The National - News

Ambition and dreams push UAE women’s jiu-jitsu team

- AMITH PASSELA

Whoever said athletes are one-dimensiona­l? Meet the UAE women’s jiu-jitsu team, some of whose members aspire to become diplomats, medical doctors, aeronautic­al engineers and fighter pilots.

Members of the national team were among more than 1,000 competitor­s in action at Al Shaheed (Martyrs) Jiu-Jitsu Championsh­ip on Friday, with 108 medals up for grabs at the Mubadala Arena at Zayed Sports City in Abu Dhabi.

Hessa Al Shamsi, 17, who came out on top in the blue belt special Division 2, is a Grade 11 student at Janeli School in Al Ain. She hopes to one day serve her country as an ambassador.

Her teammates are just as ambitious.

Mahra Al Hanaei, 16, is focused on a career in medicine. Maitha Shirem, who clinched gold in the 52-kilogram category, is a year older and pursuing aeronautic­al engineerin­g.

And when Bashayer Al Matrooshi, also 17, is not busy pinning her opponents to the mat, she is aiming for the skies to become a fighter pilot.

“Me and my national team and Al Ain Club colleagues are all pretty good in our academics, and [we] have got similar goals to pursue on profession­al careers,” Hessa says, referring to fellow champions Bashayer and Mahra.

“Academics are very important, but we have no intentions of quitting jiu-jitsu that has given us so much joy,” the bronze-medal winner at the recent Abu Dhabi Grand Slam Rio de Janeiro adds.

“All of us want to become black belts and bring as many internatio­nal medals as possible for our country.”

With the Asian Games scheduled for August 18 to September 2 in the Indonesian capital of Jakarta, the women’s team are taking every competitio­n seriously to prepare for the continent’s biggest sporting event.

The next big competitio­n for them is the Grand Slam Abu Dhabi in January followed by the Grand Slam London in March and the Abu Dhabi World Profession­al Championsh­ip in April.

“Of course our federation will make arrangemen­ts for our preparatio­n for the Asian Games, but as individual­s we’ll take every tournament as part of our preparatio­n,” says Mahra, who claimed her second gold in a Grand Slam event when she won the juvenile blue belt in Rio de Janeiro.

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