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The agreements cover Fatima Al Suwaidi, an under-21 shooting athlete, along with Mona Al Sharaa and Samiya Odinayeva, both under-18 archers. All three fall under UAETSS's "Pathway for Sports Champion" programme, which the committee uses to identify and support national talent across a range of sports.
The agreements were signed by Sheikh Suhail bin Butti Al Maktoum, assistant undersecretary for the Sports Development and Competitiveness Sector at the Ministry of Sports and chairman of UAETSS, and Hanan Al Mahmoud, vice chairperson of the Sharjah Women's Sports Foundation, in the presence of the athletes, their parents, and several officials from the ministry and the foundation.
Sheikh Suhail said the agreements reflect the committee's commitment to widening the talent pool for women in individual sports and to building an integrated environment that helps athletes sharpen their skills, strengthening the presence of Emirati women on the international sporting stage.
He added that targeted partnerships under the "Pathway for Sports Champion" programme help the committee invest in promising talent early, offering a complete development pathway that runs from the earliest stages through to top-level competition — supporting a generation of female athletes capable of representing the UAE and flying its flag at major sporting events.
The Ministry of Sports and UAETSS also paid tribute to the pioneering role played by Her Highness Sheikha Jawaher bint Mohammed Al Qasimi, wife of the Ruler of Sharjah and Chairperson of the Sharjah Social and Family Affairs Council, in supporting women's sport and nurturing athletic talent and in helping build a professional environment that prepares athletes to compete and achieve results.
Hanan Al Mahmoud said the partnership with UAETSS strengthens the alignment of national roles and unifies long-term strategic planning for talented athletes, ensuring support is channelled towards clear, sustainable development pathways consistent with approved technical plans. She added that the foundation runs an integrated development system covering technical, physical, psychological, nutritional and technological aspects, with the new agreements helping to coordinate support for training programmes, camps and competitive appearances, in conjunction with the relevant national federations, to keep athletes ready to represent the UAE national teams.
Al Mahmoud noted that selecting three athletes from Sharjah Women's Sports Club in shooting and archery underlines the importance of investing in promising talent within sports that demand precision, discipline and sustained commitment to training and development.
So what does each side actually bring to the table? UAETSS is putting up the money — funding the athletes' development programmes and the support services that go with them. It will also keep an eye on progress, reviewing the technical plans, checking in on results, and measuring how much difference the support is actually making.
The Sharjah Women's Sports Foundation, meanwhile, is handling the day-to-day side of things: planning camps, tournaments and trips abroad, tracking how the athletes are performing, and pulling together the data and reports that go with it. On top of that, the foundation is providing the broader support system that the athletes need to stay competition-ready and keep progressing over the long run.