Inés Semino: “Fulfilling collective objectives is the most rewarding”
The Pucará club inaugurated its first water court in early September, and the captain of the strip A, Inés Semino, spoke with AM850.com about what it means to her and for the club.
“It is a huge joy. We work hard to achieve it and that it is completed fills us with pride.”Said the player. The Burzaco Club has four strips, from A to D, each with its lower categories, two teams in projection, 10th and school. The number of players he has is a lot and what they achieved will involve a quality leap for hockey in the club.
At one time during the opening of the court, the smallest players ran around the largest, to the breath that they were the ones who were going to play in the future thereto which Inés commented: “For them it will be normal, but it remains in us to convey the effort and work behind, and that things do not happen because someone comes and puts them, but you have to plan, have a clear objective and work to achieve it.”
Pucará A is in the fourth position of the C2 Metropolitan Tournament, a contest that has a very high competitiveness, and you can not only see in the table, but in what is at stake. The first two of each area ascend directly, but the second also have chances, and the new court will give them a dynamic that are not the sand. “We have to take advantage of this surface. While we were training and playing in the Olympic Park this last time, this will give us more rhythm.” He also added that he would like to be able to take advantage of the new surface and finish in the first two places in the standings.
A water court is some dream but it is also something that allows you to continue dreaming big. “I would love that this will be in the A, it is not me the one that is on the court, but those who can hopefully have the opportunity to experience it.” But also what they achieved is something that does not happen overnight, but it was something that they all did together, as a club, after a lot of hard work. The prettiest reward. “The legacy that I would like to leave is to meet collective objectives is much more important, nice and rewarding than fulfilling personal achievements,” Inés ended.
