In the opening round, held in Langley: …………………………………………………… The top-seeded Mill Bay Brentwood clubbed the 16th-seeded Port Coquitlam Archbishop Carney Stars 97-65 after leading 23-10, 52-23 and 81-44 at the quarters. Guard Player of the game Jayden Lust knocked down four treys and scored 20 as Brentwood took total command in the first half. “We knew we had to send a message immediately as the No. 1 seed,” Lust told Varsity Letters. “We’ve been the No. 1 seed all season and we wanted to let ever team know we are playing every game as if it’s our last. … I don’t know what it was, I just had a smoothie for breakfast. I was just feeling it today. Once I saw the first shot go in, I just knew I was in that mode. … We have a lot of camaraderie on this team, and we all love each other. It’s like being part of a family. We just all count on each other and that’s the key to our success.” Jayden Lust paced Brentwood with 26. Taylor Edwards added 20, Julian Bishop 13, Dylan Gage 11, Nicholas Chomsky 8, Thomas MacDonald 6, Milan Pasquale 6, Avik Bakshi 4 and Jagre Knight 3, while Andrew Kim, David Ojedokun, Tochokwu Okonkwo and Bern Mabane were scoreless. Gabriel Hombrebrebuemo scored 14 to pace the Stars. Darnell Joseph added 11, Branden Evangelista 10, Matthew Ibrahim 8, Liam Lalonde 7, Tristan Llego 4, Dominic Madalazzo 4, Luka Peric 4, Emilio Pinske 2 and Santiago Soto 1, while Jayden Wong, Daniele Boronco and Jason Wilson were scoreless. The Stars (coach Len De Julius, assistant Adam Spindor) also included Ashwin Korada. …………………………………………………… The 6th-seeded Nanaimo John Barsby Wildcats clocked the 11th-seeded Surrey Khalsa Lions 78-51 after leading 25-13, 47-23 and 65-37 at the quarters. The Wildcats dictated a torrid tempo and quickly took command. “They were big but we were faster, so we just pushed the pace, ran, and tried to get easy baskets in transition,” Wildcat Jonny Durkan told Varsity Letters. “When we run that’s when we are at our best. … For me, I was just driving into the lane and getting easy layups. I was just getting buckets.” Jonny Durkan paced the Wildcats with 36. Kai Rednour Bruckman added 15, A.J. Barter 10, Parker Moscrip 8, Cohen Cadieux 7 and Ches Rednour Bruckman 2, while Lucas Laukkanen, Jefferson De Bruin Davis, Rhonde Lyle, Yves Omanito and John White were scoreless. Robin Benipal scored 22 to pace the Lions (coach Gurmukh Manak, assistant Akash Boporai, manager Mantaj Nagra, manager Ekampreet Jawwal, athletic director Caleb Grant, videographer Dilraj Dhaliwal). Premjot Mand added 13, Armaan Johal 5, Jaskirat Atwal 4, Jashhandeep Lalli 4, Naunihal Gill 2 and Abhijeet Singh 1, while Abhijeet Gill, Jashan Singh, Jagjot Johal, Manvir Ball, Gurjeet Gill and Harjan Sekhon were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 12th-seeded Kelowna Westsyde Whundas stunned the 5th-seeded Surrey Southridge Storm 76-69 after leading 17-16, 41-28 and 56-55 at the quarters. The Storm trimmed the margin to one after three quarters on an inbound buzzer beater by post Owen Lister. “We were nervous when they made that comeback but we were able to tough it out,” Whundas point guard Jeremy McInnis told Varsity Letters. The defending champs opened the final period with a trey by McInnis that ignited a 14-7 run to take a 70-62 lead. The Storm nswered with a 7-1 run capped by a trey from Gavin Bassi to cut the lead to 71-69 with 1:02 to play. Forward Kooper Groeneveld scored on a fastbreak lay-up to push the Westsyde lead back out to five. After a Storm miss, forward Cason Scott nailed a trety to ice the win. “They were a great shooting team and we just locked down their shooters,” said McInnis. “Westsyde has always been a tough, defensive team and that’s our mindset, that’s the way we play. … Kooper brings great energy and he was huge in the fourth quarter grabbing boards, diving on loose balls. That was key. We needed that. It gave us a lot of energy.” Caleb Gremaud paced the Whundas with 23. Cason Scott added 13, Jeremy McInnis 12, Webber Wang 10, Kooper Groeneveld 10, Logan Rubel 6 and Colton Meikle 1, while Jayden Broadfoot, Dylan Shea, Ben Littlejohns, Tony Gan, Cory McColm and Liam Connolly were scoreless. Max Blandy paced the Storm with 19. Gavin Bassi added 16, Gagan Dhanoa 11, Devan Jagpal 9, Jai Pawa 7, Matteo Cavaleri 3, Owen Lister 2 and Roshan Sandhu 2, while Devon Purewall, Levi Leach, Lucas Young, Jaden Gosal, Owen Canavan, Justin Hayer and Rafay Naeem were scoreless.

The Storm (coach Ray Kwok, teacher sponsor Dylan Lal) also included Rajin Chahal. …………………………………………………… The 9th-seeded Summerland Rockets tripped the 8th-seeded West Vancouver Collingwood Cavaliers 85-74. The Cavaliers led 24-15 after one quarter and 46-40 at the half. The Rockets led 64-60 after three quarters. Trailing 72-71 with 4:44 left in the game, the Rockets scored on three straight possessions to take a 77-72 lead. Cavalier guard James Holm countered with a trey but Dezi Duchek answered with back-to-back buckets. A deep trey by Duchek pushed the lead to 82-74, with 1:55 left and the Rockets held on for the win. “Coming from Okanagan Valley we don’t get much respect but we are really confident,” player of the game and Rockets guard Dezi Duchek told Varsity Letters. “Nobody on the team was thinking we are an underdog, let’s just keep this game close. We came here to win. This is a business trip. … I am in the gym every single morning shooting that shot alone, and I have shot it so many times, that in a game I have the confidence to make that shot and my teammates have the confidence in me to make that shot. It was the right shot to take. … At half time our coaches told us to shake out all the nerves, it was time to show our grit and show our hustle. We knew we could beat them. … At halftime coach said they were going to run a lot of plays to get me open, so find my rhythm and keep shooting. We live and die around the three.” The Rockets made 12 three-pointers in the game. Troy Issacs and Dezi Duchek each scored 25 to pace the Rockets. Sam Plant added 15, Brix Corday 12, Josh Colley 6 and Saxon Garrity 2, while Kieran Wardley, Evan Welsh, Caleb Dykstra, Chasen Hall, Michael Strangman, Sylis Charlton and Ryder Wilson were scoreless. Anderson Stewart scored 23 to pace the Cavaliers (coach Andrew Wong, assistant Teresa Ross, assistant Davey Ross, assistant Matt Sacks, manager Raya Mandani, manager Remy-Rose Caplan, manager Ricky Chen, therapist Gavin Leung). James Holm added 15, Avi Barha 14, Alex Yu 11, Cy Bosa 8 and Rhys Young 3, while Joaquin Lupton, Chris Parker, James Xu, Logan Albiani, Kiefer Stewart, Eden Wan, Finnegan Murphy, Kaydin Mawani and Sam Li were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 2nd-seeded Vancouver King George Dragons clocked the 15th-seeded Fernie Falcons 77-51 after leading 23-11, 44-27 and 63-40 at the quarters. Dragon post Dionycius Bakare notched a personal 10-0 run as King George exploded to its early lead and romped to the easy win. “I’m proud of our guys,” Dragons coach Darko Kulic told Varsity Letters. “But man, I have to give props to Fernie. They’re an incredibly well-coached team. They played us really, really hard – kind of reminded me of those Knicks teams in the 90s. They didn’t play at all like a 15-seed.” Dionycius Bakare paced the Dragons with 34. Darko Karac added 10, Faisal Shawwa 12, Jose Zuluaga (Guzman) 7, Rishin Uppal 2 and Andrej Kovacevic 2, while Martin Petkov, Ashton Vij, Callen Nedelec, Eli Volkin, Andre Novicic, Kio Nickel and Charlie Comrie were scoreless. Bronson Impey scored 12 to pace the Falcons (coach A.J. Kennedy, assistant Ian Johnson, athletic director Meghan Coultry). Parker Anselmo added 10, Arden Stuckey 10, Mattias Larsen 7, Jacob Barr 5, Bryson Barr 4 and Jaedon Chorostecki 3, while Ethan Sutherland, Miguel Garcia Agui, Joe Salekin, Kiedis Ostoroff, Naoise Heavey, Marcos Grijalva, Hunter Wilson and Blagen Mouchet were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 10th-seeded Langley Christian Lightning edged the 7th-seeded Victoria Lambrick Park Lions 78-74. The Lightning led 12-7 after one quarter. The Lions led 34-30 at the half after Blake Pye hit three treys, and 50-46 after three quarters, despite a late 12-2 run by the Lightning. But Langley Christian used a diamond press to force a series of turnovers and Carter VanderWaarde hit a trio from beyond the arc as the Lightning seized control in the final frame. “I didn’t like how we shot in the opening quarter,” Lightning coach Brodan Thiel told Varsity Letters. “But you have to trust your guys to play their way out sometimes, and they did. Carter [VanderWaarde] hit a few massive shots down the stretch there, and we started figuring it out on defense and doing what we needed to.” Carter VanderWaarde paced the Lightning with 23. Willem Van Huizen added 21, Casey Van Hemert 12, Braeden Wagar 12, Mackenzie Dornan 8 and Elijah Olson 2, while Isaac Vandeburgt, Matt Horak, Sam Woelders, Emmerson Griffhoen, Ty Olson, Jayden Moon and Zach Van Tuinen were scoreless. Blake Pye scored 21 to pace the Lions (coached by Ed Somers and Colton McKee). Jacob Yager added 16, Reid Clague 13, Angus Kidd 10, Arokya Shrestha 8, Nathan Cho 3 and Alex Baulne 3, while Liam Blair-Murphy, Stanley Truong, Carter Anderson and Graeme Kidd were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 4th-seeded North Vancouver St. Thomas Aquinas Fighting Saints clocked the 13th-seeded Prince Rupert Charles Hays Rainmakers 69-46 after leading 13-8, 40-17 and 61-34 at the quarters. Fighting Saint post and player of the game Declan Butler dominated the paint on both ends of the floor. The Saints took command with a 10-0 second quarter run. “I thought we were nervous,” Fighting Saints coach Jim Kelly told Varsity Letters. “In that first quarter, especially, I think it’s almost expected. But we settled in quickly and adjusted well. [Charles Hays] are a really-well coached team – they have great pedigree and have won it a couple of times. Really good matchup for us – they gave us a lot of trouble.” Kelly said Cutler has “been everything for us. He carried us again tonight. He’s a great leader, a great kid, does it at both ends of the floor, and he’s unselfish. He always finds a way to get it done for us.” Carson Park paced the Fighting Saints with 27. Declan Cutler added 24, Zak Sharp 8, Matias Simmons 6 and Evan Kischer 4, while Gui Wu Butsugam, Jaxon Jennex, Bennet Cordington, Dante Sikich, Nathan Canvin, Alvin Ng and Luca Caffaro were scoreless. Jon Clifton scored 14 to pace the Rainmakers (coach Mel Bishop, assistant Ryan Bishop). Darren Budskin added 12, Kole Leighton 9, Josh Aparicio 6, Josh Thompson 4 and Kevin Phan 1, while Justin April, Keanan Deinstadt, Aiden Brown, Zac Trask, Jace Stegavig, Josh Leighton, Shayden Brown and Logan Hughes were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 3rd-seeded Surrey Pacific Academy Breakers dispatched the 14th-seeded Vanderhoof Nechako Valley Vikings 78-65 after leading 16-15, 38-31 and 63-49 at the quarters. The inside-outside tandem of Simon Akindale and Nathan Chiang, who hit six treys, proved too much for the Vikings to handle. Simon Akindele paced the Breakers with 26. Nathan Chiang added 24, Jason Babs-Ishola 12, Jaden Mesfin 10, Oureal Mulugeta 5 and Paul Ude 1, while Solomon Barlin, Leslie Mabiza, Judah Ashbee, T’ivine Spence, Leo Liu, Jimin Choi, Moses Wiebe and Earl Akene were scoreless. Tanton Mueller scored 40 to pace the Vikings ((coach Gary Simrose, assistant Debbie Simrose, athletic director Travis Himmelright, media Darlene Fawcett, media Brittany Simrose, videographer Vaughn Mueller). Terry Thompson added 14, Cooper Ziler 6, Brecken Fawcett 2 and Evan Warkentin 2, while Jaxson Currie, Grayson Turgeon, Thomas Cross and Aiden Simrose were scoreless.

        In the quarterfinals, the 12th-seeded Kelowna Westsyde Whundas stunned the 4th-seeded North Vancouver St. Thomas Aquinas Fighting Saints 60-45 after leading 21-15, 33-20 and 45-39 at the quarters. The Fighting Saints notched a 13-3 run in the third quarter as they rallied within six. But the Whundas clamped down in the fourth frame. Whundas post Caleb Gremaud did an excellent job of containing Fighting Saints post Declan Cutler in the defensive affair. “Tonight was just heart, hustle, and being physical,” Whundas coach AJ McInnis told Varsity Letters. “Westsyde basketball, we just play tough, force teams to play our way, and try and beat them up along the way. Tonight, we brought a lot of physicality on defense and that really won it for us.” Caleb Gremaud paced the Whundas with 20. Jeremy McInnis added 14, Colton Meikle 9, Cason Scott 9 and Kooper Groeneveld 8, while Jayden Broadfoot, Dylan Shea, Webber Wang, Ben Littlejohns, Tony Gan, Cory McColm, Logan Rubel, Liam Connolly and Koyoji Brown were scoreless. Declan Cutler paced the Fighting Saints with 12. Carson Park added 10, Matias Simmons 9, Zak Sharp 8 and Nathan Canvin 6, while Gui Su Butsugam, Jaxon Jennex, Bennet Cordington, Dante Sikich, Evan Kischer, Alvin Ng and Luca Caffaro were scoreless. The Fighting Saints (coach Jim Kelly, assistant Damian Botteselle, assistant Loui Saituro) also included Tong Li.

        Top-seeded Mill Bay Brentwood stomped the 9th-seeded Summerland Rockets 84-47 after leading 24-14, 48-23 and 67-41 at the quarters. They iced the win with a late 12-0 run. Brentwood’s Dylan Gage lit up the Rockets with five treys. Brentwood coach Blake Gage told Varsity Letters that “we have different guys who can all step up. Tonight, it was Dylan, which was great, but we have a lot of different weapons and guys that can make the difference. But the great thing about Dylan is that he’s willing to fill any role, do anything, to help the team win. … I was proud of our boys’ effort. At times, we may have been a bit undisciplined, but overall, we worked hard. Full credit to the Rockets – they’re a bit young, but they’re well-coached, never quit, and they made us work for everything tonight.” Dylan Gage paced Brentwood with 32. Thomas MacDonald added 18, Jayden Lust 13, Taylor Edwards 6, Milan Pasquale 5, Julian Bishop 5, Avik Bakshi 2, David Ojedokun 2 and Nicholas Chomsky 2, while Andrew Kim, Jagre Knight, Tochokwu Okonkwo and Bern Mabane were scoreless. Dezi Duchel scored 14 to lead the Rockets (coach Darcy Mullin, assistant Jason Corday). Sam Plant added 8, Saxon Garrity 6, Troy Issacs 6, Brix Corday 5, Michael Strangman 3, Sylis Charlton 3 and Caleb Dykstra 2, while Kieran Wardley, Evan Welsh, Chasen Hall, Josh Colley and Ryder Wilson were scoreless.

        The 2nd-seeded Vancouver King George Dragons clubbed the 10th-seeded Langley Christian Lightning 85-51 after leading 18-15, 42-25 and 61-41 at the quarters. The Dragons took command with a 14-0 run late in the second quarter. Dragon guard Rishin Uppal told Varsity Letters that “it was a good team that we played. They’re smart and they hustle. I think we controlled what we could control and put our best effort forward.” Uppal added that the Dragons versatility was critical. “It’s definitely a blessing. We all have confidence that we can make any shot, and anyone else can make any shot. It lets us be flexible play different ways.” Dionycius Bakare paced the Dragons with 22. Darko Karac added 21, Faisal Shawwa 14, Jose Zuluaga (Guzman) 11, Rishin Uppal 6, Andrej Kovacevic 6, Andre Novicic 2, Kio Nickel 2 and Charlie Comrie 1, while Martin Petkov, Ashton Jij, Callen Nedelec and Eli Volkin were scoreless. Willem Van Huizen scored 19 to pace the Lightning (coach Brodan Thiel, athletic director Jon Mayan). Casey Van Hemert 9, Carter vanderWaarde 7, Braeden Wagar 6, Mackenzie Dornan 4 and Zach Van Tuinen 2, while Isaac Vandeburgt, Matt Horak, Jayden Moon, Sam Woelders, Emmerson Griffhoen, Ty Olson and Elijah Olson were scoreless.

        In the last quarterfinal, the 6th-seeded Nanaimo John Barsby Wildcats crushed the 3rd-seeded Surrey Pacific Academy Breakers 83-59 after leading 20-16, 35-32 and 54-42 at the quarters. The Wildcats buried all Breaker hopes of a rally with a late 10-0 run. Jonny Durkan paced the Wildcats with 25. Parker Moscrip added 18, Kai Rednour Bruckman 14, Rhonde Lyle 8, Ches Rednour Bruckman 8, Cohen Cadieux 6, A.J. Barter 2 and John White 2, while Lucas Laukkanen, Jefferson De Bruin Davis and Yves Omanito were scoreless. Jaden Mesfin scored 23 to lead the Breakers. Simon Akindele added 12, Nathan Chiang 8, Oureal Mulugeta 6, Jason Babs-Ishola 6 and Paul Ude 4, while Solomon Barlin, Leslie Mabiza, Judah Ashbee, T’ivine Spence, Leo Liu, Jimin Choi, Moses Wiebe and Earl Akene were scoreless. The Breakers (coach Seth Sorenson, assistant Joel Ashbee, assistant Tysen Stoddart, assistant Ethan Sorensen, manager Judah Ashbee) also included Ethan Wirtz and Noah Keizer.

        In the semis, top-seeded Mill Bay Brentwood spanked the 12th-seeded Kelowna Westsyde Whundas 87-47 after leading 8-0 early and 20-12, 50-21 and 63-37 at the quarters. Brentwood took total command with a 12-0 run, ignited by a Jayden Lust trey, in the second quarter. Despite a third-quarter lull, they coasted to the easy win. “We may have gotten a bit too comfortable,” Brentwood coach Blake Gage told Varsity Letters. “But the truth of it is that Westsyde is a damn good team. They got a bit unlucky, and overall, it probably wasn’t their best game. But I think that quarter is an idea of what very well could have happened if they had been at their best.” Dylan Gage paced Brentwood with 22. Milan Pasquale added 19, Jayden Lust 14, Jagre Knight 8, Nicholas Chomsky 8, Taylor Edwards 4, Avik Bakshi 4, Thomas Macdonald 4 and Justin Bishop 1, while Andrew Kim, David Ojedokun, Tochokwu Okonkwo and Bern Mabane were scoreless. Caleb Gremaud paced the Whundas with 19. Jayden Broadfoot added 8, Jeremy McInnis 6, Cason Scott 5, Logan Rubel 5, Dylan Shea 2, Colton Meikle 2 and Kooper Groeneveld 1, while Webber Wang, Ben Littlejohns, Tony Gan, Cory McColm, Liam Connolly and Kiyoji Brown were scoreless.

        In the other semi, the 2nd-seeded Vancouver King George Dragons bombed the 6th-seeded Nanaimo John Barsby Wildcats 74-48 after leading 25-14, 40-25 and 64-41 at the quarters. The Dragons length and defensive pressure quickly proved an insurmountable obstacle for the Wildcats. “We have a saying – ‘Preparation is key to Separation’,” Dragons coach Darko Kulic told Varsity Letters. “Our whole team – our fans, coaching staff, our community, and especially our players – they’re laser-focused right now. I’ve had some teams, where you say go to bed and you know they’re up. With these guys, if I tell them to go to sleep at 10, I trust that they’ll do it. Because they know that every little thing makes a difference.” Darko Karac paced the Dragons with 22. Rishin Uppal added 19, Dionycius Bakare 12, Jose Zuluaga (Guzman) 8, Faisal Shawwa 8 and Andrej Kovacevic 5, while Martin Petkov, Ashton Vij, Callen Nedelec, Eli Volkin, Andre Novicic, Kio Nickel and Charlie Comrie were scoreless. Jonny Durkan and Cohen Cadieux each scored 13 to lead the Wildcats. Parker Moscrip added 12, Kai Rednour Bruckman 8 and Ches Rednour Bruckman 2, while A.J. Barter, Lucas Laukkanen, Jefferson De Bruin Davis, Rhonde Lyle, Yves Omanito and John White were scoreless.

        In the bronze medal match, the 12th-seeded Kelowna Westsyde Whundas dispatched the 6th-seeded Nanaimo John Barsby Wildcats 100-89 in overtime. The Whundas led 19-16, 40-38 and 55-49 at the quarters. The score was knotted at 75 after regulation. Defensive player of the tournament Caleb Gremaud paced the Whundas with 39. Jeremy McInnis added 28, Colton Meikle 20, Webber Wang 10 and Cory McColm 3, while Jayden Broadfoot, Dylan Shea, Cason Scott, Ben Littlejohns, Kooper Groeneveld, Tony Gan, Logan Rubel, Liam Connolly and Kiyoji Brown were scoreless. Cohen Cadieux scored 51 to pace the Wildcats (coach Rick Hart, athletic director Robert Stevenson). Jonny Durkan added 14, Parker Moscrip 13, Ches Rednour Bruckman 6, A.J. Barter 3 and Rhonde Lyle 2, while Kai Rednour Bruckman, Lucas Laukkanen, Jefferson De Bruin Davis, Yves Omanito and John White were scoreless.

        In the final, the 2nd-seeded Vancouver King George Dragons dusted top-seeded Mill Bay Brentwood 63-33 after leading 17-5, 28-10 and 53-16 at the quarters. Dragons coach Darko Kulic told Varsity Letters that after poring over game film the night before the final, he told his troops to play man-to-man defence at the start before reverting to their standard 2-3 zone. It seemed to work as the Dragons length unravelled the Brentwood attack. Dionycius Bakare dominated the floor, hitting 17-26 from the field, including four treys. “He’s a shy, humble kid, but not on the court,” Kulic said. “Amazing human, amazing person. He had 41!, more than the other team scored. Big time players step up in big time moments.” Faisal Shawwa, who dominated the defensive paint, said “us and coach Darko, he’s been trying to get this for a long, long time. Loses two times in the provincial final. This year, we came out strong and we won it.” Darko Karac said “we’ve been waiting for this moment, like, forever. Coming into the pre-season we were ranked 10th and we were motivated by that. We wanted to prove everybody wrong. … and it’s great to make history for our team.” Brentwood coach Blake Gage said of his team’s tournament record low offensive output “I wanted to get in the history books somehow. But that wasn’t the way I envisioned it. … I don’t know what to say. I guess the emotion of the moment was just too big. King George did a great job. We had lots of good looks early, but when nothing went in, we got rattled and totally discombobulated. But I’m super proud of these guys. They had a great year and it’s just a shame to finish that way.” Kulic noted that “I can’t put into words what these boys meant to me. A lot of these boys, I coached their brothers .. this wasn’t for us, this was for everybody,” Kulic said. “For the last 16 years, I hated hearing “We are the Champions, No time for losers,” said the coach who lost Double A finals in 2018 to Brentwood College and 2020 to the Charles Hayes Rainmakers out of Prince Rupert. “Anywhere I am I turn it off. (Hearing it Saturday) was one of the best ever feelings. Well, my marriage and my baby are the most important things. But what a game, what a magical group of kids. 34-1, our one loss by one (point).” The December loss to North Delta, “was the best thing to ever happen to us,” Kulic said. “We came in after that game really upset at ourselves. We watched what we did and we never let it happen again. I was so sad that we lost, she gave me a little rock and I have had it in my pocket every game since and we won 30 straight (with) that lucky rock my daughter gave me.” Player of the game Dionycius Bakare paced the Dragons with 41. Darko Karac added 7, Faisal Shawwa 7, along with 10 boards, Rishin Uppal 5 and Jose Zuluaga (Guzman) 3, while Martin Petkov, Ashton Vij, Callen Nedelec, Eli Volkin, Andre Novicic, Kio Nickel, Andrej Kofacevic and Charlie Comrie were scoreless. Dylan Gage paced Brentwood with 14. Jayden Lust added 9, Taylor Edwards 5, Jagre Knight 5 and Thomas MacDonald 2, while Julian Bishop, Avik Bakshi, Andrew Kim, Milan Pasquale, David Ojedokun, Tochokwu Okonkwo, Nicholas Chomsky and Bern Mabane were scoreless.

The all-tournament featured MVP Dionycius Bakare (King George); Darko Karac (King George): Dylan Gage (Brentwood); Jayden Lust (Brentwood); Jonny Durkan (John Barsby) and Declan Cutler (St. Thomas Aquinas).

The 2nd-team featured: Cohen Cadieux (John Barsby); Jeremy McInnis (Westsyde); Nathan Chiang (Pacific Academy); Jaden Mesfin (Pacific Academy) and Jose Zaluaga (King George).

        The bronze medalist Kamloops Westsyde Whundas: Caleb Gremaud; Cason Scott; Jeremy McInnis; Webber Wang; Kooper Groeneveld; Logan Rubel; Colton Meikle; Jayden Broadfoot; Dylan Shea; Ben Littlejohns; Tony Gan; Cory McColm; Liam Connolly; Koyoji Brown; coach Chris Gremaud; assistant Ryan Porter; assistant Alex Toplak; assistant A.J. McInnis; assistant Jake Tabor; assistant Dylan Barrett; athletic director Jeff Goodrich

        The silver medalist Mill Bay Brentwood: Dylan Gage; Jayden Lust; Taylor Edwards; Jagre Knight; Thomas MacDonald; Julian Bishop; Avik Bakshi; Andrew Kim; Milan Pasquale; David Ojedokun; Tochokwu Okonkwo; Nicholas Chomsky; Bern Mabane; Zachary Houghton; Temi Sapara; coach Blake Gage; assistant Liam Sullivan; manager Robin Gage; manager Richard Wilson; trainer Tanner McGaw

        The champion Vancouver King George Dragons: Dionycius Bakare; Darko Karac; Faisal Shawwa; Jose Zuluaga (Guzman); Rishin Uppal; Andrej Kovacevic; Martin Petkov; Ashton Vij; Callen Nedelec; Eli Volkin; Andre Novicic; Kio Nickel; Charlie Comrie; coach Darko Kulic