In the opening round, held in Langley: …………………………………………………… The top-seeded Surrey Holy Cross Crusaders spanked the 16th-seeded Dawson Creek Penguins 90-11. They led 36-4 after one quarter. Convenors did not post the entire box score, so the Crusaders leading scorers were unavailable. Crusaders coach Amy Beauchamp told Varsity Letters that “chemistry is a big thing. We have 10 grade 12’s, they’ve played together forever. Last year we lost in the final, so now they’re ready to go.” Alyssia Palma led the Crusaders with 15. Mila Wojciechowski added 14. Rylee Loomis led the Penguins with 4. Harrison Parminter added 4, Sophie Harrison 2 and Alex Tan 1, while Aviyah Cruz, Mya Coutts, Suki Zhange, Sophia Proulx, Lily Proulx and Brooklyn Attachie were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 9th-seeded West Vancouver Collingwood Cavaliers clubbed the 8th-seeded Victoria Lambrick Park Lions 59-40 after leading 11-9, 23-20 and 43-26 at the quarters. They opened the second half with a 9-0 run and romped to the win. Cavaliers coach Morgan McLaughlin told Varsity Letters that “we came in well prepared. We knew it was going to be a super tough game. I think that we were a little nervous in the first, as we all are, first game of provincials, but we settled down. … Kensie (Cole) brings a lot of heart and soul to the team. She takes on a lot herself, but she also knows how to use her teammates well. She brings confidence when she’s playing well, she also instills confidence in others and their game as well. … We rebounded extraordinarily well in the first half. I think we adjusted to the pace and the physicality fairly well as we settled in. But defence wins games, and that’s been our bread and butter for most of the season.” Kensie Cole the Cavaliers with 18. Brooklyn Cole added 12, Sara Darcy 8, Sophie Taylor 6, Shyra Jahangiri 6, Chloe Cechin 5, Ashley Zhang 2, Campbell Stewart 1 and Abby Walters 1, while Maddy Gouglas, Briana Tana, Miral Nazari, Salma Winder and Parker Gibbs Carsley were scoreless. Siena Khosla paced the Lions (coach Lexi Dunkley, coach Gary Baker) with 16. Briar Wishlow added 8, Quinn O’Connor 6, Abby Pilkington 4, Kaelyn Pitre 3 and Audrey Bestwick 3, while Nera Carl was scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 13th-seeded Kamloops Westsyde Whundas stunned the 4th-seeded Vancouver Notre Dame Jugglers 75-71 after leading 18-17, 40-34 and 62-52 at the quarters. The Jugglers whittled the lead to one with 3 minutes to play but Claire Connolly drilled a trey to stem the rally. Whundas coach Ishar S Litt told Varsity Letters that “Claire (Connolly) played the whole game. She was driving to the hoop, she was getting rebounds, she was playing great defence”, mused Whunda’s head coach Ishar S Litt. “She stepped up, Hudsyn (Morrison) stepped up, Ryen (Scot) stepped up, Anita (?) stepped up. … I like the fact that we didn’t give up. We had a 12-point lead, and we let them back in, but we fought hard and came up with the victory.” Claire Connolly led the Whundas with 20. Hudsyn Morrison added 19, Meena Litt 17, Ryen Scott 15 and Summer Walker 4, while Brooklyn Kell, Brynn Martin, Mia Hunter, Bella Hyam, Isabelle Tiel, Olivia Schieman, Taya Funnell and Leila Thinom were scoreless. Selena Quilatan paced the Jugglers with 12. Joana Pepe added 18, Lylah Mach 17, Peyton Cagampan 9, Zoey Gonzales 2 and Lorena Iacobucci 2, while Kleah Mach, Hainanah Atienza, Mahi Walia, Hannah Tupeng, Gabriella Porco, Anna Collins and Hazel Carlson were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 5th-seeded Victoria Pacific Christian Pacers clipped the 12th-seeded West Vancouver Mulgrave Titans 68-56 after leading 13-11, 26-24 and 48-36 at the quarters. Pacers coach Jen Stewart told Varsity Letters that guard Kealayna Tupas-Singh dominated the affair. “She is a humble, talented, generational player. She doesn’t mind putting the team on her back, but she’ll find ways to make other people great. It’s beautiful to watch, we can’t say enough. … With a talented team like Mulgrave, they have depth, but they have youth, and they’re fast. They gave lots of pressure, and our girls were able to adjust. We haven’t seen a lot of that type of pressure earlier in the season, and today, our girls were able to adapt and be able to execute our gameplan.” Kealayna Tupas-Singh paced the Pacers with 29. Mylie Taal added 14, Piper Taal 9, Ava Burnside 6, Andrada Danciu 6 and Makenna Lampard 4, while Judy Wu, Kimberly Mann, Hermela Teclemariam, Cassia Brown, Giselle Miles, Michi Nguyen, Jordan Stewart, Meke Du Preez and Isabelle Taal were scoreless. Riley Armstrong led the Titans (coach Claude Leduc) with 17. Emma Hoogendoorn added 13, Sophia Takeuchi 11, Maryam Mojarraddi 8, Mikaela Nyandoro 5 and Rosa Shakravi 2, while Imogen Vodrey, Abby Kubyshyn, Anastasia Moschau, Juha Park, Samaara Ebrahim and Charlotte Lo were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 2nd-seeded Langley Credo Christian Kodiaks, entering the Double-A ranks for the first time, clipped the 15th-seeded West Vancouver West Point Grey Academy Wolves 71-54 after leading 20-13, 37-23 and 51-40 at the quarters. The Kodiaks took command with a 9-0 run to open the final quarter. Kodiaks coach Kayla Vanderhorst told Varsity Letters that “we had a nice lead the whole time, which was nice, but it just felt tight the whole time. They’ve got that number 20 (Sophie Dawe) who is a strong player. So, we just tried to shut her down a little bit.” Hailey Stam paced the Kodiaks with 20. Player of the game Kallie Breukelman added 17, Presley Kobes 14, Rayelle Leffers 11, Sydney Van Dyke 4, Kenzie Raap 3, Nadia Zietsma 2 and Addy Vandeburgt 2, while Meagan Hansma, Rhys Admirall, Chelsea Wildeboer, Addy Homan and Kory Vandergaag were scoreless. Sophie Dawe led the Wolves (coach Nadia Brenko) with 27. Lily Howard added 11, Sienna Lalari 7, Sage Douglas 4, Shoushan Kalpakian 3 and Fia Johnston 2, while Julianna Woolfender, Mary Neill, Mila Pimstone, Rose Finlayson, Ming Trebilcock, Molly Hossack, Candice Geng and Ella Vardi were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 7th-seeded Salmon Arm J.L. Jackson Jays, with a roster of just 8 players in its first year as a senior secondary school, dispatched the 10th-seeded Surrey Southridge Storm 52-36. The score was knotted at 11 after one quarter. The Storm led 24-23 at the half. The Jays led 42-28 after three quarters. Jays co-coach Kira Limber told Varsity Letters that it was a “great team effort, gusty. Everyone that came in played a great game.” Keira Cadden paced the Jays with 22. Mackenzie Bostock added 8, Zoe Kok 8, Ripley Jonker 6, Aurealia Beaumont 4 and Jaidyn Danyluk 4, while Abby Smyrl and Annaka Brautigam were scoreless. Jayda Randhawa paced the Storm (coach Paul Chiarenza) with 15. Nicole Lofing added 11, Sophia Purewall 5, Elsa Kowalczyk 4 and Megan McDonald 1, while Sashs Lofing, Gurbani Sekhon, Diya Sekhri, Jiya Gohalwar, Aykta Sandhu, Addie McMullin, Armiya Hundal, Ella Feddersen and Monroe Robins were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 3rd-seeded Burnaby St. Thomas More Knights torched the 14th-seeded Abbotsford St. John Brebeuf Bears 86-57 after leading 10-2 early and 31-12, 49-30 and 69-43 at the quarters. The Knights full-court pressure hounded the Bears into a raft of miscues. Knights coach Cassie Lauang told Varsity Letters that “I think we came out swinging. “We look ready. … We look composed. … We had two weeks of practices that we had to sharpen all the tools in our toolkit. …  I think our kids look like they’re having fun and there’s a lighthearted sense of purpose to what we are doing on both ends.” Demicah Arnaldo paced the Knights with 19. Mackenzie Pagtakhan added 18, Mia Beliveau 18, Kyla Limon 9, Lauren Wong 9, Emina Sidhu 7, Kristina Prtenjaca 4, Evie Ashford-Livingstone 2 and Cassandra Molo 1, while Annika Montagano, Sam Galang, Ambert Degraaf, Kessa Roberts, Elin Lee, Gianna Dosanjh and Jaeda Foraina were scoreless. Nadia Andrews paced the Bears with 20. Miyana Fenrich added 13, Helena Andrews 9, Kamryn Blatz 9, Jessica Van Vugt 3, Madeline Gaudet 2 and Lauren Gaudet 1, while Hannah Coloma, Lauren Godbout, Mayastina Miyata, Payton Choboter and Danika Andrew were scoreless. …………………………………………………… In the last opening round match, the 6th-seeded Surrey Pacific Academy Breakers defeated the 11th-seeded Fernie Falcons 51-43. The score was knotted at 8 after one quarter. The Breakers led 20-18 at the half and 37-31 after three quarters. Breakers coach Mike Voros told Varsity Letters “that was an incredible battle. Fernie’s an incredible team. Ball didn’t go in much in the beginning, but we just kept telling the girls get to the rim, get to the rim. … In the second half, we were able to pull away, knock some shots down. I thought in particular, Megan [Thompson] and Amelie [Baril] were just dynamite… really proud of this team.” Megan Thompson paced the Breakers with 12. Amelie Baril added 11, Eden Hansen 9, Mila Gauer 7, Abbey Boehm 5, Amicko Li 3, Yuna Lui 2, Mckenzie Seiden 2 and Chanel Johnston 1, while Sophia Jones, Shaddai Gutierrez-Ramos, Amma Bonnie and Elizabeth Jerezano were scoreless. Olivia Blumhagen paced the Falcons with 11. Kamry Yuill added 8, Desiree French 8, Pearl Crabbe 6, Jacey Anderson 6, Josie Ferrarelli 2 and Billie Kennedy 2, while Taylor Witbeck, Ali Budd, Norah Fraser and Heidi Matejka were scoreless.

       In the quarterfinals, the top-seeded Surrey Holy Cross Crusaders spanked the 9th-seeded West Vancouver Collingwood Cavaliers 92-35 after leading 24-2, 48-24 and 71-36 at the quarters. Crusaders coach Amy Beauchamp told Varsity Letters that “having 10 Grade 12s is very unusual . . . and that helps for sure. These kids have been playing together since Grade 8 when they won provincials.” Beauchamp added that Solene Jackson was unique. “The way she is as a person and a teammate is huge. Then on top of that she’s just an amazing basketball player. Her length and her ability to do it on both ends of the floor and to create her own shot. She’s just a heck of a player.” Solene Jackson paced the Crusaders with 28. Chloe Mangalindin added 12, Mila Wojciechowski 10, Isla Iannuzzi 10, Arabelle DiLiello 7, Alyssia Palma 7, Jada Francis 6, Lindsay Correa 6 and Mia Guerrero 6, while Meghan McCash, Sophie Sheck, Gillian Gonesto, Jane Adam and Camille Amin were scoreless. Chloe Cechini paced the Cavaliers (coach Morgan McLaughlin) with 8. Sara Davey added 6, Sophie Taylor 6, Kensie Cole 6, Miral Nazari 3, Salma Winder 3, Brooklyn Cole 3 and Campbell Stewart 1, while Maddy Gouglas, Shyra Jahangiri, Brianna Tang, Abby Waltes, Aiko Ando, Ashley Zhang and Parker Gibbs Carsley were scoreless.

The 12th-seeded Kamloops Westsyde Whundas toppled the 5th-seeded Victoria Pacific Christian Pacers 78-69. The Pacers led 15-10 after one quarter and 34-26 at the half. They led by 11 in the third before the Whundas rallied to knot the score at 53 heading into the final frame. Whundas forward Ryen Scott told Varsity Letters that tournament organizers were “wrong” about seeding Westsyde 12th. “It gave us some fuel and really powered us going into the tournament. We’re happy with it.” Whundas coach Ishar Litt said seedings are “so subjective, right. We were (ranked No.) 5 at one point, but we don’t know the other teams, so we don’t know if we’re over(rated) or under. It’s OK with us. … We have four players that can score for us. We’re not relying on one person. … Our fourth quarter is our best quarter. I can tell you about a game we played when we were down 25 points in the fourth quarter and came back to nearly win. We have that in us. We can have those scoring spurts.” Ryen Scott paced the Whundas with 33. Meena Litt added 21, Claire Connolly 14, Hudsyn Morrison 8 and Bella Hyam 2, while Brooklyn Kell, Brynn Martin, Mia Hunter, Isabelle Tiel, Olivia Schieman, Taya Funnell and Leila Thinom were scoreless. Kealayna Tupas-Singh paced the Pacers (coach Jen Stewart) with 28. Mylie Taal added 12, Kimberly Mann 8, Ava Burnside 8, Makenna Lampard 7, Piper Taal 4 and Isabelle Taal 2, while Judy Wu, Hermela Teclemariam, Cassia Brown, Giselle Miles, Michi Nguyen, Jordan Stewart, Meke Du Preez and Andrada Danciu were scoreless.

The 2nd-seeded Langley Credo Christian Kodiaks dusted the 7th-seeded Salmon Arm J.L. Jackson Jays 72-33 after leading 24-10, 37-19 and 57-26 at the quarters. Kodiaks coach Kayla Vanderhorst said forward Presley Kobes, and guards Kenzie Rapp and Hailey Stam, keyed with the win with transition buckets. “They are just quick, smart players who know how to transition offensively to defensively. … This is how she (Kobes) plays. She’s very quick, probably the fastest on our team. She has that little burst of enthusiasm. And if there’s a pressure layup, we want the ball in her hands. She’s so smooth with those.” Presley Kobes paced the Kodiaks with 18. Kenzie Raap added 17, Kallie Breukelman 17, player of the game Hailey Stam 16, Chesea Wildeboer 2 and Sydney VanDyke 2, while Meagan Hansma, Madia Zietsma, Rhys Admiraal, Rayelle Leffers, Addy Vandeburgt, Addy Homan and Kory Vandergaag were scoreless. Ripley Jonker led the Jays (coach Keith Limber, coach Kira Limber) with 10. Zoe Kok added 8, Mackenzie Bostock 6, Abby Smyrl 2, Aurealia Beaumont 2 and Jaidyn Danyluk 2, while star point guard Keira Cadden was scoreless after being injured in the first quarter.

       In the last quarterfinal, the 3rd-seeded Burnaby St. Thomas More Knights edged the 6th-seeded Surrey Pacific Academy Breakers 53-49. The Knights led 18-13 after one quarter. The score was knotted at 27 at the half. The Knights led 41-34 after three quarters. Knights coach Cassie Lauang told Varsity Letters that “we are a gritty, tough group. I think we take great pride in being undersized and great pride in being underestimated. We need to make up for that in something else. And I think there is a little bit of toughness and a little bit of grit and a little bit of spirit that I can’t really put into words. They are something fun to watch.” Lauang added that Emina Sidhu “had a great game and to her credit she left a Grade 8 team that is competing for a Grade 8 championship right now. For us, it was a no-brainer to see what she could do at this level. Her composure and her finish and her toughness is something that stands out.” The game turned in the Knights favour when they went a full-court press in the third quarter. “That was key,” said Lauang. “At some point, if we’re small, we have to nullify size with something else and that is speed and toughness. Toughness is something you can’t really measure on a stat sheet. But that’s who we are and we take pride in that.” Mackenzie Pagtakhan said “we knew this game was going to probably be low-scoring and we’d have to rely on our defence. We’re small, we know that. We practice that, being a smaller team, so we take a lot of pride in our energy and our intensity on defence. And even if it’s a bad shooting day, we’ll find a way to get to the basket.” Mia Beliveau paced the Knight with 15. Kyla Limon added 10, Demicah Arnaldo 8, Emina Sidhu 8, Mackenzie Pagtakhan 5, Lauren Wong 5 and Kristina Prtenjaca 2, while Sam Galang, Amber DeGraaf, Elin Lee, Cassandra Molo, Gianna Dosanjh, Jaeda Farina and Kessa Roberts were scoreless. Anicka Montagano was a scratch. Abby Boehm paced the Breakers (coach Mike Voros, coach Joe Vinluan) with 12. Eden Hansen added 10, Amelie Baril 9, McKenzie Seiden 6, Megan Thompson 4, Amicko Li 4 and Mila Gauer 4, while Sophia Jones, Shaddai Gutierrez-Ramos, Chanel Johnston, Amma Bonnie, Elizabeth Jerezano and Yuna Lui were scoreless.

       In the semis, the top-seeded Surrey Holy Cross Crusaders torched the 13th-seeded Kamloops Westwyde Whundas 85-52 after leading 19-10, 32-18 and 65-35 at the quarters. Crusaders coach Amy Beauchamp said forward Solene Jackson was formidable. “It’s not uncommon for her, which is insane. She’s just a beast. In every aspect of the game, steals, rebounds, blocks, scoring, she’s just a nightmare, honestly. I’m glad she’s on our side.” Isla Iannuzzi paced the Crusaders with 22. Solene Jackson added 16, while nabbing 14 boards, Mia Guerrero 12, Alyssia Palma 11, Jada Francis 8, Mila Wojciechowski 8, Arabelle Diliello 4 and Chloe Mangalindan 4, while Lindsay Correa, Gillian Gonesto, Jane Adam and Camille Amin were scoreless. Meaghan McCash and Sophie Sheck were scratches. Meena Litt paced the Whundas with 24, while nabbing 14 boards. Ryen Scott added 18, while nabbing 16 boards, Claire Connolly 7, Hudsyn Morrison 2 and Olivia Schieman 1, while Brooklyn Kell, Brynn Martin, Mia Hunter, Bella Hyam, Isabelle Tiel and Leila Thinom were scoreless. Summer Walker and Taya Funnell were scratches.

       In the other semi, the 3rd-seeded Burnaby St. Thomas More Collegiate Knights defeated the 2nd-seeded Langley Credo Christian Kodiaks 78-74 after leading 29-12, 43-30 and 61-42 at the quarters. The Kodiaks bridged the final quarters with a 16-0 run to draw within 70-67. Knights coach Cassie Lauang told Varsity Letters “that’s a testament to Credo, to their resilience and their coaching. … Their toughness showed and that’s something we’ve been talking about, about being part of our DNA.” Knight guard Mia Beliveau hit a trey with 1:49 to play, while Demicah Arnoldo hit four free throws in the final 37 seconds as St. Thomas More pulled out the win. Beliveau said “we ust trust each other so much. We stayed composed when it was a close game. We had a great shooting night and I’m so proud of all of our girls. We worked so hard for this.” Lauang said “I think the threes and the Gods were in our favor today in terms of making it rain. The weather was nice (outside), but it was raining in here, that’s for sure. We knew they were big, knew they were going to take up space, so we had to be brave. We knew we had to take a lot of shots to get the percentage that we wanted. … We have three senior guards and that is an intangible. The composure that they showed, the belief and the confidence they had in each other, that’s what made the difference today.” Lauang added that she expected Arnoldo to convert the final free throws. “She’s cold blooded, probably one of the most stoic kids you’re ever going to meet. There’s a lot of analytical (hoops) IQ there for sure. She’s absolutely cold blooded, man.” Demicah Arnaldo paced the Knights with 20. Mia Beliveau added 18, Mackenzie Pagtakhan 15, Kyla Limon 13, Lauren Wong 7 and Emina Sidhu 5, while Annika Montagano, Sam Galang, Amber Degraaf, Kessa Roberts, Jaeda Farina, Kristina Prtenjaca, Cassandra Molo, Gianna Dosanjh and Evie Ashford-Livingstone were scoreless. Kenzie Raap led the Kodiaks with 25. Hailey Stam added 22, Kallie Breukelman 19, Presley Kobes 5, Rayelle Leffers 2 and Sydney VanDyke 1, while Meagan Hansma, Nadia Zietsma, Rhys Admiraal, Chelsea Wildeboer, Addy Vandeburgt, Addy Homan and Kory Vandergaag were scoreless.

       In the bronze medal match, the 2nd-seeded Langley Credo Christian Kodiaks dusted the 13th-seeded Kamloops Westsyde Whundas 94-44 after leading 30-13, 49-26 and 72-36 at the quarters. Hailey Stam, Presley Kobes and Kallie Breukelman each scored 22 to pace the Kodiaks. Kenzie Raap added 18, Sydney Van Dyke 9 and Nadia Zietsma 2, while Megan Hansma, Rhys Admiraal, Chelsea Wildboer, Rayelle Leffers, Addy Vandeburgt, Addy Homan and Kory Vandeburgt were scoreless. Meena Litt paced the Whundas with 16. Ryen Scott added 13, Hudsyn Morrison 5, Mia Hunter 5, Claire Connolly 2 and Isabelle Tiel 2, while Brooklyn Kell, Brynn Martin, Bella Hyam, Olivia Schieman and Leila Thinom were scoreless. The Whundas (coach Ishar S Litt) also included Summer Walker and Taya Funnell.

       In the final, the top-seeded Surrey Holy Cross Crusaders captured their first provincial crown since 2013 by torching the 3rd-seeded Burnaby St. Thomas More Collegiate Knights 81-51 after leading 17-14, 40-32 and 59-44 at the quarters. Crusader Alyssia Palma told Varsity Letters that “it really feels so rewarding. We’ve put in so much time, all the practicing, the team bonding. … Defensively we had to make our statement, that me and Solene, and even our big guards, that we’re stronger than them, that we could dominate on the boards and use our size to our advantage.” Crusaders coach Amy Beauchamp said “we just have kids who can score. We have trust in every one of them and they know that and they’re ready to shoot it.” Beauchamp said tournament MVP Solene Jackson double-double was “just a normal day for her.” Jackson said “this is amazing . . . I’m so proud of everybody.” Jackson added that father Paris, a former B.C. Lion and a star basketball player at Carson Graham high school, “brags about it. He’s like ‘Aw, I was better.’ … I have a title now. So I’m the first in the family.” Whundas coach Cassie Lauang said Jackson was “pretty undeniable. We tried to make it uncomfortable for her, make it difficult for her. There’s very few people who contain her. She showed why she’s the MVP (of the tournament). … Sometimes when one-on-one doesn’t work, you’ve got to do it as a team, do it by committee. Post defence is team defence. We did it the best way we could. … We knew that (we’re undersized) going in. They’re not just big. They’re talented, they’re smart, they’re skilled and they do all the right things.” Solene Jackson was chosen player of the game for the Crusaders, while Demicah Arnaldo earned the laurels for the Knights. Solene Jackson paced the Crusaders with 30, while nabbing 25 boards. Alyssia Palma added 12. Isla Iannuzzi 11, Jada Francis 10, Mila Wojciechowski 6, Chloe Magalindin 5, Mia Guerrero 4 and Lindsay Correa 3, while Meghan McCash, Sophie Sheck, Gillian Gonesto, Arabelle DiLiello, Jane Adam and Camille Amin were scoreless. Demicah Arnaldo paced the Knights with 20. Mia Beliveau added 9, defensive player of the tournament Kyla Limon 8, Mackenzie Pagtakhan 6, Kristina Prtenjaca 6 and Emina Sidhu 2, while Annika Montagano, Lauren Wong, Sam Galang, Amber Degraaf, Kessa Roberts, Elin Lee, Cassandra Molo, Gianna Dosanjh and Evie Ashford-Livingstone were scoreless.

The all-tournament team featured MVP Solene Jackson (Holy Cross); First Team: Kallie Breukelman (Credo Christian); Mia Beliveau (St. Thomas More Collegiate); Demicah Arnaldo (St. Thomas More Collegiate); Alyssa Palma (Holy Cross); Isla Iannuzzi (Holy Cross)

The 2nd-team featured: Hailey Stam (Credo Christian); Ryen Scott (Westsyde); Meena Litt (Westsyde); Amelie Baril (Pacific Academy); Kensie Cole (Collingwood)

       The bronze medalist Langley Credo Christian Kodiaks: Hailey Stam; Presley Kobes; Kallie Breukelman; Kenzie Raap; Sydney Van Dyke; Nadia Zietsma; Megan Hansma; Rhys Admiraal; Chelsea Wildboer; Rayelle Leffers; Addy Vandeburgt; Addy Homan; Kory Vandeburgt; coach Kayla Vanderhorst; assistant Sue Schetan?

       The silver medalist Burnaby St. Thomas More Knights: Demicah Arnaldo; Mia Beliveau; Kyla Limon; Mackenzie Pagtakhan; Kristina Prtenjaca; Emina Sidhu; Annika Montagano; Lauren Wong; Sam Galang; Amber Degraaf; Kessa Roberts; Elin Lee; Cassandra Molo; Gianna Dosanjh; Evie Ashford-Livingstone; coach Cassie Lauang

       The champion Surrey Holy Cross Crusaders: Solene Jackson; Alyssia Palma; Isla Iannuzzi; Jada Francis; Mila Wojciechowski; Chloe Magalindin; Mia Guerrero; Lindsay Correa; Meghan McCash; Sophie Sheck; Gillian Gonesto; Arabelle DiLiello; Jane Adam; Camille Amin; coach Amy Beauchamp; assistant Nerissa Davis