In the opening round, held in Langley: …………………………………………………… The top-seeded Vancouver King George Dragons torched the 16th-seeded Creston Kootenay River (formerly Prince Charles Secondary) Comets 78-28 after leading 19-4, 29-14 and 64-20 at the quarters. Darko Karac paced the Dragons with 23. Ashton Vij added 17, Kio Nickel 17, Faisal Shawwa 10, Andre Novicic 6, Callen Nedelec 3 and Eli Volkin 1, while Leon Latinovic, Enzo Acknin, Kurosh Amir Behzadi, Aleksandar Vuckovic, Leiroy Dionco, Jaden Wilson, Abdullah Shawwa and Charlie Comrie were scoreless. Levi Huber paced the Comets with 6. Cyrus Donaghy added 4, Dominik Kiehn 4, Jake Adams 3, Quinn Page 3 and Vinayak Khanna 2, while Brandt Storm, Miguel Cabansal, Daniel Fabbro, Evan Felitsyn and Lyon Milne were scoreless. The Comets (coach Josh Nicol, coach Ryan Abel, assistant Chris Nicol, manager Finlay Madsen, manager Luke Smith) also included Kade Hills and Hayden Beaudoin. …………………………………………………… The 8th-seeded Langley Christian Lightning clipped the 9th-seeded Summerland Rockets 71-60 after leading 13-10, 36-31 and 56-47 at the quarters. Carter van der Waarde paced the Lightning with 25. Casey Van Hemert added 23, Tyler Olson 10, Willem Van Huizen 7, Isaac Hogewoning 4 and Ethan Langston 2, while Isaac Vandeburgt, Matthew Horak, Austin McKinley, Samuel Woelders, Mattias Huberts, Jayden Moon and Zachary VanTuinen were scoreless. Dezi Duchek scored 24 to pace the Rockets (coach Matthew Raimondo, assistant Jason Corday, assistant Darcy Mullin). Matteo Duchek added 21, Troy Issacs 10, Brix Corday 3 and Saxon Garrity 2, while Peter Kunka, Ryder Wilson, Caleb Dykstra, Jack Lesley, Jack Campbell, Daniel Dykstra and Kelso Yurick were scoreless. …………………………………………………… 4th-seeded Mill Bay Brentwood pounded the 13th-seeded Prince Rupert Charles Hays Rainmakers 82-54. The Rainmakers led 17-16 after one quarter as they rained treys early. Brentwood led 35-31 at the half and opened the second half with an 11-0 run. They led 61-44 after three quarters. “I was pretty pleased overall,” Brentwood coach Blake Gage told Varsity Letters. “A lot of teams are coming off 10-plus days without playing, and so there was a bit of rust to knock off, but also, Charles Hayes is a really good team. They had a great game plan, knew everything we wanted to do early. For us to go out, keep our composure in that situation, and get it done, I thought that was good. … They definitely made some shots early – Hayes has some very good shooters. It took us a little while to figure out who they were and what they wanted to do on offense. Once we did, I think that’s when you saw things shift – we definitely did a better job of trailing those shooters as the game went on.” Milan Pasquale paced Brentwood with 32. Bern Mebane added 9, Jackson Lenarcic 9, Taylor Edwards 8, Kang Cho 8, Jaxen Lust 8, Julian Bishop 4 and Temi Sapara 4, while Isaac Ryan, Evan Rosser, Zachary Haughton, Oliver Herd, Ainose Ibhahe, Jack Shortis and Liam Li were scoreless. Shayden Brown scored 13 to pace the Rainmakers (coach Mel Bishop, assistant Ryan Bishop). Josh Aparicio added 10, Caleb Tait 10, Tyson Bomben 9, Keanan Deinstadt 8, Justin April 3 and Cooper Magnuson 1, while Kevin Phan, Deon Eshom, Aiden Brown, Callahan Van der Merwe, Jace Stegavig and Finn De La Nuez were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 5th-seeded Kamloops Westsyde Whundas crushed the 12th-seeded Port Coquitlam Archbishop Carney Stars 79-52 after leading 19-18, 45-31 and 60-50 at the quarters. Cason Scott paced the Whundas with 25. Kiyo Brown added 29, Logan Rubel 15, Kooper Groeneveld 13, Jayden Broadfoot 5 and Nate Perreault 2, while Quinn Laroche, Carter Endean, Kasen Cooper, Amanjot Sidhu, Liam Connolly, Keiran Dawson, Calder MacLeod, Jaren Porter and Jovan Johannson were scoreless. Matthew Ibrahim scored 16 to pace the Stars. Gabriel Hombrebueno added 12, Branden Evangelista 6, Tristan Llego 6, Darnell Joseph 4, Santi Soto 4, Oscar Knox 2 and Liam Lalonde 2, while Anton Joseph, Jayden Wong, Tyler Oyardo, Jason Wilson, Dominic Skyrpnyk, George Ibrahim, Daniel Boronoco were scoreless. The Stars (coach Kevin Wallsmith, coach Jordan Lee, coach J.P. Escala) also included Luka Peric. …………………………………………………… The 6th-seeded Parksville John Barsby Bulldogs defeated the 11th-seeded Vancouver Brittania Bruins 66-58 after leading 17-11, 39-24 and 49-42 at the quarters. Jonny Durkin paced the Bulldogs with 24. Cohen Cadieux added 19, Rhoden Lyle 10, Jacob Fair 6, A.J. Barter 5 and Jacobi White 2, while Willaim Scott, Niall O’Hara, Hayden Beaulieu, Arjun Janjau, Wyatt Toomer, Victor Gutierrez-Guerra and Ethan Lyttle were scoreless. Osiris Jacob scored 21 to pace the Bruins (coach Edward Hoang, coach Jadon Wanless, athletic director James Smith). Munashe Sephani added 14, Liam Gregoire 9, Kelly Ochieng 5, Alex Liu 4, Antonio Ndala 2 and Adam Mestinsek 2, while Milkias Hagos, Adeo Monk, Casey Ng, Ilia Saghaei and Patrick Ireland were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 3rd-seeded West Vancouver Collingwood Cavaliers defeated the 14th-seeded Surrey Khalsa Lions 77-69. The Lions led 18-17 after one quarter. The Cavaliers led 38-37 at the half and 56-52 after three quarters. Amir Mojarradi paced the Cavaliers with 20. James Holm added 18, Cy Bosa 13, Alex Yu 11, Logan Albiani 7, Finnegan Murphy 5 and Avi Barha 3, while Sam Li, Brek Ball, Sam Calder, James Xu, Louis Dhingra, Tony Li, Julian Hinders and Harry Bell were scoreless. Robinjeet Benipal paced the Lions with 29. Armaan Johal added 17, Premjot Mand 9, Naunihal Gill 4, Anandpreet Khosa 4, Jaskirat Atwal 4 and Jashandeep Lalli 2, while Jagjot Johal, Harjan Sekhon, Subaig Sandhu, Mehtab Walia, Manvir Bal, Ajaib Mann, Mantaj Nagra and Gurjeet Gill were scoreless. The Lions (coach Gurmukh Manak, assistant Akash Boporai, assistant Michelle Kelly, athletic director Brenna Wills, athletic director Kiranpreet Boyal) also included Gursagar Chahal and Sujot Rana. …………………………………………………… The 7th-seeded Victoria Lambrick Park Lions mauled the 10th-seeded Surrey Southridge Storm 90-70. The Storm led 27-19 after one quarter. The Lions led 38-36 at the half and 62-37 after three quarters. Blake Pye paced the Lions with 40. Reid Clague added 17, Preston Anderson 12, Alex Baulne 12, Solomon Anderson 6 and Carter Anderson 5, while Brady Ball, Ohm Chaisongkram, Humza Malik, Tristan Moss, Yuto Loo, Victor Jimenez Casal and Louis Su were scoreless. Devan Jagpal, Levi Leach and Matteo Cavaleri each scored 16 to pace the Storm. Gavin Bassi added 11, Owen Lister 5, Jaden Gosal 3 and Eshaan Sangha 3, while Andaaz Gill, Matias Fisher, Jason Si, Levi Leach, Anthony Liu, Max Blandy, Justin Hayer and Sahvin Garcha were scoreless. The Storm (coach Elliot Mason, teacher sponsor Dylan Lal) also included Jai Pawa. …………………………………………………… The 2nd-seeded Surrey Pacific Academy Breakers spanked the 15th-seeded Vanderhoof Nechako Valley Vikings 63-44 after leading 21-14, 35-23 and 50-33 at the quarters. Nathan Chiang paced the Breakers with 14. Jaden Mesfin added 13, Paul Ude 10, Simon Akindele 10, Earl Akene 10, Elias Ogbes 4 and Oureal Mulugeta 2, while Joel Aiko, Solomon Barlin, Judah Ashbee, Prince Dean, Jimin Choi, Adriel Bouguel, Jason Babs-Ishola and Eddie Li were scoreless. Thomas Cross scored 23 to pace the Vikings (coach Gary Simrose, assistant Debbie Simrose, athletic director Travis Himmelright). Dayne Mueller added 8, Grayson Turgeon 5, Cooper Ziler 4 and Aiden Simrose 4, while Brendan Baker, Jaxson Currie, Wyatt McAndrews, Kole Shoesmith, Kai Hara, James Walker, Gideon Goulty, Linden Buchanan and Treyken Stephen were scoreless.
In the quarterfinals, the 8th-seeded Langley Christian Lightning stunned the top-seeded Vancouver King George Dragons 63-56 after leading 13-4 early and 19-11, 33-31 and 43-42 at the quarters. Guard Willem Van Huizen notched 12 on the final frame, including a trey and an and-one off a finger roll as the Lightning withstood a final Dragons push. “He’s a phenomenal basketball player,” Lighting coach Jon Mayan told Varsity Letters. “His first love his volleyball – he’s going to TWU next year – but he gives it his everything when he plays. He’s so athletic and so smart, reads the floor incredibly well. He’s just a special athlete, and he hates to lose. He’s as competitive a player as I’ve ever coached. … “For our program, this is making new history. This is our first time we’ve been to the semifinals in program history. We’ve been knocking on the door in this quarterfinal game for years, it seems. King George themselves knocked us out last year. I’ve been at this a bunch where we were ready to get past this and it just didn’t happen, but this group is the most resilient I’ve had. I’ve loved coaching them. The effort they give is unbelievable, and tonight they just outcompeted a really good King George team. … We heavily scouted them. We knew how we had to play them from the jump – where there strengths were, especially with their size advantage. We had to double in the post, be very physical, and everyone on our team had to fill their role. … Building defensive habits is key to everything we want to do. We want to get out in transition, and the only way to do that is to get stops. If anything, our guys needed to understand how tough they needed to be, and how physical they needed to be against a team like that. They took that to heart.” Willem Van Huizen paced the Lightning with 23. Tyler Olson added 15, Casey Van Hemert 13, Isaac Hogewoning 6 and Carter van der Waarde 6, while Ethan Langston, Isaac Vandeburgt, Matthew Horak, Austin McKinley, Samuel Woelders, Mattis Huberts, Jayden Moon and Zachary VanTuinen were scoreless. Darko Karac scored 18 to pace the Dragons (coach Darko Kulic, assistant Randy Chan, assistant Mike Wiseman, assistant Roger McBride, assistant Luka Kojima St-Laurent, assistant Hanif Karmali, manager Jackson Intenberg, manager Abel Mohammadi, manager Nicole Ma, manager Irada Abasi, manager Martin Petkov, athletic director Jeevan Pannun). Ashton Vij added 13, Andre Novicic 11, Faisal Shawwa 9 and Kio Nickel 5, whil Leon Latinovic, Enzo Acknin, Callen Nedelec, Kurosh Amir Behzadi, Eli Volkhin, Aleksandar Vuckovic, Leiroy Dionco, Jaden Wilson and Abdullah Shawwa were scoreless.
Fourth-seeded Mill Bay Brentwood clocked the 5th-seeded Kamloops Westsyde Whundas 83-57 after leading 22-15, 46-30 and 55-47 at the quarters. Brentwood coach Blake Gage told Varsity Letters that “it was kind of what we thought it would be. They’ve got some big, strong guys over there, and I thought our boys did well to compete. For the most part, we were able to match their competitiveness and their toughness, so I was pretty happy. … I think we succeeded today by committee – I was pretty happy with Julian (Bishop), who bounced back after a tough night last night. I thought Taylor (Edwards) struggled a bit in the first half, but really came up big in the second when we needed him. In the meantime, other guys just step up and carry them. That’s something I’m really proud of – on any night, it can be someone different – any of our guys can go out and help us win.” Julian Bishop paced Brentwood with 20. Milan Pasquale added 18, Taylor Edwards 16, Jackson Lenarcic 10, Bern Mabane 7, Ainose Ibhahe 3, Jaxen Lust 3, Oliver Herd 2, Liam Li 2 and Temi Sapara 2, while Isaac Ryan, Zach Houghton, Jack Shortis and Kang Cho were scoreless. Cason Scott scored 24 to pace the Whundas. Kooper Groeneveld added 14, Logan Rubel 10, Kiyo Brown 6 and Jayden Broadfoot 3, while Quinn Laroche, Nate Perrault, Carter Endean, Kasen Cooper, Amanjot Sidhu, Liam Connolly, Calder Macleod, Kieran Dawson, Jaren Porter and Jovan Johannson were scoreless. The Whundas (coach A.J. McInnis, assistant Ryan Porter, assistant Steve Scott, assistant Alex Toplak, assistant Jake Tabor, assistant Dylan Barrett, assistant Elio Cupello, athletic director Jeff Goodrich) also included Daniel Smith.
The 3rd-seeded West Vancouver Collingwood Cavaliers dusted the 6th-seeded Parksville John Barsby Bulldogs 108-75. The Bulldogs led 30-29 after one quarter. The Cavaliers led 57-47 at the half and 87-62 after three quarters. The Cavaliers did a more effective job of containing Bulldog Jonny Durkan in the second half. Cavaliers coach Andy Wong told Varsity Letters that “we knew Barsby played fast, and they proved it early. I think they hit eight threes in the first quarter, and we really had to make a shift to the diamond-and-one, try and clog up lanes and make it harder for them to get clean looks. We put in new stuff on Monday to prepare for an opponent like this, and guys bought in. We got stronger and stronger as the game (went on). … It was a really good team effort. Guys are consistently stepping up, which is our greatest strength. Brek (Ball) was excellent on defense, constantly creating problems – that was beautiful. Great games from our bigs in Logan (Albiani) and Avi (Barha), some really nice shooting from Cy Bosa. … We don’t really have a single superstar like some teams. We go five-on, five-off and we go full-out, full-court press the entire game. We can put up some big numbers like we were able to score today by just running it up and down. I think that’s really paid off both in our conditioning, and our confidence. Because we play guys so much, we have guys sitting at number 10 in our rotation who have played as much as another team’s sixth man. So, they know when they get in there that they can get the job done.” Logan Albiani paced the Cavaliers with 22. Finnegan Murphy added 18, Avi Barha 13, Amir Mojarradi 12, James Holm 9 and Sam Li 2, while Alex Yu, Brek Ball, Sam Calder, Jamex Xu, Cy Bosa, Louis Dhingra, Tony Li, Julian Hinders and Harry Bell were scoreless. Jonny Durkin paced the Bulldogs with 34. Cohen Cadieux added 23, A.J. Barter 9, Rhonde Lyle 3, Jacobi White 2, Jacob Fair 2 and Hayden Beaulieu 2, while William Scott, James Francis, Niall O’Hara, Arju Janjua, Victor Gutierrez Garcia, Wyatt Toomer and Ethan Lyttle were scoreless. The Bulldogs (coach Rick Hart, athletic director Robert Stevenson) also included Kai Rednour Bruckman.
In the last quarterfinal, the 2nd-seeded Surrey Pacific Academy Breakers clipped the 7th-seeded Victoria Lambrick Park Lions 83-71. The Lions led 21-18 after one quarter. The Breakers led 43-29 at the half and 59-49 after three quarters. Breakers coach Seth Sorenson told Varsity Letters that guard Jaden Mesfin, who dominated the floor, is “about as good as anyone in the province. 2A, 3A, 4A, there’s not many players, if any, I would swap him for. We have a ton of guys who are capable of playing a big role and making shots for us, but our offense tends to go how Jaden goes. … It was alright. We need to finish better for four quarters. We played better today than we did yesterday, for sure. But that wasn’t what we know we’re capable of doing. Fortunately, the way in which we win doesn’t matter, as long as you win by at least one point. But we need to be better going forward. … We need to clean up our finishing. Definitely need to finish our free throws – I think we shot like 60%, which just isn’t going to be good enough in the final four. When we get opportunities, we have to finish with points – the teams we’re going up against aren’t going to give us easy looks, so when we can scheme them up, we need to take advantage.” Jaden Mesfin paced the Breakers with 41. Nathan Chiang added 13, Earl Akene 13, Oureal Mulugeta 8 and Jason Babs-Ishola 8, while Joel Aiko, Solomon Barlin, Paul Ude, Judah Ashbee, Prince Dean, Jimin Choi, Elias Ogbes, Simon Akindele, Adriel Bouguel and Eddie Li were scoreless. Blake Pye scored 25 to pace the Lions (coach Ed Somers). Alex Baulne added 17, Solomon Anderson 12, Reid Clague 11, Ohm Chaisongkram 3 and Preston Anderson 3, while Cater Anderson, Brady Ball, Humza Malik, Tristan Moss, Yuto Loo, Victor Jimenez Casal and Louis Su were scoreless.
In the semis, the 3rd-seeded West Vancouver Collingwood Cavaliers defeated the 2nd-seeded Surrey Pacific Academy Breakers 73-68. The score was knotted at 17 after one quarter. The Breakers led 32-31 at the half. The Cavaliers led 47-46 after three quarters. The score was tied at 57 with 4:56 play. Amir Mojarradi notched an and-one on a putback to give the Cavaliers. The lead. Logan Albiani and Finnegan Murphy added layups on the next two possessions. With the Cavs leading 69-63 with 14.2 seconds to play, Jaden Mesfin notched a contested triple to trim the margin to 6. But he was called for a technical foul on the backend of the play, and subsequently ejected. Breakers coach Seth Sorensen was also ejected after arguing the call and earning a technical of his own. Cavaliers coach Andy Wong told Varsity Letters “that was just a tight game from minute one to minute 40,” recapped Cavaliers head coach Andy Wong. “They beat us really good at the start of the year, so we had to come up with something to play them tight. We know number 7 Jaden [Mesfin] just went off for 41 last night, and we tried to play him tight, but they have so many other weapons, so many good athletes. We had to be physical, make sure we rebounded well and keep pressure on their shooters. Our guys did a beautiful job executing. … We had to be more patient on offense, for sure. Took our time with the shot clock, allowed it to come to us a little bit more than rushing just to get a shot off. Defensively, I think we really just locked in and minimized their second chances. We had months to get this system down, and you’d hope we were better today than we were in November. Thankfully, we were.” Amir Mojarradi paced the Cavaliers with 22. James Holm added 18, Finnegan Murphy 13, Cy Bosa 12, Logan Aliani 5, Avi Barha 2 and Sam Li 1, while Alex Yu, Brek Ball, Sam Calder, Louis Dhingra, Tony li, Julian Hinders, Harry Bell and Asher Puar were scoreless. Jaden Mesfin paced the Breakers with 23. Earl Akene added 15, Nathan Chiang 14, Adriel Bougel 8, Simon Akindele 5, Paul Ude 2 and Oureal Mulugeta 2, while Joel Aiko, Solomon Barlin, Judah Ashbee, Jimin Choi, Elias Ogbes, Jason Babs-Ishola and Eddie Li were scoreless.
In the other semi, 4th-seeded Mill Bay Brentwood dispatched the 8th-seeded Langley Christian Lightning 72-65. The Lightning led 18-16, 36-30 and 47-45 at the quarters. Brentwood’s defensive pressure contained Lightning’s perimeter shooting and generated 17 points off turnovers. Julian Bishop paced the Cavaliers with 23. Miles Pasquale added 17, Jackson Lenarcic 14, Taylor Edwards 7, Bern Mebane 6, Jaxen Lust 4 and Temi Sapara 2, while Isaac Ryan, Zachary Haughton, Oliver Herd, Ainose Ibhahe, Kang Cho and Liam Li were scoreless. Casey Van Hemert paced the Lightning with 19. Carter van der Waarde added 18, Willem Van Huizen 16, Isaac Hogewoning 3, Matthew Horak 2 and Tyler Olson 2, while Ethan Langston, Issac Vandeburgt, Austin McKinley, Samuel Woelders, Mattias Huberts, Jayden Moon and Zachary VanTuinen were scoreless.
In the bronze medal match, the 2nd-seeded Surrey Pacific Academy Breakers defeated the 8th-seeded Langley Christian Lightning 70-60 after leading 16-10, 31-22 and 47-37 at the quarters. Jaden Mesfin paced the Breakers with 21. Earl Akene added 20, Jason Babs-Ishola 15, Nathan Chiang 5, Oureal Mulugeta 5 and Simon Akindele 4, while Jimin Choi, Solomon Barlin, Paul Ude, Joel Aiko, Prince Dean, Eddie Li, Judah Ashbee and Adriel Bouquel were scoreless. Casey Van Hemert scored 19 to pace the Lightning (coach Jon Mayan, coach Brodan Thiel). Tyler Olson added 12, Isaac Hogewoning 11, Willem Van Huizen 9, Carter van der Waarde 6, Matthew Horak 2 and Zachary VanTuinen 1, while Ethan Langston, Issac Vandeburgt, Austin McKinley, Samuel Woelders, Mattias Huberts and Jayden Moon were scoreless.
In the final, the 3rd-seeded West Vancouver Collingwood Cavaliers dispatched 4th-seeded Mill Bay Brentwood 71-64. Brentwood led 17-16 after one quarter. The Cavaliers led 39-36 at the half and 57-50 after three quarters. They took command with a 9-4 run in the final frame and while Brentwood answered with a 6-0 run, player of the game Finnegan Murphy buried their hopes of a rally with a bucket in the paint with 50 seconds on the clock. Cavalier posts Avi Barha and Logan Albiani smothered Brentwood in the paint, with each notching 4 blocks. The Cavaliers hit 13-23 from the arc, including 6 from Cy Bosa and 5 from Murphy, who told Varsity Letters that the perimeter shooting has “been on all season. We just let it fly. We’ve got so much confidence on this team.” Cavaliers assistant coach Teresa Ross said “our bigs, Logan had great blocks, Avi came at the end there with great blocks, that made a huge difference. … We knew we had really cool athletes and we were going to be able to do some different stuff with them. We knew we had it in us. … We just stuck with the game plan. We scouted ahead and knew what we wanted to do. We knew we had to be locked in.” Brentwood coach Blake Gage said “you got to give them credit. They shot 56 percent from three. Some of them a little too open, but a lot of them tough (contested shots). And we shot just 25 per cent. … I thought we did a lot of really good things. We probably weren’t as confident as I’d like us to be. We got some pretty good looks, open guys around the basket. … I’m really proud of the effort they gave. Just didn’t quite have the experience to be in the moment.” Cy Bosa paced the Cavaliers with 22. Finnegan Murphy added 20, Amir Mojarradi 10, tournament MVP James Holm 8, Logan Albiani 6 and Avi Barha 5, while Sam Li, Alex Yu, Brek Ball, Sam Calder, Louis Dhingra, Tony Li, Julian Hinders, Harry Bell and Asher Puar were scoreless. Milan Pasquale paced Brentwood with 16. Julian Bishop added 15, defensive player of the tournament Taylor Edwards 12, Temi Sapara 9, Jackson Lenarcic 8 and Bern Mabane 4, while Zachary Haughton, Oliver Herd, Ainose Ibhahe, Liam Li, Kang Cho and Jaxen Lust were scoreless.
The all-tournament team featured MVP James Holm (Collingwood); Milan Pasquale (Brentwood); Darko Karac (King George); Jaden Mesfin (Pacific Academy); Willem Van Huizen (Langley Christian); and Blake Pye (Lambrick Park).
The 2nd-team featured Cy Bosa (Collingwood); Cason Scott (Westsyde); Jonny Durkin (John Barsby); Amir Mojarradi (Collingwood); Nathan Chiang (Pacific Academy).
The bronze medalist Surrey Pacific Academy Breakers: Jaden Mesfin; Earl Akene; Nathan Chiang; Adriel Bougel; Simon Akindele; Paul Ude; Oureal Mulugeta; Joel Aiko; Solomon Barlin; Judah Ashbee; Jimin Choi; Elias Ogbes; Jason Babs-Ishola; Prince Dean; Eddie Li; coach Seth Sorenson; assistant Joel Ashbee; assistant Tysen Stoddart; assistant Ethan Sorenson
The silver medalist Mill Bay Brentwood: Milan Pasquale; Julian Bishop; Taylor Edwards; Temi Sapara; Jackson Lenarcic; Bern Mabane; Zachary Houghton; Oliver Herd; Ainose Ibhahe; Liam Li; Kang Cho; Jaxen Lust; Evan Rosser; Jack Shortis; Yash Dahiya; coach Blake Gage; assistant Liam Sullivan; manager Robin Gage; manager Richard Wilson; trainer Tanner McGaw
The champion West Vancouver Collingwood Cavaliers: Cy Bosa; Finnegan Murphy; Amir Mojarradi; James Holm; Logan Albiani; Avi Barha; Sam Li; Alex Yu; Brek Ball; Sam Calder; Louis Dhingra; Tony Li; Julian Hinders; Harry Bell; Asher Puar; James Xu; coach Andrew Wong; assistant Teresa Ross; assistant Davey Ross; assistant Matt Sacks; assistant Jaden Narwall; manager Sophie Bell; manager Georgia Howard; manager Kayla Hakimzadeh; therapist Gavin Leung