The Fort Worth Press - Fiji football legend returns home to captain first pro club

USD -
AED 3.672495
AFN 63.501471
ALL 83.072963
AMD 375.623475
ANG 1.790083
AOA 917.00026
ARS 1390.220498
AUD 1.447534
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.70702
BAM 1.695072
BBD 2.009612
BDT 122.428639
BGN 1.709309
BHD 0.377609
BIF 2964.709145
BMD 1
BND 1.2851
BOB 6.894519
BRL 5.157597
BSD 0.997742
BTN 92.939509
BWP 13.688562
BYN 2.956504
BYR 19600
BZD 2.006665
CAD 1.39245
CDF 2296.000206
CHF 0.798503
CLF 0.023224
CLP 917.000289
CNY 6.885601
CNH 6.883785
COP 3662.46
CRC 464.279833
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 95.56558
CZK 21.243197
DJF 177.673004
DKK 6.47623
DOP 60.312178
DZD 133.062353
EGP 54.2572
ERN 15
ETB 155.800822
EUR 0.866597
FJD 2.253795
FKP 0.750158
GBP 0.755625
GEL 2.685051
GGP 0.750158
GHS 10.970563
GIP 0.750158
GMD 74.000249
GNF 8752.513347
GTQ 7.632939
GYD 208.828972
HKD 7.83835
HNL 26.504427
HRK 6.530905
HTG 130.952897
HUF 333.138986
IDR 16998
ILS 3.136798
IMP 0.750158
INR 92.598303
IQD 1307.141959
IRR 1319125.000189
ISK 125.149716
JEP 0.750158
JMD 157.303566
JOD 0.708984
JPY 159.617504
KES 129.794813
KGS 87.448802
KHR 3990.137323
KMF 426.999768
KPW 899.994443
KRW 1507.020477
KWD 0.30934
KYD 0.831502
KZT 472.805432
LAK 21970.392969
LBP 89502.03926
LKR 314.804623
LRD 183.088277
LSL 16.955078
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.380628
MAD 9.374033
MDL 17.55613
MGA 4171.343141
MKD 53.422776
MMK 2099.621061
MNT 3572.314592
MOP 8.055104
MRU 39.637211
MUR 46.940105
MVR 15.460021
MWK 1730.071718
MXN 17.856596
MYR 4.033014
MZN 63.950312
NAD 16.954711
NGN 1378.25967
NIO 36.712196
NOK 9.734315
NPR 148.701282
NZD 1.75133
OMR 0.384545
PAB 0.997734
PEN 3.45194
PGK 4.316042
PHP 60.464505
PKR 278.39991
PLN 3.70718
PYG 6454.29687
QAR 3.638018
RON 4.417499
RSD 101.772347
RUB 80.207393
RWF 1457.240049
SAR 3.754249
SBD 8.038772
SCR 14.425806
SDG 601.000172
SEK 9.43173
SGD 1.28546
SHP 0.750259
SLE 24.650044
SLL 20969.510825
SOS 570.192924
SRD 37.35103
STD 20697.981008
STN 21.233539
SVC 8.730169
SYP 110.548921
SZL 16.948198
THB 32.646041
TJS 9.563492
TMT 3.51
TND 2.941459
TOP 2.40776
TRY 44.5833
TTD 6.768937
TWD 31.972943
TZS 2600.000206
UAH 43.698134
UGX 3743.234401
UYU 40.405091
UZS 12122.393971
VES 473.390498
VND 26342.5
VUV 120.132513
WST 2.770875
XAF 568.506489
XAG 0.013691
XAU 0.000214
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.798209
XDR 0.70704
XOF 568.516344
XPF 103.361457
YER 238.65028
ZAR 16.94973
ZMK 9001.198572
ZMW 19.281421
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • RELX

    0.3600

    33.59

    +1.07%

  • GSK

    0.7000

    56.69

    +1.23%

  • NGG

    1.1500

    87.99

    +1.31%

  • AZN

    2.7600

    203.49

    +1.36%

  • RYCEF

    0.9000

    15.99

    +5.63%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    22.04

    +0.23%

  • BTI

    0.3900

    58.28

    +0.67%

  • BCE

    -0.9300

    24.45

    -3.8%

  • RIO

    -0.3600

    94.45

    -0.38%

  • BCC

    -1.8800

    73.2

    -2.57%

  • BP

    0.9500

    47.12

    +2.02%

  • VOD

    0.0800

    15.21

    +0.53%

  • JRI

    0.0900

    12.61

    +0.71%

  • CMSD

    0.1100

    22.26

    +0.49%

Fiji football legend returns home to captain first pro club
Fiji football legend returns home to captain first pro club / Photo: © AFP

Fiji football legend returns home to captain first pro club

Roy Krishna is unfazed by the heat. "PNG will be hotter," the 38-year-old striker quips from the sidelines of a training pitch, his eye on fixtures in Papua New Guinea.

Text size:

Still, the muggy morning session has the Bula FC squad sweating heavily at the club's base in Ba, a town on Fiji's main island in a northern coastal area known for its sugarcane farms.

It is here that the country's greatest footballer of all time wants to pass on the lessons of an improbable career.

Just getting into professional football was "very hard", the Bula FC captain says.

He signed his first contract at the age of 26, transferring in 2014 to New Zealand-based side Wellington Phoenix to play in Australia's A-League.

That feat alone was remarkable for a player from Fiji, a footballing minnow that Krishna had left years earlier to play semi-professionally.

His 51 goals in just over 120 appearances for the Phoenix -- which included Golden Boot honours and the award for the league's best player -- earned him a place in Pacific football folklore.

- 'Don't go' -

A return home looked unlikely. But after six years in India, where he won a top division title and on three occasions finished as the league's joint-highest scorer, Krishna wanted to spend more time with his daughter in Fiji.

"She's just turned four and now she's having a proper conversation with me: 'Don't go, stay, where are you going?'," he says.

It helps that Fiji now has its first professional club, which only launched a few months ago.

Bula FC, where Krishna's wife is a senior executive, announced his signing in December for its participation in the inaugural season of the Oceania Football Confederation Pro League.

The FIFA-supported competition aims to help players from the likes of Vanuatu, the Solomon Islands and Tahiti forge careers in the world game.

Krishna has had to set the standards for a squad mostly made up of players who have never trained full-time.

"I wanted to tell them football is not just on the pitch, it's outside the pitch. How to look after yourself -- sleeping, the diet, what you eat, who you're hanging out with," he says.

"Here you think... you can go and drink kava and party the whole night and then come on Monday and train," he says, referring to the mildly intoxicating root drink that is traditional in the South Pacific.

"It doesn't work like that."

- 'Just smile' -

Head coach Stephane Auvray, 44, admits some were "a little clueless and naive" about the demands.

"We make a lot of stoppages (in training), so it gives us time to... make sure the players who need to be guided are guided," Auvray says.

One of those enjoying the input of Fiji's most-capped player is 16-year-old Maikah Dau, a softly spoken, silky midfielder whose father played alongside Krishna in the national team.

Dau, the youngest in the squad, says Krishna had given him plenty of encouragement.

"In the first game, he told me to go out there and just smile and just do what I do," he says.

Krishna says the players have a great opportunity to get "in the system" of professional football and "not just play in Oceania -- go abroad, go in Asia, go in Europe and follow your dreams".

"Anything is possible," he says, drawing on his own experience growing up in a rural farming community in Labasa, on Fiji's second-largest island.

"It doesn't matter where you live, in the island or in the interior or (where) there's no internet or nothing... it will only disappoint you if you don't work for it."

Krishna accepts he is entering his final playing years, even if physically he still has the same muscular build and low centre of gravity that have made him a robust but agile forward.

His advice for his younger teammates getting their first taste of professional football is simple. "I just want these young boys to enjoy every moment of it," he says.

S.Jordan--TFWP