In the opening round (names and tallies are somewhat approximate as scoresheets are periodically illegible), held in Langley: …………………………………………………… The top-seeded West Vancouver Mulgrave Titans dusted the 16th-seeded Prince George Shas Ti Kelly Road Grizzlies 93-19 after leading 45-5, 58-13 and 83-15 at the quarters. The Titans dominated the offensive glass and generated a raft of runout layups. Titans coach Claude Leduc told Varsity Letters that “these games are super valuable because everyone gets to play and feel like they contribute, everyone gets to work on those little things because you never know. You could have foul trouble and they might have to go into the game. So it’s good experience for them and I was really happy with our bench today.” Jenna Talib paced the Titans with 20. Ava Wilson added 15, Erika Panahandeh 12, Eva Ruse 10, Lucy Xu 10, Kaitlyn Takeuchi 8, Sara Sunderji 6, Salihah Ali 6, Deanna Naemi 4 and Maryam Mojarradi 2, while Mia Ruse, Wing Lai and Maia Rayner were scoreless. Danni Thompson scored 7 to pace the Roadrunners (coach Jordan harris, assistant Helena Kemper, assistant Angela Zavaglla). Shaye Ahedy added 6, Airi Rustad 3 and Allie Caouette 3, while Ashley Norman, Bella Peters, Abby Sampson, Maria Sampson, Danielle Caouette and Veronica Somerville were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 3rd-seeded Victoria Pacific Christian Pacers clubbed the 14th-seeded Vancouver St. Patrick Celtics 58-36 after leading 13-7, 30-20 and 54-27 at the quarters. Sisters Joaleah and Kealayna Tupas-Singh turned the tide in the second quarter when they turned a 17-16 deficit with a 14-3 run, while scoring 14 of 17 points for the Pacers in the frame. The Pacers built the lead to as many as 20 and coasted to the win. Pacers co-coach John Stewart told Varsity Letters that “when you translate from the driveway to the court here at provincials, they’ve played together so long and know each other so well. … With having three sets of siblings on our team, an outstanding connection that they have. They know where each other are at all times. It’s a beautiful thing to watch, from practices to games. It’s artwork.” Celtics coach Lance Hurtibise said “we didn’t play our best today – we couldn’t hit the broad side of a barn. But we battled in the second half, and we didn’t quit.” Joaleah Tupas-Singh paced the Pacers with 16. Eden Kremler added 13, Kealayna Tupas-Singh added 13, Abi Ellison 10, Peyton Bryden 4 and Sophia Wang 2, while Sion Yun, Ariel Copley, Anna Wu, Alem Kuhn, Natasha Copley, Tarikua Kuhn and Polore Olorunojowon were scoreless. Kirsten Alojado scored 17 to pace the Celtics (coach Lance Hurtibise, coach Christine Ciresi). Gabby Weisser added 8, Chrisandra Casiano 6, Ira Santos 2, Madeline Fitzmaurice 2 and Theresa Balubar 1, while Danka Cobarrubias, Kaitlin Nagalingam, Kellie Sancon, Penelope Sparrow, N Nickoriza, Panica Maravillas and Brooklyn Caratao were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 4th-seeded Surrey Holy Cross Crusaders dispatched the 13th-seeded Abbotsford Christian Knights 63-53. The Crusaders led 15-13 after one quarter. The Knights led 26-21 at the half. The Crusaders led 47-39 after three quarters. Samantha Isidro and Isla Iannuzzi each drilled treys to ignite a 16-0 Crusderas run to open the second half. “I think in the first half we came out a little bit slow,” Isidro told Varsity Letters. “We had already beaten this team a couple of times, so I think we were expecting less of a battle than it was. In the second half we were diving on every single ball. We just wanted it more.” Crusaders coach Joe Vinlaun said “we just needed a little bit more motivation. They knew what they had to do and we just needed to motivate them to come out strong in the second half. … (Isidro) played an excellent game. She played a very smart game. She was very selective in her shots. She is one of our leaders. When she can control the tempo of the game everybody else follows.” Samantha Isidro paced the Crusaders with 18. Isla Iannuzzi added 12, Felisha-Velle Rivera 8, Alynah Solano 7, Amy Rokosh 6, Maya MacGillivray 4, Keira Legazpi 3, Siena Legazpi 2, Arianna Di-Liello 2 and Claire Nichol 1, while Nicole Magtipay, Kate Borkowski and Tiana Ursua were scoreless. Naomi Brown scored 14 to pace the Knights (coach Vince Van Dyck, assistant Ron Tutu). Kristin Kampman added 7, Laureen Van Dyk 7, Lyn Chuang 6, Kailyn Dieleman 5, Analise Henn 4, Lianne Tuin 4, Malia Morrow 2, Emma Brotzel 2 and Neveah Letourneau 2, while Holly Minderhoud and Taya Binnedyk were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 9th-seeded Abbotsford Traditional Titans defeated the 8th-seeded Vernon Kamalkala Lakers 57-50. The Lakettes 12-0 early led 19-4 after one quarter. The Titans led 27-26 at the half and 43-38 after three quarters. Twin sisters Janeesh and point guard Taneesh Sran got the Titans on track as they rallied from the early deficit. Although the Titans build their lead to five after three quarters on a pair of treys from Sukpriya Birdi, Janeesh Sran had picked up her fourth foul. Titans coach Ashyana Kumar was concerned: “She is a key part of our team. We need her on the floor all the time, defensively and offensively. Without her in the game, it’s a totally different ball game.” Kumar re-inserted Janeesh and the Titans regained control. Janeesh Sran paced the Titans with 27. Sukprixa Birdi added 12, Taneesh Sran 7, Kiran Dhillon 6 and Uppreet Bhathal 3, while 2 points were unallocated and Arushi Gandhal, Maneet Brar, Sukhneet Gill, Harsharn Parhar and Partik Gill were scoreless. Kristen Franks scored 23 to pace the Lakers (coach Johna Lee, coach Dean Francks). Sydney Lewis added 13, Brynn Fixsen 5, Claire Penner 5, Ava Tepper 2 and Kiana Warwick 2, while Lauren Cunningham, Miya Nicholson, Ginger Demetrick, Emi Nicholson, Aimee Skinner and Emily Moeck were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 5th-seeded Burnaby St. Thomas More Knights defeated Mill Bay Brentwood 50-44 after leading 14-6, 22-18 and 40-32 at the quarters. Brentwood knotted the score at 44 on back-to-back treys by Jensa Napier Ganley. But forward Lishan Hewitt had the answers for the Knights with a pair of buckets in the paint. Knights coach Cassie Lauang told Varsity Letters that grade 9 point guard Demicah Arnaldo’s speed and ball-handling were critical. “We are very, very lucky. She’s tough kid. She plays defence well, she’s a three-level scorer, there’s nobody who can quite play like her. … I think our ability to switch up offences and defences at any moment was a key for us. We can zone, we can go man. There are certain defences we can use at any moment that allow us to match up against top offensive talent.” Arnaldo said “I think my vision is one of my strengths. I am able to get my teammates their shots, get them their opportunities.” Demicah Arnaldo paced the Knights with 17, Danica Fontana added 11, Nikolina Prtenjaca 6, Ava Giovinazzo 6, Kyra Anagnostov 4, Lishan Hewitt 4 and Tea Mocnik 1, while Gianna Retino, Alyssa Demaisip, Micah Penalosa, Mattea Pavan, Kirsten Facun, Mara Nica and Mia Chan were scoreless. Jensa Napier-Ganley scored 19? to lead the Knights (coach Jillian Wopec?, assistant Cheyne Cole). Miragatta? Navaro-Perez added 13, Ruby McDougald 4, Kianah Williams 4, Sophie Horn 2 and Peyton Harker 2, while Aysha Dajani, Sylvia Ejumabone, Kiara Jensen, Simret Sarao, Beluchi Okeke and Amelie Bunz were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 6th-seeded Vancouver Notre Dame Jugglers clipped the 11th-seeded Surrey Pacific Academy Breakers 57-44. The Breakers led 10-0 early, 17-6 after one quarter and 30-23 at the half as post Sarah Ude dominated the paint. But the Jugglers opened the second half with a 13-0 run as their full-court pressure began to yield dividends. Kaitlyn Chan soon added a pair of treys and the Jugglers led 44-34 after three quarters and then romped to the win. Juggler Maecon Gifonea told Varsity Letters that it was case of early jitters. “I felt like there was a lot of pressure on us since we were ranked pretty high. … We started getting used to how they played, and we started adjusting. We started working as a team, having more chemistry with each other. … During timeouts and stuff, we just said, ‘We can beat them’. … We’ve worked hard in practice, and we started implementing our practicing into the game. That’s what we did.” Maecon Gifonea paced the Jugglers with 17. Ella Ungemach added 13, Kaitlyn Chan 10, Taylor Cagampan 8, Anastasia Kalpidis 4, Emily Chan 3 and Ally Panzetta 2, while Hailey Halldorson, Angela Soriano, Joana Pepe, Aira Ebora, Almire Augustin, Peyton Cagampan, Angelica Abijero and Samantha Allaye-Chan were scoreless. Sarah Ude paced the Breakers with 19. Mazy Wandzura added 9, Omone Idenwekhai 9, Camryn Voros 5 and Omone Idanwekhai 2, while Stella Hong, Mei Ming, Natania Vie, Eden Hansen, Mariana Romero, Gizelle Russell, Kitan Anebayo, Victoria Ling, Sydney Kang, Darla Pitakanen and Leah Munday were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 10th-seeded Fernie Falcons edged the 7th-seeded Richmond A.R. MacNeill Ravens 78-73 in overtime. The Ravens led 22-15 after one quarter and 34-31 at the half. The Falcons led 51-45 after three quarters and by as many as 10 in the fourth. But Kim Tiu notched a midrange bank shot and an acrobatic and-one layup to cut the deficit to 61-60 with 1:47 left in regulation. Kadie Anderson answered with a steal and a pair of free throws to make it 63-60, but Tiu dribbled to her left around a screen and drained a pull-up three-pointer to force overtime. Tiu drilled a pair of treys to knot the score at 71 with a minute to play in the extra session. After Anderson and Tiu exchanged 2-for-2 performances from the free throw line, Fernie’s Cassie Fahselt found Taylor Witbeck for a runout, and then stole the ensuing inbound pass as the Falcons collected the win. Anderson told Varsity Letters that “I’ve never played a game like this before. It’s so much fun. It’s so much better than the games than the games we get at home. It was amazing.” Falcons coach Jen Kennedy said Tiu is “one heck of a player. I tried to find film on her but there’s nothing online. Word on the street was she scores 30 or 40 per game, so she was our focus. We tried our best on her. … We didn’t know how this was going to go. This is our first year in the 2A, and we usually only play in Alberta so we don’t know anyone and I don’t think anyone knows us. We kind of come in blind, but we’re so grateful to be here.” Kadie Anderson paced the Falcons with 29. Cassie Fahselt added 20, Summer Musschoot 17, Emilee French 8, Taylor Witbeck 3 and Paige Matejka 1, while Heidi Stevens, Brooklyn Webster, Georgia Lessard, Millie Gadd, Felicia Smith and Emily Joy were scoreless. Kim Tiu scored 49 to pace the Ravens (coach Justin Dype?, assistant Anton Isidro). Shila Rasoul added 19, Hanna Mann 9, while K Yip, A Vasuder, T Patara, C Albos, M Azdirahman, K Soriano, A Honda, K Magallanes, G Geneblaza, Y Kwok, T Bennett and M Magallanes were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 2nd-seeded host Langley Christian Lightning torched the 15th-seeded Victoria Lambrick Park Pride 67-39 after leading 18-9, 40-9 and 57-21 at the quarters. Lightning coach Danielle Gardner told Varsity Letters that “I think there’s hunger to want to do the best we can. It’s fun coming here, fun playing at the LEC, and being that it’s in our back yard, it’s fun for our fans. I don’t think it changes anything, coming in as defending champs. That was last year, this is this year – it’s a new squad, and you just want to go out and do the best that you can. Each game, just lay it all out on the court and see what happens.” Colette Van Der Hoven paced the Lighting with 19. Grace Bradshaw added 10, Georgia VanderWaarde 9, Payton Brunoro 8, Leah Aukema 6, Lara Commerford 5, Annah Kuehl 4, Rainey DeWit 2, Brielle Hillmer 2 and Shaylah Black 2, while Emma Cazacu, Madden DeWit and Katie Beveridge were scoreless. Macy Hogg scored 20 to lead the Pride (coach G Baker, coach P Griffin). Taylor Milliken added 13, Preslie Mace 2, Teya Madsen 2 and Marianne Rodriguez 2, while Emily Pitre, Freya Redding-Mason, Siena Khosla, Hannah Pratt and Amira Bimb were scoreless.
In the quarterfinals, the 3rd-seeded Victoria Pacific Christian Pacers defeated the 6th-seeded Vancouver Notre Dame Jugglers 75-70 after leading 21-12, 36-31 and 59-40 at the quarters. The Pacers opened the second half with an 11-2 run but the Jugglers rallied with a series of shifting defences, drawing within 73-70 on a banked trey from Emily Chan. Pacers co-coach John Stewart told Varsity Letters that “we found our inside game and we felt today was one on the inside for us, not the outside which is so often our M.O.. Stewart said the Pacer bigs – Eden Kremler, Peyton Bryden and Sophia Wang – effectively contained Juggler Ella Ungemach. Stewart said Kremler is “100 per cent heart all the time,” said Stewart. “She is 100 per cent heart on legs. There is no stop. She’ll run through a wall for you and then ask what it was made of.” Abbi Ellison paced the Pacers with 25. Joaleah Tupas-Singh added 23, Kealayna Tupas-Singh 10, Polore Olorunojowon 6, Eden Kremler 5, Sophia Wang 4 and Peyton Bryden 2, while Sion Yun, Ariel Copley, Anna Wu, Alem Kuhn, Natasha Copley and Tarikua Kuhn were scoreless. Emily Chan paced the Jugglers with 22, including six treys. Kaitlyn Chan added 19, Maecon Gifonea 18 (also reported as 19), Ella Ungemach 6, Hailey Halldorson 3 and Aira Ebora 2, while Taylor Cagampan, Peyton Cagampan, Anastasia Kalpidis, Joana Pepe, Almire Augustin, Mata Curnam?, Angelica Abijero, Ally Panzetta, Samantha Allay-Chan were scoreless.
The 2nd-seeded Langley Christian Lightning whipped the 10th-seeded Fernie Falcons 87-59 after leading 23-20, 55-22 and 72-42 at the quarters. Lightning guard Grace Bradshaw, after a two-year recovery from a torn ACL, hit five triples and dominated the floor. “It’s great to be back,” Bradshaw told Varsity Letters. “I think my team has helped me become who I am. It’s back. It’s back, I’m back, and it’s great to be back.” Lightning coach Dani Gardner said “we all have ups and down but the fact that you are back playing … play with joy and just enjoy it. I told her ‘Give yourself some grace’. I said ‘Your name is perfect right now, so give yourself some Grace. Just be kind to yourself.” Grace Bradshaw paced the Lightning with 30. Colette Van der Hoven added 24, Shaylah Black 15 (also reported as 16), Payton Brunoro 12, Leah Aukema 4 and Lara Commerford 2, while Annah Kuehl, Rainey DeWit, Brielle Hillmer, Emma Cazacu, Madden DeWit, Georgia Vander Waarde and Katie Beveridge were scoreless. Kadie Anderson scored 39 (also reported as 38), including six treys, to pace the Falcons (coach Jen Kennedy, coach Rylee French). Emilee French added 9, Summer Musschoot 8, and Cassie Fahselt 4, while Heidi Stevens, Brooklyn Webster, Taylor Witbeck, Georgia Lessard, Millie Gadd, Paige Matejka, Felicia Smith and Emily Joy were scoreless.
The 4th-seeded Surrey Holy Cross Crusaders nipped the 5th-seeded Burnaby St. Thomas More Knights 48-46 on a driving layup by Samantha Isidro. The Knights led 15-11 after one quarter. The Crusaders led 28-23 at the half and 35-33 after three quarters. Crusaders coach Joe Vinluan told Varsity Letters that his troops were just able to contain Demicah Arnaldo. “They are a good team and a scrappy team and No. 4 (Arnaldo), she’s a wonderful guard. She really knows how to control the game. We knew we couldn’t restrict her from scoring but we just wanted to contain her, get in her grill and not let her look down the floor.” Vinluan also said his team benefited from a tough schedule. “So I think they came already built for adversity. It’s built in with us. … We are a small team that is always fighting and crawling as best we can.” Isla Iannuzzi paced the Crusaders with 18. Amy Rokosh added 13, Samantha Isidro 12, Felisha-Velle Rivera 4 and Tiana Ursua 1, while Maya MacGillivray, Kate Borkowski, Alynah Solano, Arianna Di-Liello, Claire Nichol, Siena Legazpi and Keira Legazpi were scoreless. Demicah Arnaldo scored 13 to pace the Knights. Danica Fontana added 12, Kyra Anagnostou 10, Lishan Hewitt 4, Micah Penalosa 3, Mattea Pavan 2 and Ava Giovinazzo 2, while Gianna Retino, Alyssa Demaisip, Nikolina Prtenjaca, Kirsten Facun and Mia Chan were scoreless.
In the last quarterfinal, the top-seeded West Vancouver Mulgrave Titans crushed the 9th-seeded Abbotsford Traditional Titans 63-35 after leading 16-9, 35-16 and 46-18 at the quarters. Abbotsford slowed the game to a crawl in hopes to derailing Mulgrave’s offence. Mulgrave guard Eva Ruse told Varsity Letters that the team rewatched the 2022 Double-A final (a loss to Langley Christian) to motivate themselves. “It was more of our own thing, something the team decided to do. “It was so that we could … re-hunger ourselves, re-feel what we felt. It was just a way for us to remember how much we want this. … We’re full of nerves but we’re also full of hunger … We want it.”,” continued Ruse. “Last year we were this close, and it was really hard but that just made us stronger.” Ava Wilson led Mulgrave with 18. Eva Ruse added 17, Jenna Talib 12, Lucy Xu 7, Salihah Ali 6 and Deanna Naemi 3, while Mia Ruse, Maryam Mojarvadi, Kaitlyn Takeuchi, Sara Sunderji, Wing Lai, Erika Pannahandeh and Maia Rayner were scoreless. Janeesh Sran scored 18 to pace the Titans (coach Ashyana Kumar, coach Taylor Claggett, assistant Mike Claggett). Taneesh Sran added 7, Sukprixa Birdi 6 and Uppreet Bhathal 4, while Arushi Gandhal, Kiran Dhillon, Maneet Brar, Sihneet Gill, Harshan Parhar and Partik Gill were scoreless.
In the semis, the top-seeded West Vancouver Mulgrave Titans mauled the 4th-seeded Surrey Holy Cross Crusaders 85-36 after leading 15-0 early and 28-3, 52-10 and 79-19 at the quarters. Titans coach Claude Leduc told Varsity Letters that “I think the girls are just more focused and experienced and used to the physical, tough style of basketball we got by playing in all of those Quad-A tournaments. … I think our girls have a bit of swagger now… they know they can play. Today’s game was a classic case of that. They worked hard on both ends of the court. I could tell during our pre-game talk on the bus how much they wanted it. They are doing the right things, saying the right things, getting their sleep… they are largely Grade 10s and 11s but they are all acting like seniors. … When we went into this game, I told the girls ‘Don’t take your foot off the gas pedal because these Holy Cross girls work hard and battle and keep coming and coming. We knew. In the past we’ve had games like this blow up in our face.” Jenna Talib paced the Titans with 28. Lucy Xu added 19, including five treys, Eva Ruse 16, Ava Wilson 16, Sara Sunderji 2, Deanna Naemi 2 and Erika Panahandeh 2, while Maryam Mojarradi, Mia Ruse, Kaitlyn Takeuchi, Wing Lai, Salihah Ali and Maia Rayner were scoreless. Isla Iannuzzi paced the Crusaders with 10. Amy Rokosh added 7, Felisha-Velle Rivera 7, Claire Nichol 3, Samantha Isidro 3, Maya MacGillivray 2, Kate Borkowski 2 and Alynah Solano 2, while Tiana Ursua, Arianna Di-Liello, Siena Legazpi, Nicole Magtipay and Keira Legazpi were scoreless.
In the other semi, the 3rd-seeded Victoria Pacific Christian Pacers nipped the 2nd-seeded Langley Christian Lightning 48-46. The Lightning led 11-2 after one quarter and 23-17 at the half and by as many as 14 midway through the third quarter. But guards Joaleah and Kealayna Tupas-Singh, along with physical posts Eden Kremler and Sophia Wang, rallied the Pacers to knot the score at 37 after three quarters. They bridged the final quarters with a 23-2 run to take a 44-37 lead with seven minutes to play. The Lightning countered with a 7-2 run to draw within 48-46 and had a chance to knot the score when Grace Bradshaw drove the floor and attempted a layup while crumpling to the floor, appearing to injury her formerly uninjured knee (she’d had a ACL tear two years earlier). She was taken off the floor by wheelchair. “Honestly, it was like our coach always says … you need skill, team work and magic,” Kremler told Varsity Letters. “I think it just takes a little of all of them.” Pacers co-coach Jen Stewart said “family won today,” we are never out of it because we are so much for each other. “We have good basketball IQ, but you know, so does Langley, they are a fantastic-coached team. I just feel like today, our family won.” Stewart added that the Tupas-Singh sisters have “a light from within. You see them smile, and that is belief. I am telling you, they believe in their teammates, they make other people better, and they are not just for each other. They just have a way of igniting everybody.” Joaleah Tupas-Singh paced the Pacers with 19. Eden Kremler added 10, Tarikua Kuhn 8, Abi Ellison 6, Sophia Wang 4 and Peyton Bryden 1, while Sion Yun, Ariel Copley, Anna Wu, Alem Kuhn, Natasha Copley, Polore Olorunojowon and Kealayna Tupas-Singh were scoreless. Leah Aukema paced the Lightning with 14. Payton Brunaro added 10, Grace Bradshaw 8, Colette Vander Hoven 5, Shaylah Black 5, along with 11 boards, Lara Commerford 2 and Rainey DeWit 2, while Annah Kuehl, Madden DeWit, Brielle Hillmer, Emma Cazacu, Georgia Vander Waarde and Katie Beveridge were scoreless.
In the bronze medal match, the 2nd-seeded Langley Christian Lightning crushed the 4th-seeded Surrey Holy Cross Crusaders 61-39 after leading 12-8, 261-4 and 45-25 at the quarters. Leah Aukema and Colette Vander Hoven each scored 14 to pace the Lightning. Annah Kuehl added 12, Payton Brunoro 9, Shaylah Black 6, Georgia Vanderwaarde 5 and Madden DeWit 1, while Lara Commerford, Grace Bradshaw, Rainey DeWit, Brielle Hilmer, Emma Cazacu and Katie Beveridge were scoreless. Amy Rokosh scored 13 to pace the Crusaders (coach Joe Vinluan, assistant Naomi Vinluan). Isla Iannuzzi added 9, Alynah Solano 8, Samantha Isidro 3, Maya MacGillivary 2, Tiana Ursua 2 and Arianna Di-Liello 2, while Nicole Magtipay, Kate Borkowski, Claire Nichol, Siena Legazpi, Keira Legazpi and Felisha-Velle Rivera were scoreless.
In the final, the top-seeded West Vancouver Mulgrave Titans dusted the 3rd-seeded Victoria Pacific Christian Pacers 91-53 after leading 30-10, 50-19 and 73-41 at the quarters. Titans coach Claude Leduc said “the theme all tournament was just stay loose, enjoy the moment and focus on what’s important now and stay in the moment. … We learned about the grit and toughness and preparation that is required to be successful. They learned that they needed to act like seniors – hydrate, rest, sleep, work hard. We have been to the provincials at the 1A level a bunch of times, but have never been able to close it out, so to do to it at the 2A level the second time around, it means a lot.” Leduc added that Eva Ruse “is on another level. She makes her teammates better, she does everything. She has the heart of a champion, competes, battles, great leaper, can finish. … (The team works) hard, they are committed, they can score in a bunch of different ways, and when they commit to defence like they did this tournament, they are impossible to beat.” Guard Lucy Xu told Varsity Letters that “it definitely feels amazing, especially after last year (a loss in the finals) being so close. Getting into the final for the second year in a row and being able to win it this time, just amazing.” Pacers coach John Stewart said the Titans boardwork perimeter shooting was exceptional. “They were huge and I don’t know how many three hits, but I can’t really count that high. They were dropping them in from left, right and centre.” Leduc said “we’ve got two of the best three-point shooters in the province on our team and our big (Ruse) she can know ‘em down from three too.” Lucy Xu paced the Titans with 30. Jenna Talib added 27, Ava Wilson 14, Eva Ruse 11, along with 12 assists and 9 boards, Erika Panahandeh 5, Deanna Naemi 2, Mia Ruse 1 and Maryam Mojarradi 1, while Sara Sunderji, Kaitlyn Takeuchi, Wing Lai, Salihah Ali and Maia Rayner were scoreless. Defensive player of the tournament Joaleah Tupas-Singh paced the Pacers with 16. Kealayna Tupas-Singh added 15, Eden Kremler 11, Abi Ellison 10 and Sophia Wang 1, while Sion Yun, Ariel Copley, Anna Wu, Alem Kuhn, Natasha Copley, Tarikua Kuhn, Peyton Bryden and Polore Olorunojowon were scoreless.
The all-tournament 1st team included MVP Eva Ruse (Mulgrave); Kealayna Tupas-Singh (Pacific Christian); Jenna Talib (Mulgrave); Ava Wilson (Mulgrave); Grace Bradshaw (Langley Christian); and Colette Vanderhoven (Langley Christian).
The 2nd team featured Ella Ungemach (Notre Dame); Isla Iannuzzi (Holy Cross); Janeesh Sran (Abbotsford Traditional); and Lucy Xu (Mulgrave).
The bronze medalist Langley Christian Lightning: Grace Bradshaw; Colette Vander Hoven; Shaylah Black; Payton Brunaro; Leah Aukema; Lara Commerford; Annah Kuehl; Rainey DeWit; Brielle Hillmer; Emma Cazacu; Madden DeWit; Georgia Vander Waarde; Katie Beveridge;
The silver medalist Victoria Pacific Christian Pacers: Joaleah Tupas-Singh; Eden Kremler; Kealayna Tupas-Singh; Abi Ellison; Peyton Bryden; Sophia Wang; Sion Yun; Ariel Copley; Anna Wu; Alem Kuhn; Natasha Copley; Tarikua Kuhn; Polore Olorunojowon; coach John Stewart; assistant Jen Stewart
The champion West Vancouver Mulgrave Titans: Jenna Talib; Ava Wilson; Erika Panahandeh; Eva Ruse; Lucy Xu; Kaitlyn Takeuchi; Sara Sunderji; Salihah Ali; Deanna Naemi; Maryam Mojarradi; Mia Ruse; Wing Lai; Maia Rayner; coach Claude Leduc