(1) | Simon Fraser | 83 | ||||||
(8) | Ottawa | 37 | Simon Fraser | 61 | ||||
(4) | Laval | 57 | Laval | 59 | Simon Fraser | 70 | ||
(5) | Regina | 50 | ||||||
—–SIMON FRASER | ||||||||
(2) | Victoria | 72 | ||||||
(7) | Memorial | 54 | Victoria | 58 | Winnipeg | 60 | ||
(3) | Winnipeg | 79 | Winnipeg | 66 | ||||
(6) | Guelph | 62 |
In the quarterfinals, held at Winnipeg’s Duckworth Centre, the 4th-seeded Laval Rouge et Or defeated the 5th-seeded Regina Cougars 57-50. Laval hit only three baskets in the second half but they went 17 of 21 from the free throw line. The Cougars were sloppy, committing 16 turnovers in the first half and 25 in the game. “We couldn’t buy a break and we couldn’t buy a basket,” said guard Danny Ash. Nothing would drop. We also had a lot of turnovers, which hurt us. We couldn’t finish, we couldn’t get a call – nothing wanted to work for us.” Ash’s jab at the three officials was a common refrain. “We were playing five-on-eight out there,” said forward Leah Anderson. “I turned to Amy (Moroz, an assistant coach) at one point and said, ‘Is (official Sam Kasakowski) really a ref?’” Speedy said the Cougars’ inability to hit shots was a key factor, but so was the work of the officials. “The fouls were 23 (for Regina) to 12 and the free-throw attempts were 29 (for Laval) to six. That’s not the main reason we lost, but it definitely was a factor. We just couldn’t get to the free-throw line. We did enough defensively – holding a team like that to 23 points in the second half is pretty good – but 50 points isn’t going to win you too many games at the national level.” Laval led for much of the first half, but an 8-0 run gave the Cougars a 27-25 lead with 3:19 left. From there, Regina was outscored 9-0 for the remainder of the half and trailed 34-27 at the break. “We were just wanting to go, go, go and weren’t taking our time,” Anderson said. “I’ve noticed that all year, actually: We try to attack too much because we want to score 20 points right now. It doesn’t work that way.” Laval’s largest second-half lead was 11 points at 42-31 before Regina got to within three at 51-48 with 1:30 left. But Ash missed a two-pointer with 50 seconds remaining, leaving the Cougars no option but to foul the rest of the way. Speedy said “it’s my job as a coach to do everything in my power to make sure my team wins, as long as it’s professional, as long as it’s classy and as long as it’s within the rules. Sometimes you have to bend the rules a little bit in the hopes it provides positive results.” At one stage, Speedy – upset a holding foul wasn’t called on Laval – yelled a perpetrator “can get 15 yards for that in the CFL.” Reminded later that holding is a 10-yard infraction in the CFL, Speedy sheepishly admitted he was “so wound up, I made a poor reference.” He then got into a conversation at the Cougars’ bench with Kasakowski, who told Speedy officials don’t call fouls when they hear a slap of skin on skin. “I said, ‘Obviously, you don’t call what you see, either,” Speedy said. He might not have heard that last bit; he was already running downcourt.” He added that he deliberately provoked Kasakowski into calling a technical. “It was totally premeditated. I wasn’t freaking out. (Kasakowski) was on the baseline on eight of our possessions in a row and we never got a (foul) call (on Laval). I thought he was terrible, so I told him. I did it as much for the girls in terms of the us-against-the- world mentality and it worked. They huddled at halfcourt, got pissed off, dug deeper and played with a chip on their shoulders for the next couple of minutes.” Josee Lalonde paced Laval with 13 on 6-10 from the floor and 9 boards. Patricia Mandeville added 10 on 8-10 from the line and 7 boards. Emilie Langevin scored 8 on 3-7 from the floor. Caroline D’Amours notched 8 on 2-8 from the floor and 4-4 from the line. Chantale Bellavance scored 7 on 2-7 from the floor. Andree-Anne Parent scored 6 and Marian Fortier 5, while Karine Bibeau and Genevieve Blanchette were scoreless. The Rouge et Or shot 16-49 (.327) from the floor, 3-13 (.231) from the arc and 22-29 (.759) from the line, while garnering 29 boards, 9 assists. 12 fouls, 16 turnovers, 5 steals and 4 blocks. Leah Anderson led Regina with 14 points on 7-15 from the floor and 7 boards. Jana Schweitzer scored 13 on 3-14 from the floor, 2-8 from the arc, 5-5 from the line and 4 boards. Lara Schmidt scored 7 on 3-8 from the floor. Laura Hunko scored 7 on 3-5 from the floor and 9 boards. Megan Cherkas scored 4, Danny Ash 3 and Chelsea Cassano 2, while Leane Philipps, Meryl Jordan, Maja Kralovcova and Emily Ross were scoreless. The Cougars hit 20-64 (.312) from the floor, 4-18 (.222) from the arc and 6-6 from the line, while garnering 43 boards, 12 assists, 22 fouls, 21 turnovers, 7 steals and 1 block.
The top-seeded Simon Fraser Clan thrashed the 8th-seeded University of Ottawa 82-37 Gee-Gees as Laura Van Den Boogard scored 18 on 6-8 from the arc. Morgan McLaughlin added 17 on 7-11 from the floor and 10 boards. Julia Wilson scored 10 on 4-7 from the floor. Maren Corrigal notched 9 on 3-4 from the floor. Dani Langford scored 7 on 2-7 from the floor and 10 assists. Kelsie Thu scored 7 on 3-4 from the floor. Devon Campbell notched 7 on 3-7 from the floor and 7 assists. Courtney Brown scored 4 and Lani Gibbons 3, while Courtney Gerwing was scoreless. The Clan shot 30-52 (.577) from the floor, 10-18 (.556) from the arc and 12-21 (.571) from the line, while garnering 38 boards, 25 assists, 13 fouls, 14 turnovers, 8 steals and 3 blocks. Julie Rodrigue paced Ottawa with 13 points on 4-9 from the floor and 4-4 from the line. Moriah Trowell added 8 on 2-9 from the floor. Hilary Foster scored 7 on 3-6 from the floor. Kristen Moyle was scoreless on 0-8 from the floor. Veronique Martineau scored 5 on 2-3 from the floor and 6 boards. Miranda Killam scored 4 on 2-7 from the floor. Tina Ethier, Jenn Labelle, Caroline Allain, Moronike Laleye, Katie Laurie and Nadia Brenko were scoreless. The Gee-Gees shot 13-59 (.220) from the floor, 2-21 (.095) from the arc and 9-13 (.692) from the line, while garnering 21 boards, 9 assists, 18 fouls, 12 turnovers, 8 steals and 1 block. The Clan completely dominated the Gee-Gees as they romped to an easy win. “This game just underlines our depth and balance all the more after a great season of depth and balance,” said fifth-year forward Morgan McLaughlin. “We’ve got players on the bench who would be starters on most other teams. It’s a credit to how hard they practice day in and day out. They’re always ready to step into any game situation.” Despite playing without 6-4 power forward Julia Wilson for the most of the first half because of foul trouble, the Clan romped to a 40-19 lead at the half on McLaughlin’s dominance of the pain and point Dani Langford’s playmaking. Ottawa coach Carlos Brown said “we chose the wrong time to have a bad night shooting the basketball. When you shoot only 23 per cent against any team, never mind the best team in the country, you’re going to have a long and bad night. SFU defended the ball well, but we still had good looks at the basket. We just couldn’t hit nearly often enough to stay competitive.”
The 3rd-seeded Winnipeg Wesmen crushed the 6th-seeded Guelph Gryphons 79-62 as Joanne Wells scored 22 on 8-18 from the floor and 6-6 from the line. Heather Thompson added 16 on 4-8 from the floor, 8-17 from the line, 7 boards and 5 steals. Uzoma Asagwara scored 15 on 5-14 from the floor, 4-6 from the line and 5 boards. Melanie Talastas scored 7, Kate Daniels 6, Jenny Ezirim 6, Jae Pirnie 4 and Stefanie Timmersman 3, while Lindsay De Leeuw was scoreless. The Wesmen hit 28-56 (.500) from the floor, 3-8 (.375) from the arc and 20-31 (.645) from the line, while garnering 29 boards, 18 assists, 17 fouls, 18 turnovers, 14 steals and 2 blocks. Sharon Hollinshead paced Guelph with 16 points on 6-8 from the floor, 4-6 from the line and 9 boards. Stephanie Yallin scored 14 on 5-11 from the floor, 3-4 from the arc, 7 boards and 4 assists. Kathryn Nevar scored 11 on 5-7 from the floor. Katie Guthrie notched 7, Jessica Nieuwland 5, Emily Peaker 4, Anne Marie Ssemanda 3 and Heather Angus 2, while Ingrid Skolko was scoreless. The Gryphons hit 23-53 (.434) from the floor, 4-11 (.364) from the arc and 12-20 (.600) from the line, while garnering 25 boards, 12 assists, 20 fouls, 22 turnovers, 9 steals and 2 blocks.
In the last quarterfinal, the 2nd-seeded Victoria Vikings whipped the 7th-seeded Memorial Sea-Hawks 72-54 as Jania Mynott scored 19 on 6-11 from the floor, 7-9 from the arc and 7 boards. Jennifer Diana scored 14 on 5-11 from the floor, 4-5 from the line and 7 boards. Jody Potts scored 14 on 6-9 from the floor. Jamie Bell notched 11 on 4-7 from the floor and Leanne Shenton 10 on 2-6 from the floor and 9 boards. Lindsay Hewson and Victoria McGroarty each scored 2, while Krystal Hawksworth, Beckie Macdonald, Schuylah Merrick and Allison Omland were scoreless. The Vikings shot 25-53 (.472) from the floor, 2-10 from the arc and 20-28 (.714) from the line, while garnering 38 boards, 12 assists, 20 turnovers, 7 steals and 1 block. Jenine Browne paced Memorial with 16 points on 6-13 from the floor. Leslie Stewart added 11 on 5-14 from the floor and 6 boards. Amy Dalton scored 9 on 4-12 from the floor and 5 boards. Renee McGrath notched 6 on 3-6 from the floor and 5 boards. Krista Singleton scored 5 and nabbed 7 boards. Maegan Seaward scored 4 and Paula Barker 3, while Erin Mullaley, Kelly Himmelman and Meghan Dalton were scoreless. Memorial shot 23-65 (.354) from the floor, 4-19 (.211) from the arc and 4-5 from the line, while garnering 30 boards, 11 assists, 23 fouls, 15 turnovers and 12 steals. The Vikes started slowly but still romped. “We were a bit nervous at the start,” said forward Jania Mynott. “We relied on our defence and that generated offence for us.” The Vikes were down 6-2 and 8-4 before clawing back. They scored the last six points of the first half for a 31-25 lead after 20 minutes. “Memorial took it to us early and they were strong on the ball,” said Mynott. “They weren’t afraid to take fouls and we just have to make sure that we go up and make the hoops. We kept attacking them all night and we wore them down.” Jamie Bell said her first nationals appearance was “awesome. … We started a little shaky but we just kept working hard and our better conditioning showed in the end.” Vikings coach Brian Cheng said “the first game of a tournament is always the hardest. There is so much anticipation and build up for that first game and we were a little tight to start. We had a very balanced attack and another team effort. Hopefully we can build on this and move forward.”
In the semis, 3rd-seed Winnipeg dumped 2nd-seed Victoria 66-58 after rallying from a 14-point deficit. Victoria led by as many as 14 and by 32-22 at the half but melted down in the second frame. JoAnne Wells took command for the Wesmen, scoring 22 in the second frame. Vikes had a 14-point lead at one point in the first half and 32-22 at half time before JoAnne Wells and her Wesmen took over. “This game was a tale of two halves,” said Vikes’ coach Brian Cheng. “We started very strong and had a chance to put them away but we couldn’t. Winnipeg stuck in there and never stopped believing that they could win. At points in the game, our defence let us down and our offence went dry. We would have liked to defend JoAnne [Wells] better but she did a lot of good things in the second half and showed why she is the best player in Canada.” Wells said that the Wesmen left everything on the floor. “This was a national semifinal and I’m a fifth-year player and I wanted to give it everything I had. We have been a second half team all year and it really showed tonight. That win was a little bit of revenge for Victoria knocking us out of the playoffs and I’m sure it showed on our faces.” Wells finished with 25 points on 8-13 from the floor, 2-3 from the arc, 7-8 from the line and 7 boards. Uzoma Asagwara added 19 on 5-8 from the floor, 2-3 from the arc, 7-8 from the line and 4 boards. Jae Pirnie scored 7 on 3-3 from the floor. Heather Thompson scored 5 on 2-7 from the floor and 8 boards. Stefanie Timmersman scored 4, Jenny Ezirim 4 and Melanie Talastas 2, while Kate Daniels, Lindsay De Leeuw and Christina Thys were scoreless. Winnipeg shot 22-48 (.458) from the floor, 4-10 from the arc and 18-29 (.621) from the line, while garnering 31 boards, 11 assists, 17 fouls, 11 turnovers, 10 steals and 5 blocks, including 3 by Thompson. Jody Potts paced Victoria with 15 points on 6-17 from the floor, 3-6 from the arc, 7 boards and 7 assists. Jania Mynott added 14 on 4-9 from the floor and 8 boards. Beckie Macdonald scored 7 on 2-8 from the floor and 5 boards. Leanne Shenton scored 6 on 2-11 from the floor. Lindsay Hewson scored 3, Jamie Bell 2 and Jennifer Diana 1, while grabbing 9 boards. The Vikings hit 16-59 (.271) from the floor, 7-26 (.269) from the arc and 9-15 (.600) from the line, while garnering 38 boards, 12 assists, 23 fouls, 20 turnovers and 6 steals.
In the other semi, Simon Fraser nipped Laval 61-59 as Julia Wilson scored 17 on 5-14 from the floor, 7-11 from the line and 8 boards. Dani Langford added 12 on 4-14 from the floor, 3-8 from the arc, 5 boards and 3 assists. Courtney Gerwing scored 7 on 2-2 from the floor and 3-3 from the line. Maren Corrigal notched 6 on 2-5 from the floor. Lani Gibbons scored 6 on 6-6 from the line. Morgan McLaughlin scored 6 on 3-7 from the floor and 8 boards. Devon Campbell scored 5 on 2-4 from the floor and 9 boards. Courtney Brown scored 2, while Kelsie Thu and Laura Van Den Boogard were scoreless. The Clan shot 19-53 (.358) from the floor, 3-8 (.357) from the arc and 18-24 (.750) from the line, while garnering 35 boards, 12 assists, 17 fouls, 19 turnovers, 10 steals and 5 blocks. Chantale Bellavance paced Laval with 16 points on 7-14 from the floor. Andree-Anne Parent added 13 on 6-10 from the floor. Caroline D’Amours scored 12 on 6-13 from the floor. Genevieve Blanchette notched 6 on 4-4 from the line and 6 boards. Patricia Mandeville scored 4, Marian Fortier 4, Josee Lalonde 2 and Karine Bibeau 1, while Chantal Forest and Emilie Langevin were scoreless. The Rouge et Or hit 24-51 (.471) from the floor, 2-7 (.286) from the arc and 9-11 (.818) from the line, while garnering 20 boards, 10 assists, 20 fouls, 16 turnovers, 7 steals and 2 blocks. The Clan started very slowly, hitting only three of their first 18 shots. But they finished the first half by hitting 8-12 and took a 32-31 lead into the lockers. The Clan started the second half with a 10-0 run but Laval battled back to make the game close. Julia Wilson had an exceptional second half. “I’ve decided to name myself the one-half wonder,” Wilson smiled after reversing a four-point first half outing with 13 points, six rebounds and a pivotal blocked shot in 18 second-half minutes. “I just haven’t been able to put two halves together.” After playing smash-mouth basketball with Laval’s deep rotation of post players, both Wilson and fellow frontcourt Twin Tower, 6- foot-2 Morgan McLaughlin, found themselves battling foul trouble to the extent that neither could remain on the floor together for any significant time in the first half. In the second half, however, Wilson seemed to assume a new persona. Playing in concert with McLaughlin she became that “other Julia”, scoring eight of the Clan’s points in a 10-0 opening run that turned a 32-31 lead at the break into a 42-31 advantage. In the end, it was a cushion the Clan couldn’t have done without. “I don’t even know what happens,” said Wilson of her transformation. “I think for a lot of players, if you have a bad first half, halftime is a time to get yourself focused and ready to play in the second. But it can work the other way where halftime is a momentum killer. For me I was just glad I went the other way with it.” Wilson began moving her feet, competing harder for loose balls on the offensive glass and just generally lowered the boom on the Rouge et Or, finishing with 17 points and eight rebounds. Laval got three-pointers from Chantale Bellevance and Andree-Anne Parent in the final 12 seconds that the Clan were fortunate enough to offset thanks to the 4-for-4 free-throw shooting of Lani Gibbons. “I think the whole first half was like a feeling-out process for us,” admitted Clan wing Devon Campbell. “They just kept flooding in those big girls. We just told each other that if we were going to win this thing, we were going to do it with heart.” Wilson, who got a halftime refresher on how to play offensively in the post from senior point guard Dani Langford, also brought her best defensively, blocking a shot by Laval’s Caroline D’Amours with 37 seconds remaining and SFU leading 56-51. “That was a very intense game and a good learning experience for us,” said Campbell. Clan coach Bruce Langford called it a total chess match. “They were a team unique in style from anything we have seen this year. I think, without a doubt, it was the toughest game. It was a tough, physical battle and there was a lot of chess going on. … “We did not see Laval, nor did we have any tape of them until Friday,” said Clan coach Bruce Langford. “But everybody that I talked to said that they strongly recommend to me that we needed to full-court pressure them and that we needed to play a zone defence against them. Well, only thing is that we don’t full-court press and we don’t play zone. I debated it long and hard. Do we do what everybody is saying for us to do or do what we do best? In the end I thought, well, they’ve never played this SFU team before.”
In the bronze
medal match, Laval dumped Victoria 60-47. “This was an amazing team,” said Vikes’
coach Brian Cheng. “At the start of the year, we were probably a bubble team
just to make the Canada West playoffs. But this team just worked so hard and
they cared for and respected each other. That is what made the chemistry on
this team so strong. … Laval has a very good team. They were a couple of
possessions away from getting into the gold-medal game. They are arguably one
of the top two teams here because of their size and athleticism. We played with
some urgency today and competed hard. My only concern was that we could have
finished a little better with our shots. Laval was very good defensively as
they jumped into the passing lanes and blocked shots. Some of the shots we were
making all year, they took away from us.” Josee Lalonde led Laval with 13 on 6-12
from the floor and 6 boards. Emilie Langevin scored 10 on 4-9 from the floor.
Andree-Anne Parent notched 10 on 4-7 from the floor. Marian Fortier scored 8,
Caroline D’Amours 7, Chantale Bellavance 6, Patricia Mandeville 5 and Genevieve
Blanchette 1, while Christina Lacombe and Chantal Forest were scoreless. The Rouge
et Or shot 22-56 (.393) from the floor, 6-15 (.400) from the arc and 10-13
(.769) from the line, while garnering 25 boards, 17 assists, 14 fouls, 12 turnovers,
11 steals and 5 blocks. Jania Mynott paced Victoria with 17 points on 6-16 from
the floor, 5-12 from the line and 9 boards. Jody Potts added 15 on 6-14 from
the floor. Jennifer Diana notched 6, Leanne Shenton 4, Lindsay Hewson 3 and Jamie
Bell 2, while Krystal Hawksworth, Beckie Macdonald, Victoria McGroarty,
Schuylah Merrick and Allison Omland were scoreless. The Vikings hit 18-51 (.353)
from the floor, 2-11 (.182) from the arc and 9-17 (.529) from the line, while
garnering 38 boards, 10 assists, 17 fouls, 20 turnovers, 5 steals and 1 block.
The Rouge et Or used a lethal combination of timely baskets and solid defense
as they bottled up the Vikes not allowing their rivals too many easy looks at
the basket. The score at halftime was 30-24 Laval. In the second half Laval
continued their strong play and once again was tenacious on defense holding the
Vikes to 30% shooting from the field and 23 points. Laval’s bench outscored the
Vikes 19-2, which turned out to be a big factor in this game.
In the final, Simon Fraser dumped
Winnipeg 70-60. The Clan relied on the three-point shot for the victory as they
connected on 11-of-24 three-point shots to keep the Wesmen off balance. Each
time the Wesmen scored the Clan would counter attack with a three-point shot.
Simon Fraser built a 38-24 lead at halftime. In the second half the Wesmen started
to chip away at the lead and even closed the gap to four points with just over
one minute remaining in the game. The Wesmen turned the ball over on a couple of
occasions and were unable to overtake the Clan. Simon Fraser built a 16-point
lead early in the second half and was comfortably out in front for most of the
game. But over the final 10 minutes the Wesmen came storming back. Trailing
57-42, Winnipeg went on an 18-5 run to close to within two points, 62-60, with
1:37 left in the game. Senior forward Morgan McLaughlin hit a field goal to put
the Clan up by four and on Winnipeg’s next possession guard Melanie Talastas
turned the ball over. Winnipeg never got another point as the Wesmen were
forced to foul the rest of the way. Langford stole the ball with 39 seconds left
and the Clan clinging to a six-point lead. Langford stripped Winnipeg swingman
JoAnne Wells on a driving layup and held the ball until she was fouled. She
made both free throws to preserve the win. Langford was named player of the
game and tournament MVP. “This was a pretty sweet way to finish my career,”
said Langford, who will help her father Bruce Langford coach the Clan next year.
“We watched the semifinal Winnipeg played against Victoria and we knew that
they would make a second-half run at us. We just wanted to keep playing solid
defence and not let them back in it.” Father Bruce Langford noted that “it’s interesting
that she wins the MVP of the national tournament but she isn’t a CIS all-star. “I
happen to think that she is very underrated, but then again, I am her dad.” Said
Dani of the snub: “That’s all political stuff. We got what we wanted in the
end. But I was not expecting [the MVP]. That was just the cherry on top.”
Langford hit the critical treys early to open the floor and then later, with the
Wesmen trailing by six and Wells driving to the basket, she reached out and
stripped the ball, drawing a foul as she charged down the court and getting to
the free-throw line where she quickly put her team up 68-60. “Devon [Campbell] was
playing great defence but I knew Jo was going to go and try to take it, so I
had to go and help,” said Langford, who after the game was clutching the very
ball she stole from Wells. “I got it and I just ran for my life.” As Bruce
Langford agreed afterward, it was the biggest play in the biggest game of the
season. “You can’t get any bigger than that,” he said of a play that short-circuited
the flow from one team to the other. “She recognized the moment and the
situation and it was a great play.” It staggered the Wesmen’s rally after they
had climbed from 16 down early in the half to within 62-60 in the final 90
seconds. “It’s pretty sweet,” said Langford, who also chosen game MVP after
dishing 10 assists, while only have 1 turnover in 37 minutes of play. “No
better way to go out than with your last game. I was shaky and crying a bit
before the game because it sunk in that it was the last game. To go out with
those girls, it’s just awesome.” Kelsie Thu paced Simon Fraser with 14 on 5-8
from the floor, 3-4 from the arc and 1-1 from the line. Dani Langford scored 13
on 3-8 from the arc, 4-4 from the line and 10 assists. Devon Campbell notched
10 on 4-9 from the floor. Morgan McLaughlin scored 10 on 4-11 from the floor
and 7 boards. Maren Corrigal scored 8 on 3-7 from the floor. Courtney Gerwing,
Lani Gibbons and Julia Wilson each scored 4. Wilson also nabbed 7 boards. Laura
Van Den Boogard scored 3, while Courtney Brown was scoreless. The Clan shot 23-61
(.377) from the floor, 11-24 (.458) from the arc and 13-16 (.812) from the line,
while garnering 32 boards, 19 assists, 16 fouls, 9 turnovers, 9 steals and 9
blocks, including 4 by McLaughlin. Joanne Wells paced Winnipeg with 23 points
on 8-12 from the floor, 6-6 from the line and 4 boards. Uzoma Asagwara notched
12 on 4-11 from the floor, 3-3 from the line and 4 boards. Heather Thompson
scored 10 on 4-13 from the floor and 17 boards. Kate Daniels scored 7 on 3-6
from the floor. Melanie Talastas scored 5 and Stefanie Timmersman 4, while
Lindsay De Leeuw and Jae Pirnie were scoreless. Winnipeg shot 22-52 (.423) from
the floor, 4-11 (.364) from the arc and 12-13 (.923) from the line, while garnering
29 boards, 7 assists, 15 fouls, 14 turnovers, 4 steals and 4 blocks. The Clan
finished (38-2) on the season.
The all-tourney team featured: MVP Dani Langford (Simon Fraser); Jania Mynott (Victoria); Andree-Anne Parent (Laval); Uzo Asagwara (Winnipeg); JoAnne Wells (Winnipeg); and Julia Wilson (Simon Fraser)
The bronze medalist Laval Rouge et Or: Marian Fortier; Caroline D’Amours; Josee Lalonde; Andree-Anne Parent; Chantale Bellevance; Patricia Mandeville; Emilie Langevin; Chantal Forest; Karine Bibeau; Genevieve Blanchette; Christina Lacombe; Andre-Anne Parent; Nadia Askerow; Marie-Pier Turcotte; coach Linda Marquis
The silver medalist Winnipeg Wesmen: JoAnne Wells; Heather Thompson; Jenny Ezirim; Kate Daniels; Uzo Asagwara; Melanie Talastas; Lindsay de Leeuw; Stefanie Timmersman; Jae Pirnie; Christina Thys; Ronaly Olaes; Alecia Evans; Sam Breakenridge;
The champion Simon Fraser Clan: Julia Wilson; Dani Langford; Morgan McLaughlin; Courtney Brown; Devon Campbell; Laura Van Den Boogard; Kelsie Thu; Maren Corrigal; Lani Gibbons; Courtney Gerwing; coach Bruce Langford; assistant Kerry Rokosh; assistant Theresa Kliendienst; assistant John Prescott; athletic director Wilf Wedman