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Doing Nothing is the Hardest Thing You Can Do
On Alexander Volkanovski’s mental health struggles
As a first-generation Macedonian Australian, I’ve followed the career of Alexander Volkanovski closely.
Unlike the David Warners of the world, Volkanovski is one of few Australian sporting exports that I and many like me could truly identify with — and a UFC champion at that!
Up until a recent loss against Islam Makhachev, he was considered by many pundits the best pound-for-pound fighter in the world.
That said, despite the strong and charismatic exterior, Volkanovski held tears back at a post-fight press conference on the weekend, eluding to his struggles with mental health.
“It is hard, it really is hard for athletes, I never thought I’d struggle with it but for some reason when I wasn’t fighting or in camp … I was just doing my head in, I needed a fight.”
“I don’t know how, everything’s fine, I’ve got a beautiful family, but I think you just need to keep busy. That’s why I ask the UFC to keep me busy. I need to be in camp otherwise I’m going to do my head in.”