Paris 2024 Women's Football: Caldentey of Spain says, We want to play at the Olympics with the right conditions.

The two eventual champions will compete in the Paris 2024 Olympics are Spain and Switzerland. Spain defeated Sweden on Friday and will play Switzerland on Tuesday in the Nations League group stage.

Paris 2024 Women's Football: Caldentey of Spain says, "We want to play at the Olympics with the right conditions."

In order for the women's squad to compete at the Olympic Games in 2016, Mariona Caldentey, a forward for Spain, said on Monday that she believes "the conditions we think we deserve" would be met.

After disgraced former president of the Spanish football federation, Luis Rubiales, kissed a player after La Roja won the Women's World Cup in August, a players' strike threatened to ruin the team's ambitions of making it to the Paris Games in 2024.

Many of the players called up for Nations League matches stayed on strike, demanding more reforms within the federation, until a compromise was reached last week between the two parties and the Spanish government. Rubiales resigned from his position earlier in September following extraordinary uproar.

After kissing Jenni Hermoso, a midfielder who wasn't on the team, on the lips, the former head of the federation is accused of sexual assault.

In the Nations League group stage, Spain will play Switzerland on Tuesday after defeating Sweden on Friday; the winners will compete in the Olympics.

Caldentey stated during a news conference, "We want things to keep moving forward, to keep getting better, and we'll keep fighting for the same thing.

"We don't want what happened to happen again; these have been really stressful days, and we want to win so that we may compete at the Olympics in the conditions we believe we deserve.

We hope that all works out, that we're on a calmer route, and that we can continue to enjoy football. The federation, the CSD (Spain's sports council), and the players have committed to making these changes in order to keep moving forward.

The men's and women's teams are not treated equally in terms of staffing and travel arrangements, according to Spain's players.

winner of the Ballon d'Or twice Alexia Putellas claimed on Sunday that the Spanish team once endured a six-hour bus ride to reach a match, and that on another occasion, they had to rise early to catch a flight.

Last week, the team elected Caldentey and Aitana Bonmati of Barcelona as two of the team's four captains, after Putellas and Irene Paredes.

After a tumultuous start to the national team camp in which players were called up against their will by new coach Montse Tome, who took over for the controversial Jorge Vilda, Bonmati claimed that things had become considerably calmer recently.

Because of the stress and anxiety, the first few days were really difficult, according to Bonmati.

"Now that everything has settled down, we are entirely focused on the football."

The main player for Spain during their run to World Cup triumph in Australia and New Zealand, playmaker Bonmati, revealed that the team's goal was to have an impact that went much beyond sport.

"We want to leave a good legacy and good conditions for the generations that follow, we're an example, not just on a sporting level, but a social one," she continued.

"An equal society in which men and women are treated equally and have the same rights."