikola Markovski:
23. Yeah, at 23 years old, I
had played 26 games and scored 23 goals.
It was a good journey. I won
all the awards that year and had the opportunity to go higher. So, I progressed
to the second Greek second division. It was a good opportunity for me. I had a
trial in Albania with Skënderbeu - they played against Dinamo Zagreb. I left
after six weeks due to issues with my agent and decided to return to play in the
Macedonia First League with my first club, FK Pelister, I played there for one
year.
I’ve had mixed success with
managers and this has affected my career. If you have a good manager but you are
an average player, you can be successful. If you’re a good player with bad management,
you can finish playing Division Two. I know a lot of average players who have done
very well with a good agent. So, there is good luck, there is a bit of luck.
When I returned to Macedonia,
I met my wife. She came for holiday and everything's changed after that.
Football is:
When you spend all that time
at a fairly young age away from home and you're playing in a different system
to what you play at home, how did it affect you when you went back to Macedonia?
Nikola Markovski:
When I came back home and I
start playing in the seniors with FK PeIister, it was a dream come true. I always
dreamed to be part of this squad and part of the club my father played for. So,
that means a lot to me. You can play everywhere in the world but at FK Pelister,
I felt the passion from the supporters. I must mention the supporters, they are
called the Čkembari – they are an active supporter group and they have the biggest
crowd in Macedonia. So, as a player, it's unfair to give them less than a hundred
percent. Last year they played against Wisła Krakówin Poland in the UEFA Champions
League. I have friend at the club and when I go back now for a holiday, I'll go
there and train with them.
Football is:
So, how did you end up in
Australia?
Nikola Markovski:
My wife is born here. She's
Australian and she misses her family. Macedonia is a little bit of a poorer
country with a lot of political problems. My wife felt uncomfortable at times
and I said okay, we should move to Australia and I’ll try to find somewhere to
play. Maybe it's going to change everything and that's why we decided to relocate
to Australia. Honestly, when I arrived I was little bit shocked – I didn't have
connections, nothing, and one member of my family gave me a contact at Melbourne
Victory. I sent my CV there. They return my email and said that I would cost
them a visa spot and that as I wasn’t a marquee player, they couldn’t use that
spot on me. They said that if I got my permanent residency that maybe they
could give me a chance to trial. But by the time I got my permanent residency, three
years had passed. It was a really long time. I was so confused and then a friend
come up to me and said, ‘Look, not far from your house is a club. So, why don’t
you go try there? They play NPL.’ I didn't know what NPL was and when I got there,
it was Green Gully SC. When I walked in it had a pretty good setup and I fell
in love with the club because they had the same colors as my old club, white
and green. And I spoke with the coach and he gave me a chance. I spoke with Roddy
Vargas. I met him there. A couple of
days later we played a friendly against Port Melbourne, and I scored a hat-trick
and next morning, I was signed.
Football is:
So, when you were dating
your wife, how difficult was it for her to understand what you do?
Nikola Markovski:
She understands. I really
appreciate my wife because she supports me in every moment, what I'm doing and
she said ‘Look, it’s better to see you happy and for you to do something that
you want to do and do well and I will support you. It doesn't matter where football
takes you. I'm with you’ and she said she would give her full support to me. I
respect my wife and that's why I married her because she understands me a lot
and she motivates me. She has always said she believes in me. That support is a
big part of the marriage because if you have someone who doesn’t understand you
and what you’re doing – especially playing soccer – it's very hard to perform and
be a good player, because mentally you’re not focused on the game. You're going
to be focused on other stuff. As a couple, you need to have a good understanding
about what is important to both of you. Otherwise, it just won’t work.
Football is:
What do you think is the
biggest sacrifice that you've had to make?
Nikola Markovski:
I had an opportunity to work
with good company full time at the airport but I sacrificed that job just to
stay focused on football. I can’t live without soccer. My wife has also sacrificed
the time we spend together. For example, we don’t always spend our holidays
together because in summer my pre-season starts and that will usually mean we
can’t go away together.
Football is:
So, after you joined Gully,
you then moved to Northcote City. How would you compare playing in the NPL to
your experience playing overseas?
Nikola Markovski:
Honestly, the NPL is nearly
about ten years away from getting closer to the highest league in Europe, even
the third division in Europe is more professional. It's full-time. Here you
must change the system of training. They must train more and more of the teams
need to be full-time. Some of players in the NPL get frustrated when they come to
a training session tired and can’t perform very well. That's the biggest difference
between Australia and Europe. In Europe, for example, if you are in the third or
second division you still get a big crowd to the game. The atmosphere is very
different and you feel pressure from the crowd. It's a very different system
and when I came here to play in the NPL, I was confident I could do well. All
games are like a training session because there are not many supporters at a
match. I enjoy myself, no pressure, train three times a week, I think it is a
big difference.
Football is:
Tell me a little bit about how
you ended up at Altona Magic, especially during 2016?
Nikola Markovski:
I met Igor the president of
the club and he ran through the history of the club and where they hoped to be
in a couple of years. Honestly, Magic is one of the clubs that could win the
Premier League competition and in time, they can do really, really well. Being
a club with a Macedonian heritage, I decided to try and help these guys to get
promotion from State League to NPL. Some people asked me why I didn’t join Preston
who are also a Macedonian club. I felt Magic was a good club with good people. If
you’re a player, you can’t be with two clubs you must go left or right. That's
why I chose Magic. It has a good bunch of players and a good team spirit.
The club has experienced
players who have come from teams across the NPL. We’ve done very well. We won the championship.
We won the grand final. The atmosphere at the club was different because after a
training session, you stayed behind, you would have a chat with your teammates
and fans. Also, you can train in your own language.
Football is:
Moving forward, what are you
focused on outside of playing?
Nikola Markovski:
In 2015, I opened my Academy
called the MVP Academy. I started with six to seven kids. The kids are given an
award for their achievement. When I give them an award, that's one motivation
for every kid to work hard. For my academy I start doing something not many
coaches do here. A lot of our focus is on co-ordination, ball work and technique.
I teach the kids how to play football – less focus on fitness, more on intelligence.
So, they are understanding the game because playing soccer is not just about
being fit. You need to be very smart and like I said, you need to understand
the game and learn to read the game. For me, it's more important to be tactical
and intelligent than fit. You can see in the Serie A, the Italians, they play until
the age of 39 years old, 40, 41. Not because they are fit like a 23-year-old
but because they're smart. They know how to play football and that's my
inspiration. I start doing agility stuff, also one-on-one sessions, like games
to start working your mind, extra work with your mind.
Football is:
So, now your next three
months, you're going to head overseas again and you were telling me that’s to
get your B license. So, what's involved in achieving that for you and why do
you feel going overseas for that is going to help you?
Nikola Markovski:
My first goal is to go
overseas and try to then set up a tournament for my academy so these kids get
that professional experience and to hit some clubs hard. This will give kids an
opportunity to see what level they are because a lot of the kids here, they don’t
know, especially what's happening in Europe. That's why I Iike to set up that
trial to go for a couple of weeks there to be part of the biggest academy, play
friendlies and gain experience playing in a different system, I want to get my B-license
as it will help me to improve myself as a coach, to become a coach, to take one
team, build something from their experience to bring here in Australia. So, not
many clubs to have that one. So, that’s my goal.
Football is:
Do you think that will be
part of what's needed for kids here to actually understand how good they have
to be if I they want to play overseas?
Nikola Markovski:
That's my main objective, to see
the level of the kids, to see if they can play there or not or we stay here and
work more and try to go to Asia, or somewhere with a similar system to ours because
in Europe, the level is higher. If you want to be a professional football player,
that's the place to be. I remember Jacob Elipoulos from Northcote City, when we
trained together, he play on my side and always I told him ‘Man, you are a good
player. Don't waste your time here’. At every training session I’d tell him to
find an agent and go to Europe.
Football is:
You've had the experience of
relocating into Europe to play your sport. You've had the experience of coming
to Australia, moving your whole life here. For a young player that's growing up
in Australia that then has to go overseas to Europe with no family maybe and no
connections there, what do you think is the biggest challenge for them when
they relocate?
Nikola Markovski:
The biggest challenge for
the kid will be in his mind. They have to remember why they have chosen to move
away from home: ‘I must do this if I want to play professionally, if I would like
my dream to come true, then I must do this’. It’s about your mental strength. They
have to believe that it doesn't matter what's going to happen. In some
countries, you can’t eat the food, you can't understand the language but this
is a hard industry. If you don’t like to play professionally, you can stay at home.
No one's pushing, no one's there but in order for the really, really big stars
to become big, they will gamble everything for their dream. That’s the mental
preparation to go there and it makes you stay there.
Football is:
How much of it, especially when
you're younger, do you think is the actual physical ability versus the mental ability?
Nikola Markovski:
80% is mental and 20% is physical.
The mind makes up a large portion of how successful you are in anything in
life. A strong mind will drive success. Sometimes a good player will give up
because mentally they don’t have the strength to persevere and work through the
hard games or training session. But then the guy who’s behind him who may not
be as talented but who never gives up, ends up going on to be successful. That's
reality. You set up your mentality like a soldier. That mentality is a successful
mentality. If you’re thinking always in your mind ‘I'm too good, I'm too good’,
you go nowhere.
Football is:
Do you think the opportunity
for young players in Australia is better focused on heading overseas or for
them to try and break into the A-League?
Nikola Markovski:
I think before they go
overseas, they need to test themselves in the A-League or play against them and
if they can play, then can try Europe or Asia. If they can't, that means they
still are not ready for that challenge
Football is:
What do you think is the
biggest failings of the system we have here in Australia?
Nikola Markovski:
Not invest in youth system
and relegation promotion system, including the A-League. Australia needs a strong
second division because at the moment it’s not enough spot for pro players and
coaches with an A Licence, Also, there’s a need to change the visa rules to be
not less then 4 players per team, so the competition is stronger!
Football is:
Nikola, finish this sentence
football is…?
Nikola Markovski:
For me, football is more
than a game, it’s my life. So, you choose to be different from anyone else, you
choose to be something who not many people can be. If you’re a team player, you’ll
succeed. If you’re selfish, if you don’t like to share things with the people
and you’re too arrogant and don’t know how to be good in a group, you can’t be
in this industry. You become one with football, or you stay away.
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