In the opening round: …………………………………………………… The top-seeded Burnaby Byrne Creek Bulldogs crushed the 16th-seeded Terrace Caledonia Kermodes 77-47 after leading 18-11, 37-23 and 66-30 at the quarters. Martin Djunga paced the Bulldogs with 23. Majok Deng added 10, Sufi Ahmed 8, Daniel Cion 6, Aaron Cruz 6, Tyril Whitebear 6, Titgol Jok 5, Daniel Moges 3, Bithow Wan 2, Chidubem Nkoloagu 2 and Emmanuel Ananga 2, while Gabriel Bondoc, Mukhtar Afadish, Hajrudin Dzebic and Renny Van Rensburg were scoreless. Solomon Johnson led the Kermodes with 12. Cole Oullet added 8, Kaking Ma 7, Jackson Netzel 7, James Gagnon 5, Elijah Azak 4 and Kahim Ma 3, while Jagdeep Dhillon, Brody McKay, Carlos Tajan, Spencer Schulte and Everett Poole were scoreless. The Kermodes (coached by Joe Dominguez, assisted by Cam Mackay and Curtis Mercer) also included Trenton Armstrong, Jimmy Nijjar, Daniel Yoo and Falcon Thomas. …………………………………………………… The 8th-seeded Vancouver Sir Charles Tupper Tigers clubbed the 9th-seeded Surrey Clayton Heights Night Riders 90-70 after leading 18-17, 51-36 and 76-50 at the quarters. The Tiger shit 36-72 from the floor and 13-27 from the arc. Norben Bulosen paced the Tigers with 14. Gaurab Acharya added 13, Joven Dhillon 11, Simon Crossfield 11, Matthew Dunkerley 10, Benson Laconsay 10, Ranell Sebastian 9, Sebastian Lemos 8 and Luke Tobias 4, while Abessan Rajaratnam, Trew Peterson, J.J. Roldan, Lloyd Macinas, Mitchell Morgan and Jason Ubial were scoreless. Kris Galindez and Richard Mageto each scored 17 to pace the Night Riders (coached by Mike Sweeney, Simon Mah and Sonny Thind, manager Bianca Servando). Jay Ar De Dios added 10, Karim Nuruddin 8, Tyler Douglas 7, Liam Roberts 7 and Mat Kalanj 4, while Darren Qiu, Eddie Kim, Lanz Alejo, Khushal Dharba, Daniel Lee, Fatehbir Gill and Nicola Becchi were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 4th-seeded North Delta Huskies spanked the 13th-seeded Courtenay G.P. Vanier Towhees 67-42 after leading 27-8, 45-21 and 57-32 at the quarters. On a day of upsets, Huskies coach Jesse Hundal told Varsity Letters, “we made sure to remind our guys that it’s anyone’s game. They took our game plan with fire in their hearts and I am proud of them. … The main thing is we didn’t want this game to be bigger than it is. We have played the toughest schedule in the province, we’re on a high from winning the Fraser Valleys, and we prepared just like we prepare for any other game. We focused on ourselves, we cared for each other and we did anything to win.” Suraj Gahir paced the Huskies with 20. Arun Atker added 14, Vikram Hayer 10, Brandon Bassi 7, Armaan Johal 6, Jaskirat Thind 3, Ryan Cabaco 2, Harpreet Gill 2, Yusuf Yilmaz 2 and Jagraj Johal 1, while Eric Sandhu and Roopinder Gill were scoreless. Levi Timmermans scored 18 to lead the Towhees (coached by Larry Street, assisted by Joss Biggins, manager Colten Payne), while nabbing 11 boards. Bentley Barth notched 5, Riley Meyerhoff 5, Graeme Trask 4, Lucky Nguyen 2, Kyle Piercy 2, Aidan Bernard 2 and Peter Greaves 2, while Dawson Kipp, Griffin Jamieson, Jordan Dennis, Ethan Lloyd and Sidney Woodrow were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 5th-seeded Richmond R.A. McMath Wildcats edged the 12th-seeded Clearbrook Mennonite Educational Institute Eagles 97-92. The Eagles led 32-19 after one quarter and by as many as 19 in the first half. The Wildcats led 54-49 at the half. The Eagles led 80-66 after three quarters. Bryce Mason paced the Wildcats with 30 points, 16 boards, 5 assists and 5 steals. Victor Radocaj added 22, along with 20 boards, Rohan Balaggan 18, Jordin Kojima 12, Natrone Gonzales 11 and Ioan Popov 4, while Jonathan Downton, Travis Hamberger, Rio Hutchful, Alex Murphy, Michael Kitka, Diether Krugler and Matthew Bakken were scoreless. Isaiah Reimer led the Eagles with 45, while nabbing 10 boards. Ethan Bucknam notched 15, Travis Veerman 10, Jordan York 8, Chris Khotawanich 4, Kieran Steunenberg 3, Preston Lollar 2 and James Klassen 2, while Colby Stobbe, Luke Ouellette, Hunter Klassen, Aidan Kelly, Jacob Funk, Caleb Gosselin and Brodie Kelly were scoreless. The Eagles (coached by Dawn Thiessen and Matt Thiessen) also included Matt Hanna, Amraaz Dhillon, Harry Gill and Luke Tiegen. …………………………………………………… The 2nd-seeded South Kamloops Titans dispatched the 15th-seeded Campbell River Carihi Tyees 58-51. The Titans led 16-10 after one quarter and 26-21 at the half. The score was knotted at 39 after three quarters. The Titans prevailed despite shooting 0-24 from the arc. But they forced 27 turnovers and outscored the Tyees 42-20 in the paint. Nick Sarai paced the Titans with 23. Ripley Martin added 17, along with 11 boards, Graeme Koppes 7, Reid Jansen 7 and Evan Jumaga 4, while Josh Jean, Sam Jean, Denzel Marican and Foster Wynne were scoreless. Jonah Shankar scored 17 to pace the Tyees (coached by Ray Wilson, assisted by Cleon Shankar, managers Liz West and Marcus Shankar). Connor Hall added 12, Jared Perras 7, Connor Nast 6, Quin Nelson 3, Mason Osterhout-Code 2, Gurjot Mann 2 and Cam Younger 2, while Skylar Gordon, Carson Foy, Jason Chen, Blake Doherty, Pabil Adhikari and Tom Younger were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 7th-seeded Prince George Duchess Park Condors clubbed the 10th-seeded Abbotsford Rick Hansen Hurricanes 88-65. The Hurricanes led 28-18 after one quarter and 44-36 at the half. The Condors led 63-58 after three quarters. “We knew that they were a great shooting team, but also a streaky shooting team,” Condors coach Jordan Yu told Varsity Letters. “We knew that we just had to weather that first storm. I think in the end we just wore on them. … For us it was trusting in the process and the guys bought in a long time ago.” The Condors took command with an 8-0 run to open the second half. Colburn Pearce paced the Condors with 28. Malcom Macdonald added 16, Cody Boulding 16, Garet Anderson 14 and Soren Erricson 11, while Isaac Northrop, Seth Lapre, Dan Zimmerman, Sam Istok, Mich Ochieng and Jackson Kuc were scoreless. Gurlal Mann and Gurkaran Mangat each scored 16 to pace the Hurricanes (coached by Steve Twele, assisted by Sukhpaul Dhaliwal, trainer Tanya Goertzen). Harjas Dhillon added 15, Harjot Dhaliwal 9, Gautam Dhaliwal 7 and Monty Gill 2, while Vikram Gill, Manney Nahal, Ravdeep Brar, Taj Sidhu, Tanvir Kaler, Karn Dhillon, Rajvir Sidhu, Paul Heinzinger and Sahil Gill were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 14th-seeded Richmond Colts stunned the 3rd-seeded North Vancouver Argyle Pipers 81-80. The score was knotted at 23 after one quarter. The Pipers led 46-43 at the half and 64-54 after three quarters. “Push the ball in transition, get down the court before they set up in that 2-3 (zone) because they have some big guys down at the bottom, attack the middle and get short corner,” Colts coached Brandon Harbour told Varsity Letters. “That was the entire game plan and it worked. … The energy could have gone the other way but it didn’t, except at the free throw line (14-of-26). We’ll make adjustments but it’s the first game of senior provincials so you expect some nerves.” Murad Mohammed paced the Colts with 27 points, 10 boards and 8 assists. Daniel Afanasiyevskyy notched 26, Evan Brusse 12, Ahmed Shehata 8, Ace Adano 5, Talhah Farooqi 2 and Ryan Liu 1, while John Siwa, Fasih Warriach, Anton Poburko, Leon Kim, Jonathan Hu, Leo Liang, Jason Zhong and Arminas Ilciukas were scoreless. Alex Wallace led the Pipers with 26. David Finch added 19, along with 11 boards, Anton Mellinghaus 19, along with 15 boards, Mac Ward 6, Max Kensett 4, Jordan Bauer 3 and Harrison Archer 2, while Geriel Larosa, Jack Ferguson, Jeff Lee, Ben Marshall, Ben Sawiuk and Jacob Green were scoreless. The Pipers (coached by Bruce Wallace, assisted by Cam Molinski, manager Katie Hutton) also included Nick Richardson, Devin O’Hea and Declan Confortin. …………………………………………………… The 6th-seeded Pitt Meadows Marauders dumped the 11th-seeded Courtenay Mark Isfeld Ice 69-59. The bigger Marauders dominated the glass. Giovanni Manu paced the Marauders with 34, along with 13 boards. Conor Laverty added 12 and Colton Leon 12. Leon and Ben Pollard each nabbed 10 boards, en route to out-rebounding the Ice 42-22, the Marauders totaled 19 offensive rebounds to Isfeld’s 22 total boards. Thaskani Mtawali paced the Ice with 17. Dawson Fox added 12 and Alessandro Bovio 11. The Ice (coached by Tom Elwood, assisted by Colin Cunningham and Kate McLeod, manager Harriette Cunningham) also included Jacob Volkers, Ian Rutledge, Riley Fussell, Darrin Lessard, Thomas Green, Andrew Choi, Trent Johnson, Hayden Fieret, Aidan McDonald and Koome Huff.

        In the quarterfinals, the top-seeded Burnaby Byrne Creek Bulldogs dispatched the 8th-seeded Vancouver Sir Charles Tupper Tigers 68-57. The Bulldogs led 14-9 after one quarter. The Tigers led 27-26 at the half. The Bulldogs led 44-38 after three quarters. “They’re gritty, we’re gritty and so it was match-up of two (like-minded) teams,” Bulldogs coach Bal Dhillon told Varsity Letters. “We’re bigger and we’ve got more length, and I think in the end that is what won us this game. … They are hard to play against, and I’d wished we’d faced them earlier so we would have had a better taste of it. I knew this was going to be tough the moment I saw the draw.” Majok Deng paced the Bulldogs with 18, along with 17 boards. Bithow Wan added 17, Titgol Jok 15, along with 10 boards, Sufi Ahmed 10 and Martin Djunga 7, while Gabriel Bondoc, Chidubem Nkoloagu, Daniel Cion, Emmanuel Ananga, Aaron Cruz, Mukhtar Afadish, Renny Van Rensburg, Tyril Whitebear, Hajrudin Dzebic and Daniel Moges were scoreless. Gaurab Acharya led the Tigers with 12. Sebastian Lemos added 10, Norben Bulosan 9, Simon Crossfield 8, Joven Dhillon 6, Matthew Dunkerley 5 and Benson Laconsay 5, while Abessan Rajaratnam, Trew Petersen, J.J. Roldan, Lloyd Macinas, Ranell Sebastian, Luke Tobias, Mitchell Morgan and Jason Ubial were scoreless. The Tigers (coached by Jeff Gourley, associated Patrick Cumaual, assistant Ron Ronquillo, assistant Jordan Alpine, assistant Kehl Petersen, manager Zoe Fenster, manager Nicola Ruby) also included Lucas Friesen, Neerav Kaila and Paul Joseph Santos.

        The 4th-seeded North Delta Huskies edged the 5th-seeded Richmond R.A. McMath Wildcats 78-73. The Huskies led 24-17 after one quarter. The score was knotted at 44 at the half. The Huskies led 61-58 after three quarters. Trailing 74-73 in the final minute, the Wildcats got the stop they needed but the Huskies came up with a huge offensive rebound.

Forced to foul, Armann Johal missed the back half of his 2 free throws but another rebound kept the ball with North Delta. This time both free throws were good and McMath’s provincial run was over. “It’s a tough pill to swallow of course. Expectations were high at the beginning of the season,” Wildcats co-coach Max Pecarsky told the Richmond News. “Two of their guys combined for 60 points. Against their zone we didn’t seem to execute too well and were missing some (easy looks). That’s high school basketball.” Suraj Gahir and Armaan Johal each scored 28 to pace the Huskies. Johal also nabbed 11 boards. Jaskirat Thind scored 8, Arun Atker 8, Roopinder Gill 2 and Vikram Hayer 2, while Ryan Cabaco, Harpreet Gill, Jagraj Johal, Eric Sandhu, Brandon Bassi and Yusuf Yilmaz were scoreless. Jordan Kojima scored 20 to pace the Wildcats (coached by Jason Belonio, Jas Dhari, Tony Wong-Hen, Max Pecarsky, Ricky Hernandez, and managed by Rebbeca Lopez and Alyssa Sta Marie). Bryce Mason added 18, Victor Radocaj 16, along with 16 boards, Rohan Balaggan 14, Natrone Gonzales 5, Travis Hamberger 3 and Ioan Popov 2, while Jonathan Downtown, Rio Hutchful, Alex Murphy, Michael Kitka, Diether Krugler and Matthew Bakken were scoreless.

        The 2nd-seeded South Kamloops Titans whipped the 7th-seeded Prince George Duchess Park Condors 62-44 after leading 17-9, 28-23 and 48-32 at the quarters. Although Titan star Ripley Martin found himself in foul trouble in the third quarter, South Kamloops had the answers. “We are resilient and we showed that,” Titans coach Bryce McMillan told Varsity Letters. “When Ripley went to the bench, we went small ball and it worked out for us. The guys worked their butts off all game and they had to because Duchess Park is so well coached. Like us, they are very structured.” Reid Jansen paced the Titans with 21. Nick Sarai added 13, Evan Jumaga 10, Ripley Martin 9, along with 13 boards, Graeme Koppes 7 and Denzel Marican 2, while Josh Jean, Sam Jean and Foster Wynne were scoreless. Malcom Macdonald and Soren Erricson each scored 10 to pace the Condors (coached by Jordan Yu, assisted by John MacDonald and Al Ericsson, manager Brevin Gervais). Colburn Pearce added 9, along with 10 boards, Cody Boulding 5, Garet Anderson 4, Dan Zimmerman 3, Seth Lapre 2 and Mich Ochieng 2, while Isaac Northrop, Sam Istok, Demian Dorn and Jackson Kuc were scoreless.

        In the last quarterfinal, the 6th-seeded Pitt Meadows Marauders stomped the 14th-seeded Richmond Colts 84-64. The Colts led 20-19 after one quarter. The Marauders led 34-30 at the half and 63-40 after three quarters. Werner Giovanni-Manu paced the Marauders with 34, along with 10 boards. Colton Leon added 21, Caleb Kinney 9, Conor Laverty 8, Benjamin Pollard 4, Ross Power 4, Patrick Juriga 2 and Lautaro Ferreyro-Araya 1, while Lorenzo Leoncio, Ryan Crockett, Harrison Longhi, Jack Garcha and Alec Tyler were scoreless. Daniel Afanasiyevskyy paced the Colts with 25. Murad Mohammed added 19, Ace Adano 9, Evan Brusse 8, Ahmed Shehata 2 and Arminas Ilciukas 1, while John Siwa, Fasih Warriach, Ryan Liu, Anton Poburko, Jonathan Hu, Leo Liang, Jason Zhong and Talhah Farooqi were scoreless. The Colts (coached by Brandon Harbour, assisted by Martin Appiah, Tristan Ordonez and Suzzan Poppell) also included Tony Fei and Karssey Leung.

        In the semis, the top-seeded Burnaby Byrne Creek Bulldogs clipped the 4th-seeded North Delta Huskies 76-64. The Huskies led 12-10 after one quarter and 35-29 at the half. The Bulldogs led 55-52 after three quarters. The Bulldogs switched to a zone, which coach Balraj Dhillon told Varsity Letters was actually “man-to-man played lazily,” late in the third quarter and promptly ripped off a 16-0 run. “They are good shooters and I am not taking anything away from them,” said Dhillon of the Huskies, “but typically, most teams shoot a lower percentage in this arena. So that is a testament to how good they are. And when they went cold, I was surprised.” Huskies coach Jesse Hundal said “they face guarded two of our best guys. We’re young and we had some mental turnovers. I think we just ran out of gas. But our goal was to win the Fraser Valley and finish top four in B.C., and we’ve done that. I am really proud of our guys.” Martin Dijunga paced the Bulldogs with 33, along with 11 boards. Bithow Wan added 14, Sufi Ahmed 13, Majok Deng 7, Titgol Jok 6 and Renny Van Rensburg 3, while Gabriel Bondoc, Chidubem Nkoloagu, Daniel Cion, Emmanuel Ananga, Aaron Cruz, Daniel Moges, Mukhtar Afadish, Tyril Whitebear and Hajrudin Dzebic were scoreless. Arun Atker led the Huskies with 25. Suraj Gahir added 17, Roopinder Gill 9, Jaskirat Thind 6, Armaan Johal 3, Jagraj Johal 2 and Brandon Bassi 2, while Ryan Cabaco, Harpreet Gill, Rajveer Rosodi, Eric Sandhu, Yusuf Yilmaz and Vikram Hayer were scoreless.

        In the other semi, the 2nd-seeded South Kamloops Titans edged the 6th-seeded Pitt Meadows Marauders 65-59 after leading 19-8, 31-21 and 44-41 at the quarters. The Titans shifted to their 1-3-1 zone press in the fourth quarter and it yielded major dividends. Nursing a one-point lead, Evan Jumaga hit a trey to give the Titans a 61-57 lead with 1:59 left, and then eight seconds later, the resulting pressure allowed Sam Jean to make a steal and drive in for a lay-up that made it 63-57. “That was a great match-up,” Titans assistant Bryce McMillan told Varsity Letters. “Those guys are physical and big and we knew that we would have to elevate our aggressiveness and our toughness.” Nick Sarai paced the Titans with 19. Evan Jumaga added 18, Ripley Martin 12, along with 10 boards, Reid Jansen 10, along with 6 boards and 7 assists, and Sam Jean 6, while Josh Jean, Graeme Koppes, Denzel Marican and Foster Wynne were scoreless. Werner Giovanni-Manu, a 6-7 U.B.C. football recruit, paced the Marauders with 24, along with 9 boards.  Benjamin Pollard added 9, Conor Loverty 8, Colton Leon 8, Caleb Kinney 6 and Ross Power 4, while Lautaro Ferreyro-Araya, Lorenzo Leoncio, Ryan Crockett, Patrick Juriga, Harrison Longhi, Jack Garcha and Alec Tyler were scoreless.

        In the bronze medal match, the 4th-seeded North Delta Huskies clocked the 6th-seeded Pitt Meadows Marauders 69-52 after leading 16-11, 32-19 and 56-31 at the quarters. Suraj Gahir paced the Huskies with 18. Vikram Hayer added 15, Jagraj Johal 12, Arun Atker 9, Armaan Johal 7, Jaskirat Thind 4, Harpreet Gill 2 and Roopinder Gill 2, while Ryan Cabaco, Rajveer Rosodi, Eric Sandhu, Brandon Bassi and Yusuf Yilmaz were scoreless. Werner Giovanni-Manu scored 24 to pace the Marauders (coached by Carson Power, assisted by Mike Leon). Colton Leon added 10, Ross Power 5, Caleb Kinney 4, Alec Tyler 3, Benjamin Pollard 2 and Lautaro Ferreyro-Araya 2, while Conor Laverty, Lorenzo Leoncio, Ryan Crockett, Patrick Juriga, Harrison Longhi and Jack Garcha were scoreless.

        In the final, the 2nd-seeded South Kamloops Titans defeated the top-seeded Burnaby Byrne Creek Bulldogs 74-66 to complete a boy’s-girl’s title double at the 3A level, the first time in 27 years that a school had managed the feat. The Titans led 26-12, 39-30 and 57-54 at the quarters. Titans coach Tim Unaegbu told CFJC Today that the team was determined to better its 2017 silver medal finish. “It was a very painful feeling and something that we didn’t want to feel again.” Unaegbu was prevented from being on the bench during the tournament are being flagged for unsportsmanlike behavior earlier in the season and receiving multiple technical foul violations and a 10-game suspension by the Okanagan association. “It almost gave them a spark without me there because they wanted to do this for [me],” Unaegbu said. “We put things together, I had the talk…when we went to the game, it doesn’t matter who’s on the bench. … I said, ‘Hey, in 30 years, you can go the Kamloops museum, you’ll see an old photo of yourself and say, hey, we were the first team (in school history to win the title). No one can take that away.” Nick Sarai told Varsity Letters that the loss to Rick Hanse was top of the entire team’s mind. “Just seeing all the posts on social media about Rick Hansen, and how we were leading in the fourth quarter then we collapsed. Every day we were driven by the thought of Rick Hansen hoisting the trophy instead of us. But we knew going into this year that we would be expected to win. But people still thought we were underdogs. It didn’t matter. We believed in ourselves. And this championship? It was for Tim.” Byrne Creek guard Martin Djunga knotted the score early in the fourth quarter. Assistant Titans coach Mike Flaco Zayas repeatedly told the squad that he’s been on a Richmond R.C. Palmer team that had lost the final in 2010 but came back the following year to win the title. “I’ve told that story pretty much every day in practice and every day here at the tournament,” Zayas said. “I’m so sorry I’ve lost my voice. But they emulated my story and it is amazing.” Assistant Bryce McMillan said “it was tough” without Unaegbu. “He is our leader. He is our general. He was with us during the week at the hotel, game-planning behind the scenes doing everything he could. Everybody played this one for him.” Unaegbu was allowed to join the team on the floor when the game ended. “Last year, we made the mistake of trying to win on pure heart, and not focusing on game plans,” Unaegbu said. “But this year we had extensive game plans. You saw us play a young-and-fast Carihi on the first day, then a Duchess Park team so well-coached by Jordan Yu, a Pitt Meadows team which is very physical and likes to take it inside, and then today, a Byrne Creek team which is so quick and gets in the lanes. So, you saw all styles of South Kamloops basketball in four games, when people thought we were done the first day.” Bulldogs coach Bal Dhillon said “it’s a testament to Tim that they can perform and keep the same culture that he instilled. “I don’t know what Tim did to get suspended but he is a great guy and I can’t envision him doing anything that would get him suspended. So that is weird to me, but it is what is.” McMillan told the Columbia Valley Pioneer that Nick Sarai ‘was unbelievable. He stepped his game up like I’d never seen before. He didn’t shy away from the moment, he wanted the ball. … We knew we had the talent to come back but we had to put in the work and these kids definitely did. It took just a lot of determination, heart and grit.” Nick Sarai paced the Titans with 28 on 12-12 from the line and 9 boards. Player of the game Ripley Martin added 16, along with 12 boards, Reid Jansen 10, Evan Jumaga 8, Josh Jean 8 and Sam Jean 4, while Graeme Koppes, Denzel Marican and Foster Wynne were scoreless. Martin Djunga led the Bulldogs with 25. Bithow Wan added 16, Aaron Cruz 7, defensive player of the tournament Majok Deng 7, along with 6 blocks, Titgol Jok 6, Daniel Cion 3 and Hajrudin Dzebic 2, while Daniel Moges, Sufi Ahmed, Gabriel Bondoc, Chidubem Nkoloagu, Emmanuel Ananga, Mukhtar Afadish, Renny Van Rensburg and Tyril Whitebear were scoreless.

        The all-tournament team featured MVP Nick Sarai (South Kamloops); Werner Giovanni-Manu (Pitt Meadows); Suraj Gahir (North Delta); Reid Jansen (South Kamloops); Martin Djunga (Byrne Creek); and Bithow Wan (Byrne Creek).

        The second team featured: Isaiah Reimer (M.E.I.); Colton Leon (Pitt Meadows); Arun Atker (North Delta); Gaurab Acharya (Sir Charles Tupper); and Alex Wallace (Argyle).

        The bronze medalist North Delta Huskies: Ryan Cabaco; Arun Atker; Harpreet Gill; Jagraj Johal; Suraj Gahir; Rajveer Rosodi; Bhavraj Thiara; Armaan Johal; Eric Sandhu; Brandon Bassi; Jaskirat Thind; Yusuf Yilmaz; Roopinder Gill; Vikram Hayer; coach Gary Sandhu; coach Manvir Gahir; coach; Jesse Hundal; coach Bill Edwards

        The silver medalist Byrne Creek Bulldogs: Titgol Jok; Bithow Wan; Daniel Moges; Sufi Ahmed; Gabriel Bondoc; Tarik Tune; Chidubem Nkoloagu; Martin Djunga; Daniel Cion; Emmanuel Ananga; Aaron Cruz; Majok Deng; Mukhtar Afadish; Renny Van Rensburg; Tyril Whitebear; Hajrudin Dzebic; coach Balraj Dhillon; assistant Shaun Hake; manager Chad Mullings; SID Macdonald Chamboko

        The gold medalist South Kamloops Titans: Evan Jumaga; Reid Jansen; Josh Jean; Sam Jean; Graeme Koppes; Nick Sarai; Denzel Marican; Foster Wynne; Ripley Martin; coach Tim Unaegbu; assistant Mike Flaco Zayas; assistant Ben MacDonald; assistant Bryce McMillan; manager Kellie Jean; manager Toni Sara