In the opening round: …………………………………………………… The Delta Delview Raiders stunned the North Vancouver Sutherland Sabres 90-81 in overtime. The squads were seldom separated by more than four points. Sutherland led 20-16, 36-35 and 57-3 at the quarters. The teams were tied at 75 after regulation play. In overtime, grade-11 guard Alex Mihajilovic went to the foul 12 times, hitting 7. Alex Mihajilovic paced the Raiders with 18. Elias Hassan added 18, Lucien Bayer 15, Pawanpreet Takhar 14, along with 12 boards, Spencer Maichin 8, Zeeshan Chaudhry 6, Dallas Sideris 5; Ajaypreet Toor 2, Nolan Wallinger 2 and Garry Vinayak 2, while Randeep Shahi, Tyler Dhaliwal and Singh Pavan were scoreless. Louis Boyd led Sutherland with 16. Co-captain senior guard Preet Gandhi added 15 points and 12 boards, Ali Farokhi 14, along with 12 boards, Alex Serdyuk 11; Matt Hilder 11, Jordan Penman 8, Ben Nesbit 3 and Justin Pow 3, while Devan Woolley and Gregg Eschelmuller were scoreless. The Sabres (coached by Brad Thornhill, assisted by Sean Campbell and Scott Lawson) also included John Dickie, Kim Garma, Cooper Sweeney, Eric Moss and Justin Pow. …………………………………………………… The Oliver Southern Okanagan Hornets dusted the Richmond Hugh Boyd Trojans 82-67 after leading 25-14, 52-40 and 66-56 at the quarters. Greet Gill led the Hornets with 27. Parry Aulakh added 25, Harey Dhaliwal 16, Balteg Gill 8, Dale Polychroniou 4 and Lucky Gill 2, while Raj Sidhu, Amit Chahal, Sunny Aulakh and Parminder Sidhu were scoreless. Senior centre Tyler Nett paced the Trojans with 18. Tiernan Docherty added 13, Aidan Docherty 12, Devon Lung 10, Ryan Pidhaichuk 8, Kevin Wu 2, Kim Gapas 2 and Daniel Chernov 2, while Chris Bustillo was scoreless. The Trojans (coached by Brock Aura, assisted by Bob Boisvert) also included Juston Giorno, Jude Sioson and Connor Grams. …………………………………………………… The 2nd-seeded Victoria Lambrick Park Lions stomped the 15th-seeded Prince Rupert Rainmakers 95-56 after leading 23-14, 44-25 and 74-41 at the quarters. The Lions built a substantial first half lead as 6-5 senior Kevin Breel dominated the paint. Kevin Breel paced the Lions with 18. Grade 10 guard Brendan Somers added 14, Jimmy Chaung 12, Lucas Dellabough 11, Cole Shields 10, Jesse Hodges 9, Sanjeev Kang 8, Brendan Miller 4, Akshay Rai 3, Brad Pardy 2, Edmond Mar 2 and Chase Cuckovich 2. Grade 11 guard Evan Nequinto led the Rainmakers with 17. Keith Paterson added 12, senior captain Tyler Verde added 11, Stephen Fodor 6, T.J. Santiago 5, Jalen Nelson 3 and Anthony Yecyec 2, while Ben Mark, Mike Ridsdale, Cameron de la Nuez, Mike Nequinto, Danzel Rosario and Douglas Faithful were scoreless. The Rainmakers (coached by Mel Bishop) also included Jas Randhawa and Brett Sampson. …………………………………………………… The 10th-seeded Burnaby St. Thomas More Knights clipped the 7th-seeded Chilliwack G.W. Graham Grizzlies 72-46 after leading 18-8, 34-26 and 55-35 at the quarters. “We took the approach we had lots to prove and felt we could compete with the top teams,” said Knights coach Aaron Mitchell. “Our kids were focused and they played awesome.” The Knights were paced by 6-6 senior Karsten Harder, who scored 16 and nabbed 10 boards, while Ben Hieltjes added 13, 6-5 post Andrew Morris 11, Denzel Laguerta 10, Tristan Hill 10, Mikey Carney 6 and A.J. Imperial 6 while Liam McCarthy, Marwin Empainado, Matteo Gazzola, Andrew Wu and Ross Hilliam were scoreless. Josiah Cockrill paced the Grizzlies with 19. Lucas Mannes added 9, Matthew McConnell 6, Mike Gregory 4, Fran Armengual 3, Austin Neetz 2, Hank Derksen 2 and Geoff Slovick 1, while Devin Brandreth, Jesse Law, Ryan Tempel, Clayton Riobo and Cody Hansen were scoreless. The Grizzlies (coached by Jake Mouritzen, assisted by Ken Larson and Mike Manves) also included Connor Leibing, Phoenix Lipinski, Kyle Heaps and Cole Crompton. …………………………………………………… The Victoria St. Michaels Jaguars clocked the Vernon Clarence Fulton Maroons 72-57 after leading 17-12, 36-26 and 57-46 at the quarters. Fulton coach Dale Olson said “that was probably our worst game of the season.” Joe Erlic and Mitch Wiggins each scored 20 to lead St. Michaels. Liam Maclure added 14, David Lafleur 8, Monty Fraser-Brown 4, Georgios Ikonomou 2, Murphy Miu 2 and Mark Yorath 2, while Johny Huang, Lewis Liu, Connor Eden and Derek Hyde-Lay were scoreless. Greg Hyde paced Fulton with 15. Ben Olson added 12, Mitchell Rouault 9, Gurbinder Randhawa 7, Dalton Anderson 6, Spencer Kaneda 3, Dustin Popoff 3 and Tyler Annesley 2, while Pratab Sidhu, Omeet Khatra and Jaspaul Deol were scoreless. The Maroons (coached by Dale Olson, assisted by Dave Hobbs, Mark Zaino and Callum Lloyd) also included Zach Anderson, Cody Nevens, Clayton Mottus and Austin Richardson. …………………………………………………… The 3rd-seeded Mission Roadrunners dumped the Prince George College Heights Cougars 74-61 after leading 23-11, 40-32 and 57-45 at the quarters. Grade 11 forward Luke Morris and 6-6 Rhys Parry dominated as Mission maintained a double-digit lead til the final buzzer. Luke Morris paced Mission with 30. Rhys Parry added 28, along with 18 boards, Tanner Pearce 8, Conner Pickering 2, Jeevan Bhogal 2, Luc Comeau 2 and Kristjan Jakobs 2, while Abushawashi Ayor, Owen Munro, Hadley Gwyn and Nicholas were scoreless. Senior guard Matt Badial led College Heights with 19. Nolan Hanson added 17, Dominick Manhas 16, Sam Goodrich 5 and Josh Power 4, while Joseph Beaman, Scott Smith and Nolan Schwab were scoreless. The Cougars (coached by Jeff Goodrich) also included Rajen Bhular, Udhejeet Sidhu, Mike Norgren and Carson Toth. …………………………………………………… Mill Bay Brentwood defeated the Surrey Southridge Storm 62-52 after leading 12-4, 27-16 and 40-33 at the quarters. “They’re a good team,” said Brentwood coach Blake Gage. “They’re a lot like us.” Senior forward Jason McCarthy led Brentwood with 22. Jordan Charles added 16, Ben Hindson 14, along with 10 boards, Shalev Sharabi 5, Raffy Glacet 3 and David Lawrence 2, while Sean Liu, Jonathan Courville and Victor Anderson were scoreless. Rider Laskin led the Storm with 21. Jacob Andreou added 19 points and 11 boards, Ben Severide 4, Michael Carter 3, Royce Holmes 2, Jonathan Yu 2 and Justin Buttar 1, while Shahbaj Dhillon and Mayaz Alam were scoreless. The Storm (coached by Steve Anderson, assisted by Dale Kurylyk, Sach Bains and Steve Watson) also included Cameron Adams, Jonathan Hsu and Liam MacDonald. …………………………………………………… The top-seeded Kamloops Sa-Hali Sabres dispatched the Invermere David Thompson Lakers 79-58 after leading 25-20, 44-37 and 73-45 at the quarters. Sa-Hali ran off a 29-8 third-quarter to take control of the game. The Lakers gave Sa-Hali all it could handle — at least until the Sabres went on an 11-0 run to open the third quarter. “In the change room (at halftime) we talked about choice,” said Sabres head coach Paul Patterson. “The guys had a choice in (every) decision they made from how loud they are to how low they play. The game was their choice, and they came out in the third and did the job that they were supposed to do.” The Sabres had held leads of 10 points in the first two quarters, but couldn’t shake the Lakers, and was ahead 44-37 after 20 minutes. Then, Patterson read the Riot Act at halftime, and the Sa-Hali boys woke up. “Our coach gave it to us,” said Sabres guard Miles Marchand. “He got us motivated, as he always does. As soon as we came out, we were ready to go.” Sa-Hali absolutely dominated the third. Patterson had been a little worried about his team’s defence in the first two quarters, but the Sabres tightened up, allowing the Lakers to score only 21 points in the second half. “Miles had his best game of the season,” Patterson said. “He was great — he covered their best player, and that was his job. We do not expect him to score, but he scored lots of points for us at critical times.” Marchand said “it was important, just to get the jitters out.” Sa-Hali was paced by 6-5 forward Chase Blair who scored 20, while hitting five treys. Timo Sargent added 14, Patrick Wells 11, Miles Marchand 9, Connor Dolson 7, Hessan Mahbobi 6, Chris Toporowski 6, Russell Farren 2, Matt Lofgren 2 and Daylin Epp 2, while Riley McDonald, Ryan Pinneo and Dylan Legebokow were scoreless. Tye Green paced the Lakers (coached by Dan Godlien and Barry Tremblay) with 13. Alex Godlein added 11, Max Regitnig 9, Connor Williams 9, Ryan McNeil 7, Hayden Logan 4, Ben Carlow 3 and Morgan Hendry 1 while Ryley Purdy and Jared Livingston were scoreless.
In the quarterfinals, the Oliver Southern Okanagan Hornets crushed the Delta Delview Raiders 90-58 after leading 16-14, 46-27 and 66-35 at the quarters. The Hornets took command in the second quarter when senior Parry Aulakh took control. Parry Aulakh paced the Hornets with 37. Harey Dhaliwal added 15, Baltet Gill 14, Greet Gill 10, along with 14 boards, Lucky Gill 7, Jivan Gill 2, Sunny Aulakh 2, Gurkamal Dhaliwal 2 and Amit Chahal 1, while Jaspinder Grewal and Dale Polychroniou were scoreless. Spencer Maichin paced the Raiders (coached by Vladimir Nikic, assisted by Ian Harvey) with 11. Lucien Bayer added 8, Pawanpreet Takhar 8, Elias Hassan 7, Alex Mihajilovic 6, along with 10 boards, Jason Sideris 5, Randeep Shahi 4, Nolan Wallinger 3, Garry Vinayak 2, Tyler Dhaliwal 2 and Zeeshan Chaudhry 2, while Ajaypreet Toor, Mankaran Dhanda, Singh Pavan and Dallas Sideris were scoreless.
The 10th-seeded Burnaby St. Thomas More Knights stunned the 2nd-seeded Victoria Lambrick Park Lions 76-65. Lambrick Park led 16-11after one quarter. But the lower mainland champs took full control with a 24-9 second-quarter and kept running away with a 21-12 third-quarter to lead 56-37 entering the final ten minutes. The Knights had good size inside to control the key and out-treyed Lambrick Park 8-4 on the perimeter to lead by as much as 68-45 with about six minutes left. 6-5 guard Andrew Morris ensured the win at the free throw line. Andrew Morris paced the Knights with 22. Denzel Laguerta added 19, Karsten Harder 11, along with 12 boards, Ben Hieltjes 9, Mikey Carney 6, A.J. Imperial 5, Tristan Hill 2, Bryan Padron 1 and Marwin Empainado 1, while Liam McCarthy, Mike Reganit, Andrew Wu and Ross Hilliam were scoreless. Cole Shields paced the Lions (coached by Ed Somers, assisted by Chris Ball and Wes Lefsrud) with 18 points and 11 boards. Lucas Dellabough scored 15, Kevin Breel 8, Jimmy Chuang 8, Brendan Somers 8, Jesse Hodges 3, Akshay Rai 2, Chase Cuckovich 2 and Sanjeev Kang 1, while Brendan Miller, Brad Pardy and Edmond Mar were scoreless.
The 3rd-seeded Mission Roadrunners sped past the Victoria St. Michaels Jaguars 55-47. The Fraser Valley champ Roadrunners set a blistering pace as 5-8 Luc Comeau and 5-9 Conner Pickering used frenetic defence and hustle to force turnovers. St. Michaels closed to within three in the late stages but never overcame an early 9-0 deficit. Mission led 11-9, 22-18 and 38-29 at the quarters. Luke Morris led Mission with 13. Rhys Parry added 11, Tanner Pearce 9, along with 11 boards, Conner Pickering 7, Luc Comeau 6, Owen Munro 4, Jeevan Bhogal 3 and Hadley Gwyn 3, while Kristjan Jakobs was scoreless. David Lafleur paced the Jaguars with 12. Derek Hyde-Lay added 8, Mark Yorath 7, Liam Maclure 6, Connor Eden 5, Mitch Wiggins 3, Joe Erlic 3, Georgios Ikonomou 2 and Monty Fraser-Brown 1, while Chris McEachran-Law was scoreless. The Jaguars (coached by Reagan Daly, assisted by Mathew Geddes) also included Murphy Miu, Lewis Liu, Johnny Huang and Dawit Workie.
In the last quarterfinal, Mill Bay Brentwood clipped the top-seeded Kamloops Sa-Hali Sabres 86-72. Brentwood led 21-12, 46-27 and 53-52 at the quarters. Sa-Hali led by a point in the closing minutes before grade 10 Brentwood guard Jordan Charles made a series of clutch baskets in the final two minutes and iced it at the line. “We shot the ball great,’’ said Brentwood coach Blake Gage. “Defensively, I was really pleased what we did.” David Lawrence led Brentwood with 26. 6-9 Ben Hindson added 18, along with 12 boards, Jordan Charles 17, Jason McCarthy 13, Raffy Glacet 7 and Shalev Sharabi 5, while Jonathan Courville, Martin Barakso and Victor Anderson were scoreless. Connor Dolson paced Sa-Hali with 22. Patrick Wells added 14, Timo Sargent 12, along with 8 assists, Chris Toporowski 9, Chase Blair 5, Miles Marchand 4, Dylan Legebokow 3 and Matt Lofgren 3, while Hessan Mahbob and Ryan Pinneo were scoreless. The Sabres (coached by Paul Patterson, assisted by Elmer Froese and Dean Bubela) also included Daylin Epp, Russell Farren and Riley McDonald.
In the semis, the Oliver Southern Okanagan Hornets whipped the 10th-seeded Burnaby St. Thomas More Knights 79-55. The Knights led 19-14 after one quarter. The Hornet led 38-27 at the half and 56-40 after three quarters. “Having that tough draw hurt us,” said Knights coach Aaron Mitchell. “We were down by 22 (points) in the third quarter and got it down to six, but lost it to a better team.” Greet Gill paced the Hornet with 30 on 13-22 from the floor, 2-4 from the arc, 2-3 from the line and 19 boards. Parry Aulkah scored 20, Harey Dhaliwal 13, Balteg Gill 5, Dale Polychroniou 3 and Lucky Gill 2, while Jivan Gill, Sunny Aulakh, Gurkamal Dhaliwal, Jaspinder Grewal and Amit Chahal were scoreless. South Okanagan hit 27-57 (.474) from the floor, 9-19 (.474) from the arc and 11-15 (.733) from the line, while garnering 45 boards, including 13 on the offensive glass, 14 assists, 22 turnovers, 3 blocks and 5 steals. Karsten Harder and Andrew Morris each scored 14 to pace the Knights. Mikey Carney added 10, A.J. Imperial 8, Denzel Laguerta 7 and Tristan Hill 2, while Ross Hilliam, Ben Hiltjes, Andrew Wu and Matteo Gazzola were scoreless. St. Thomas More hit 19-61 (.311) from the floor, 7-26 (.269) from the arc and 10-14 (.714) from the line, while garnering 29 boards, including 11 on the offensive glass, 16 fouls, 16 assists, 15 turnovers, 3 blocks and 7 steals.
In the other semi, the 3rd-seeded Mission Roadrunners nipped Mill Bay Brentwood 54-51. Brentwood led 14-8 after one quarter and 27-18 at the half. Mission led 39-36 after three quarters. Luke Morris paced Mission with 13 on 5-21 from the floor and 12 boards. Jeevan Bhogal added 11, Tanner Pearce 10, Conner Pickering 7, Rhys Perry 7, Hadley Gwyn 3 and Luc Comeau 3, while Kristjan Jakobs and Abushawashi Ayor were scoreless. The Roadrunners hit 19-63 (.302) from the floor, 8-27 (.296) from the arc and 8-14 (.571) from the line, while garnering 29 boards, including 16 on the offensive glass, 12 fouls, 13 assists, 17 turnovers, 2 blocks and 13 steals. Jordan Charles led Brentwood with 12. Ben Hindson added 10, along with 13 boards, David Lawrence 8, Raffy Glacet 5, Victor Anderson 6, Jason McCarthy 6 and Shaleve Sharabi 3, while Martin Barakso was scoreless. Brentwood hit 15-47 (.319) from the floor, 6-17 (.353) from the arc and 15-19 (.789) from the line, while garnering 39 boards, including 8 on the offensive glass, 14 fouls, 10 assists, 19 turnovers, 4 blocks and 8 steals.
In the bronze medal match, the Mill Bay Brentwood x edged the 10th-seeded Burnaby St. Thomas More Knights 55-48 as Jordan Charles hit eight free throws down the stretch. Brentwood led 15-7 after one quarter. St. Thomas More led 25-22 at the half and 36-30 after three quarters. “They peaked at the right time, for sure,’’ raved Brentwood coach Blake Gage. “The boys were terrific.” Ben Hindson paced Brentwood with 21 on 10-20 from the floor, 1-6 from the line and 8 boards. Jason McCarthy added 14 on 7-15 from the floor, 1-2 from the arc and 8 boards. Jordan Charles added 12 on 2-8 from the floor, 8-8 from the line and 4 assists. Shalev Sharabi added 3, David Lawrence 2 on 1-6 from the floor and 4 boards, and Raffy Glacet 2 on 1-4 from the floor, 10 boards and 2 steals. Victor Anderson, Chris Wong, Jonathan Courville and Martin Barakso were scoreless. Brentwood hit 22-56 (.393) from the floor, 2-6 (.333) from the arc and 9-16 (.563) from the line, while garnering 40 boards, including 8 on the offensive glass, 12 fouls, 16 assists, 15 turnovers, 2 blocks and 7 steals. Andrew Morris paced St. Thomas More with 12 on 4-11 from the floor, 1-7 from the arc, 3-4 from the line and 8 boards. Ben Hieltjes added 11 on 4-11 from the floor, 3-5 from the line and 7 boards. Mike Reganit added 9 on 2-5 from the floor, 0-1 from the arc and 5-5 from the line. Mikey Carney added 6 on 3-6 from the floor, 8 boards and 4 steals. Denzel Laguerta added 3, A.J. Imperial 3, Karsten Harder 2, along with 7 boards, and Tristan Hill 2, while Ross Hilliam was scoreless. The Knights hit 17-63 (.270) from the floor, 3-23 (.130) from the arc and 11-14 (.786) from the line, while garnering 44 boards, including 15 on the offensive glass, 14 fouls, 12 assists, 18 turnovers, 4 blocks and 9 steals. The Knights (coached by Aaron Mitchell) also included Bryan Padron, Andrew Wu, Kyle Madden, Matteo Gazzola, Marwin Empainado and Liam McCarthy.
In the final, the Oliver Southern Okanagan Hornets defeated the 3rd-seeded Mission Roadrunners 71-66 in overtime. The Hornets led 20-9 after one quarter. The score as knotted at 29 at the half. Mission led 42-39 after three quarters. The score was knotted at 60 after regulation play. Each team committed costly turnovers in the final seconds of regulation when it appeared the Hornets had it won when, with 24.1 seconds remaining, Harey Dhaliwal sunk two free throws to make the score 60-56. Mission’s 6-5 forward, Luke Morris, came back and made a huge three-pointer with 16.8 seconds remaining to cut the lead to one, before the Hornets threw the ball out of bounds, giving the Roadrunners another possession with 15 seconds left. “I couldn’t believe it!” said tournament MVP Parry Aulakh. “My heart stopped – I didn’t know what to do. It was crazy.” Mission’s Rhys Parry managed to draw a foul on that last possession, making one of two free throws to tie the game at 60 and force overtime. Southern Okanagan took a six-point lead in the overtime, with Parry Aulakh making two key steals and Mission appeared out of it when they lost starters Luke Morris, Conner Pickering and Tanner Pearce to fouls, but remarkably Mission again clawed their way back behind some missed Hornet foul shots and the fact that the Hornets lost a key player of their own to fouls when Aulakh took his fifth foul. Mission’s corps of tiny lightning quick guards were effective, with 5-8 Luc Comeau making a series of desperation drives and plays as time ran out to put his team back in striking distance, only to have it all end when Baltej Gill made a pair of key foul-shots to put it out of reach. “Mission played their game and made us win this game,” said Southern Okanagan coach Maurizio Basso. “They got after us and made it hard for us to score, but we were able to gut it out, and we found a way to win.” Aulkah said “it’s amazing – I don’t think it’s real yet. It hasn’t hit me. I was so worried we were going to lose. What a game!” The Hornets managed to make three of their four free-throws in the final 20.5 seconds of overtime. Free throw shooting “was horrid – all tournament, it was 72, 73 (per cent). It was just the nerves and not believing. It was one of those things – we were playing not to lose.” The Hornets should have obliterated MSS. They’re bigger, stronger and have a ridiculously tight offense, said MSS coach Jim Pearce. “We came off slow and were down 20-9 after the first quarter.” said Pearce. “We were a little disappointed, especially when you’re that close. The kids just never stopped working. We always told them the harder you work, the luckier you get.” Perry Aulakh paced Southern Okanagan with 23 on 8-14 from the floor, 1-4 from the arc, 6-10 from the line, 4 boards and 6 steals. Balteg Gill added 17 on 5-19 from the floor, 4-13 from the arc, 3-5 from the line and 7 boards. Harey Dhaliwal notched 10 on 2-11 from the floor, 1-7 from the arc, 5-7 from the line, 4 boards and 2 steals. Greet Gill scored 8 on 3-10 from the floor, 2-4 from the line, 113 boards, 4 assists and 5 steals. Lucky Gill scored 7 on 3-3 from the floor, 1-1 from the arc and 3 boards. Dale Polychroniou added 6 on 2-10 from the floor, 1-6 from the arc, 1-5 from the line, 5 boards, 3 assists and 2 steals. Parminder Sidhu, Sunny Aulakh and Amit Chahal were scoreless. The Hornets hit 23-69 (.333) from the floor, 8-34 (.235) from the arc and 17-34 from the line, while garnering 40 boards, including 16 on the offensive glass, 19 fouls, 13 assists, 21 turnovers, 1 block and 16 steals. Rhys Parry paced Mission with 20 on 7-12 from the floor, 2-2 from the arc, 4-6 from the line and 19 boards. Luke Morris added 19 on 8-18 from the floor, 1-4 from the arc, 2-2 from the line, 8 boards and 3 assists. Tanner Pearce added 15 on 5-16 from the floor, 3-10 from the arc, 2-4 from the line, 9 boards and 3 assists. Luc Comeau added 6 on 2-7 from the floor, 1-4 from the arc, 1-2 from the line and 3 boards. Conner Pickering added 4 on 0-3 from the floor, 4-4 from the line, 5 boards and 3 assists. Jeevan Bhogal added 2, while Kristjan Jacobs, Hadley Gwyn, Abushawashi Ayor and Owen Munro were scoreless. The Roadrunners hit 23-64 (.359) from the floor, 7-24 (.292) from the arc and 13-18 (.722) from the line, while garnering 53 boards, including 18 on the offensive glass, 26 fouls, 16 assists, 32 turnovers, 3 blocks and 2 steals.
The bronze medalist Mill Bay Brentwood: Jason McCarthy; Jordan Charles; Ben Hindson; David Lawrence; Shalev Sharabi; Raffy Glacet; Sean Liu; Jonathan Courville; Victor Anderson; Martin Barakso; Chris Wong; Anthony Savoie; Alex Park; Joel Wilson; Matthew Hollingsworth; coach Blake Gage; assistant Marius Felix; manager Nick Wai; manager Benjamin Lin
The silver medalist Mission Roadrunners: Luke Morris; Rhys Parry; Tanner Pearce; Conner Pickering; Jeevan Bhogal; Luc Comeau; Kristjan Jakobs; Abushawashi Ayor; Owen Munro; Hadley Gwyn; Sam Butter; Jimmy Buttar; Jag Khangura; Cam McEwen; Tom Clarkson; coach Jim Pearce; coach Danny Jakobs
The gold medalist Oliver Southern Okanagan Hornets: Greet Gill; Parry Aulakh; Harey Dhaliwal; Balteg Gill; Dale Polychroniou; Lucky Gill; Jivan Gill; Raj Sidhu; Amit Chahal; Sunny Aulakh; Parminder Sidhu; Gurkamal Dhaliwal; Jaspinder Grewal; coach Maurizio Basso; manager Jessica Buttar; manager Puneet Brar