In the opening round: …………………………………………………… The top-seeded Vancouver Notre Dame Jugglers dusted the 16th-seeded Fernie Falcons 118-76 after leading 40-20, 68-34 and 106-61 at the quarters. Second-year Jugglers coach Cam Wright told Varsity Letters that “we got a bunch of super athletic guards that kind of can get out and score and do different things. So absolutely, we want to run at a good tempo. I mean, at the same time, you know, we pride ourselves on our defence, obviously. Maybe we didn’t show too much against Fernie there.” Wright added that senior guard Caleb Parotta is a difference-maker. “His basketball IQ, his basketball knowledge, the way he gets his other teammates involved is one thing, and then, you know, his ability to score, obviously, is super impressive. He can get downhill. But at the same time, getting his teammates involved and defensively as well, you know, can really guard.” Connor Mabel paced the Jugglers with 42. Caleb Parrotta added 38, Saachin Rattan 11, Niko Kuna 10, Jaden Chan 3, Nathan Roye 2, Sayjvir Gill 2, Anson Cheung 2, Klyde Tan 2, Michael MacLeod 2 and Yousef Ibrahim 2, while Arrel Belnas, Nicolo Mauro and Joshua Somera were scoreless. Oscar Wrigglesworth scored 15 to pace the Falcons (coach A.J. Kennedy, assistant Ian Johnson, athletic director Meghan Coultry). Isaac Stukey added 13, Gordon Fahselt 12, Sebastian Fraser 10, Kevin Cox 8, Beck Tuggle 5, Gary Blocksom 4, David Press 3, Wyatt Thurmeier 2, Oskar Shafer 2 and Monty Conroy 2, while Russell Rutherford and Naomeh Roy Diol were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 9th-seeded Kamloops Westsyde Whundas clocked the 8th-seeded Prince Rupert Charles Hays Rainmakers 77-54 after leading 21-13, 49-22 and 60-35 at the quarters. Whundas coach Ryan Porter told Varsity Letters that winning a title in 2022 invigorated the program. “Like once you sort of break the seal, if you will, right, it kind of gives everybody belief and understanding of what is possible, right? And, yeah, our program’s been a lot of fun. The boys who are a part of it know it’s a special thing to be a part of. And we always think we have a chance until we don’t.” Jaren Porter paced the Whundas with 15. Jacob McKearney added 13, Calder MacLeod 11, Barrett Thompson 10, Jovan Johanson 8, Keiran Dawson 6, Owen Quiring 6, Jaxson Mills 3, Connor Marrington 2, Brendan Huang 2 and Zachary Duhaime 1, while Evan Ruddick was scoreless. Nate Sawka scored 14 to pace the Rainmakers (coach Kevin Sawka, coach Mel Bishop, assistant Ryan Bishop). Carl Sampson added 12, Thales Innes 7, Hudson Veldman 5, Rylan Brooks 5, Jacob Leighton 3, Stanley Yeomans-Stewart 3, Graeme Dickens 3 and Tyce Adams 2, while Jack Crump, Jeremy Higginson, Blake Yaroshuk, Morgan Wells and Brandon Basso were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 4th-seeded Vancouver King George Dragons crushed the 13th-seeded Burnaby Cariboo Hill Cougars 65-38 after leading 15-8, 36-16 and 56-23 at the quarters. “We knew what we wanted to do, we wanted to control the pace,” player of the game Rei Ikeda told Varsity Letters. “If we don’t let them speed us up, if we play at our own pace, we’ll get good shots, and that’s what led us to the win.” Dragons post Oleg Orlov said “we listened to coach. Whatever coach Darko [Kulic] was saying, it really helped us figure out the right play. We just trusted each other.” Oleg Orlov paced the Dragons with 18. Rei Ikada added 17, Leon Latinovic 13, Abud Shawwa 2 and Enzo Acknin 2, while Artem Grotskyy, Kairos Bakare, Mihajlo Lekic, Brad McCullough, Thomas Fowler, Teo Novicic and Marek Dunn were scoreless. Himat Dosanjh scored 19 to pace the Chargers (coach Eugene Fung, assistant Davey Nat, assistant Paul Teodosio). Cyrus Lee added 7, Abeel Chogang 6 and Henry Sarabun 6, while Shivniel Ram, Abraham Tesfemarian, Sebastian Abonza Sarabia, Tenzin Tsultem, Riley Fernandez, Luka Stanisavljevic and Pranav Chaliwal were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 5th-seeded Surrey Christian Falcons defeated the 12th-seeded Nelson L.V. Rogers Grizzlies 82-76. The Grizzlies led 11-0 early and 26-16 after one quarter. The score was knotted at 42 at the half on a late trey by Falcons Joel Zutter. The Falcons opened the second half with a 9-0 run and led 63-59 after three quarters. They built their lead to 17 and withstood a final Grizzlies rally to hang on for the win. Falcons coach Josh Buys told Varsity Letters that the play of Lleyton Kelly and Tyus Buys were critical. “Lleyton is a born leader, aside from the scoring, he lifts up his team on and off the floor. And Tyus’ scoring in the first kept us afloat and kept us in this one. … Thatis a good basketball team. It could have gone either way.” Lleyton Kelly paced the Falcons with 21. Sidney Kelly added 17, Trus Buys 15, including 4 treys, Harmehtaab Bath 11, Joel Zutter 6, Koen Chapman 6, Jireh Koshy 3 and Angad Aulakh 3, while Larry Mutenda, Elijah Reddy, Isaac Chiang, Ethan Santlal and Fritz Van’t Hullenaar wee scoreless. Elijah Marcus-McCormick scored 18 to pace the Grizzlies (coach Ryan MacKinnon, assistant Matthew Fuhr, assistant Ross Naka). Jack Boyes added 15, Gabe Liddell 12, Korban Ashley 11, Chase Lake 9, Roman Van’t Land 9 and Benjamin Stewart 2, while Forest Bokser-Wishlow, Seth Kilpatrick, Jaxson Slomba and Reed Mitchell were scoreless. ………………………………………………… The 2nd-seeded West Vancouver Collingwood Cavaliers whipped the 15th-seeded Vanderhoof Nechako Valley Vikings 87-57 after leading 25-12, 46-25 and 70-43 at the quarters. Cavaliers coach Andy Wong told Varsity Letters that player of the game Elliot McNeil is “such a good, true point guard. He has such poise on the court. You could trust him defensively, but on offence, he gets us into our sets. He gets us into our rhythm. You know exactly what you’re getting out of him every game; he gives us calm on the court when we need it. … We wanted to play at a high pace, to move the game 94 feet. Honestly, the strength of our team is our team play. We just pass it, pass it, pass it. We’re really unselfish, and that’s what we’re known for.” Jake McAdam paced the Cavaliers with 15. Henry Bell added 14, Elliot McNeill 14, Bayan Dehghani 10, Lucas Di Marco 9, Sam Layden 4, Godfrey Mang 4, Ethan Albiani 3 and Daniel Pan 1, while Tomas Villamil, Easton Bruce, Ken Wu, Matt McAdam and Ardavan Tehrani were scoreless. Brody Black scored 15 to pace the Vikings. Zeke Ferguson added 13, Dayne Mueller 9, Myer Himmelright 7, Tyce Mueller 7, Linden Buchanan 2, Lucas Avison 2 and Ben Teichroeb 2, while Miles Robinson and Cameron Johnson were scoreless. The Vikings (coach Gary Simrose, assistant Joel Mueller, assistant Debbie Simrose, athletic director Travis Himmelright) also included Broc Bjronson. …………………………………………………… The 7th-seeded Langley Christian Lightning clubbed the 10th-seeded Victoria St. Michael’s University Blue Jaguars 73-53. The Blue Jaguars led 21-15 after one quarter and 38-28 at the half. The Lightning le 51-44 after three quarters after a late 8-0 run capped by a trey from Judah Lindberg. “I just tell the guys, stick to the game plan, we understood that, at some point, with our intensity, with our length, with our athleticism, other teams break,” Lightning coach Brodan Thiel told Varsity Letters. “We just trust the inside touches and trust that Tyse [Wagenaar] is going to go off, and he did, amazing job from him.” Thiel added that Tyse Wagenaar excelled in the second half. “When you’re the leader, and a guy who’s basically been captain since grade 10 – he’s now in Grade 11, averaging 25 points and 13 rebounds a game, he comes out and has a monster performance. Everyone feeds off of him, so it’s just great to see.” Tyse Wagenaar paced the Lightning with 26. Judah Lindberg added 21, Jarom Smith 9, Ike Hogewoning 8, Henry Sept 4, Rhys Wagar 2, Chase Bennett 2 and Nolan Neufeld 1, while Noah Lindberg, James Chang, Koby Wind, Maky Ng, Owen Vanderburgt, Carter Lammers and Mathison V.D. Waarde were scoreless. Alex MacKay scored 18 to pace the Blue Jaguars (coach Ian Hyde-Lay, assistant Jeff Rud, therapist Hannah Resch). Dani Pelyhe added 11, Will Low 10, Manev Kang 8, Evan Pressello 4 and Will Bateson 2, while Henry Lake, Bek Farish, Ruibo Wu, Parker Sheeham, Azaad Gill and Elias Cambhi Arroyave were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 14th-seeded Summerland Rockets stunned the 3rd-seeded Surrey Southridge Storm 90-70 after leading 21-20, 52-43 and 75-61 at the quarters. Rockets point guard Mateo Ducheck blistered the nets for 59 points, including 17-22 from the line. Ducheck told Varsity Letters that “when you get going, you kind of just like get in a flow. So it starts with my teammates hitting me, and then you can just get yourself going and make harder shots. … My club coach says I go too slow, but I’ve got long steps. I can make it to the rim, yeah. And just not going straight to the net. Like, I’ll make the right play if someone’s wide open, too.” Rockets coach Matthew Raimondo said “it’s unreal, and we almost take it for granted what he’s doing because he just does it all the time. Like he’s probably as close to 40 a game right now. But the best part of this game is he guarded the other Matteo [Cavaleri] the entire game, number 14 for them. And really did a good job on him. So we’re tiring him out on both sides of the court and he’s still able to put those numbers up and, you know, it’s pretty incredible to watch it.” Mateo Ducheck paced the Rockets with 59. Livio Specht Mari added 9, Aaden Pidperyhora 8, Ary Duchek 8, Kingston Ripley 4 and Max Hildebrandt 2, while Chase Knowlton, Nick Burman, Joseph Bonda, Sonny Aubie, Shaun Petkau, Ryder Sherman, Kingston Biro and Alex Henrichsen were scoreless. Matteo Cavaleri scored 24 to pace the Storm (coach Perry Harder, assistant Dylan Lal, manager Zayver Khunkhun, manager Zachary Huan, manager Eli Chu). Nolan Chow added 13, Sahvin Garcha 9, Dylan Tiamzon 9, Anthony Liu 8 and Derek Zheng 7, while Evan Khangura, Jovan Johal, Ari Purewall, Eshaan Sangha and Feury Gallant were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 11th-seeded Vernon Kalamalka Lakers clipped the 6th-seeded Victoria Pacific Christian Pacers 82-72. The Pacers led 18-15 after one quarter. The Lakers led 44-37 at the half and 66-53 after three quarters. Lakers coach Glenn Garvie said post Tylen Lewis late dominance in the paint proved the difference. “The unique thing about Tylen is he has the ability to handle the ball, shoot from outside and be very strong inside. He has very few weaknesses in that sense, so he’s very tough to guard. … We knew that [the Pacers] would never quit. We just had to play hard the whole time. We were calm when we had to be calm, and we were frantic when we had to be frantic. They handled the pressure very well.” Tylen Lewis paced the Lakers with 32. Mason Clerke added 29, Isaac MacDonald 7, Adam Mills 5, Evan Cunningham 4, Braden Bankley 3 and Noah Bagan 2, while Cruz McLean, Sam he and Ty Johannson were scoreless. Judah Henkel scored 28 to pace the Pacers (coach Gabe Kremler, athletic director John Stewart). Tommy Reems added 21, Zach Day 11, Jahvon Rodney 6, Magnus Varnes 4 and Matteo Du Toit 2, while Parker Reems, Caleb Varnes, Josiah Toews, Luke Henkel, Josiah Steinman, Ethan Clark and Athan Wilcox were scoreless.

       In the quarterfinals, the top-seeded Vancouver Notre Dame Jugglers dispatched the 9th-seeded Kamloops Westsyde Whundas 91-82 after leading 20-15, 46-43 and 70-57 at the quarters. Point guard Caleb Parrotta notched a late trey and a fadeaway jumper to ice the win. “We always say that Caleb Parrotta is ready for the moment,” Jugglers coach Cam Wright told Varsity Letters. “And in the fourth quarter there, as it came down the stretch, he was ready for the moment. He did a great job tonight. … We knew it was going to be a dogfight.” Caleb Parrotta paced the Jugglers with 36. Connor Mabel added 24, Nathan Roye 23, Niko Kuna 7 and Saachin Rattan 2, while Jaden Chan, Arrel Belnas, Nicolo Mauro, Sayj Gill, Josh Somera, Anson Cheung, Klyde Tan, Michael MacLeod, Yousef Ibrahim and Will Craig were scoreless. Jacob McKearney scored 27 to pace the Whundas. Jaren Porter added 26, Barrett Thompson 8, Jovan Johannson 7, Jaxson Mills 6, Calder MacLeod 6 and Owen Quiring 2, while Evan Ruddick, Conner Marrington, Brenden Huang, Zach Duhaime and Keiran Dawson were scoreless. The Whundas (coach Ryan Porter, assistant Zach Villanueva, assistant Ryan Watson, assistant Matteo Cupello, athletic director Jeff Goodrich) also included Axell Bodenheim, Gabe Collrin and Paxton Janes.

The 4th-seeded Vancouver King George Dragons clipped the 5th-seeded Surrey Christian Falcons 70-60. The Dragons led 21-12 after one quarter. The Falcons led 33-28 at the half after notching a late 13-0 run The Dragons led 51-48 after three quarters. Player of the game and Dragons forward Abud Shawwa told Varsity Letters that the screaming of coach Darko Kulic has become ritual. “Our coach has been doing that with his teams for 20 years. His energy helps fire us up.” Dragon Mihailo Lukic said “our intensity, our defence was much better in the second half. We really focused on getting stops and we really kind of changed our game, trying to attack more of the rim instead of just shooting threes. We tried to get more in the paint to try and get some gap-kick, swing movement so we could get easier buckets. … We made sure to stop them from driving into the hoop because they were really killing us in the first half.” Abud Shawwa paced the Dragons with 23. Rei Ikeda added 16, Mihailo Lukic 16, Leon Latinovic 12 and Oleg Orlov 3, while Artem Grottskyy, Kairos Bakare, Mihaijo Leekic, Brad McCullough, Thomas Fowler, Teo Novicic, Enzo Acknin and Marek Dunn were scoreless. Lleyton Kelly scored 33 to pace the Falcons (coach Josh Buys, coach Gary Chapman, athletic director Sean Engbers). Sidney Kelly added 12, Harmehtaab Bath 5, Joel Zutter 4, Tyus Buys 3 and Koen Chapman 3, while Larry Mutenda, Elijah Reddy, Jireh Koshy, Angad Aulakh, Isaac Chiang, Ethan Santlal and Fritz Van’t Hullenaar were scoreless.

       The 2nd-seeded West Vancouver Collingwood Cavaliers clipped the 7th-seeded Langley Christian Lightning 71-55 after leading 17-6, 34-19 and 57-35 at the quarters. Cavaliers coach Andy Wong told Varsity Letters that “we knew who their go-to scorers were. We knew they like to play at a slow pace and we wanted to speed things up in transition, use our good team passing and be able to get our quick shots. That kind of defines us. … We play with a lot of flow. It’s just beautiful, beautiful passing, and then a lot of confidence when we are able to get a shot. We have really good shot selection. It’s very unselfish. Whatever is the best shot, we put it up, and that’s just kind of how we define our team. No superstar, just a bunch of really hard-working stars.” Elliot McNeil paced the Cavaliers with 20. Player of the game Jake McAdam added 16, Harry Bell 15, Peter Huang 10, Sam Layden 6 and Daniel Pan 4, while Lucas Di Marco, Ethan Albiani, Bayan Dehghani, Tomas Villamil, Easton Bruce, Ken Wu, Godfrey Mang, Matt McAdam and Teggen Murphy were scoreless. Tyse Wagenaar scored 20 to pace the Lightning (coach Brodan Thiel, athletic director Jon Mayan). Ike Hogewonin added 8, Rhys Wagar 8, Jarom Smith 6, Judah Lindberg 3, Henry Sept 3, Nolan Neufeld 3 and Chase Bennett 2, while Noah Lindberg, James Chang, Koby Wind, Maky Ng, Owen Vandeburgt, Carter Lammers and Mathison Van der Waarde were scoreless.

       In the last quarterfinal, the 11th-seeded Vernon Kalamalka Lakers dusted the 14th-seeded Summerland Rockets 81-44 after leading 23-15, 37-31 and 59-42 at the quarters. Lakers coach Glenn Garvie told Varsity Letters that “I think our size wore them down,” said Kalamalka coach Glenn Garvie. “Mason [Clarke] and Tylen [Lewis] played really well tonight. … The game plan was to have someone on him [Rockets point guard Mateo Ducheck] the whole night. And when he did have the ball we would double him and get it out of his hands. That was the philosophy. Don’t let him below the foul line. … We didn’t shoot particularly well tonight, so we had to get it inside and that’s what ended up working.” Mason Clerke and Tylen Lewis each scored 26 to pace the Lakers Isaac MacDonald added 14, Adam Mills 4, Cruz McLean 3, Evan Cunningham 3, Ty Johannson 3 and Braden Blankley 2, while Noah Bagan and Sam He were scoreless. Mateo Ducheck scored 13 to pace the Rockets (coach Matthew Raimondo, assistant Brandon Dykstra, assistant Darcy Mullin). Aaden Pidperyhora added 12, Livio Specht Mari 10, Kingston Ripley 6, Shuan Petkau 2 and Chase Knowlton 1, while Nick Burman, Joseph Bonda, Sonny Aubie, Ary Ducheck, Max Hildebrandt, Ryder Sherman, Kingston Bird and Alex Henrichsen were scoreless.

       In the semis, the top-seeded Vancouver Notre Dame Jugglers dusted the 5th-seeded Vancouver King George Dragons 82-59. The Dragons led 16-15 after one quarter. The Jugglers led 48-39 at the half and 63-47 after three quarters. Jugglers coach Cam Wright told Varsity Letters that point guard Caleb Parrotta “is the ultimate competitor”, began Jugglers head coach Cam Wright. “He was talking to the guys at halftime; he truly believed in himself as well as his teammates. He led the charge but got other guys involved. That was a team effort in the second half for sure. … We knew King George coming in, was going to have a really good game plan. They pride themselves on their defence, and it definitely gave us some trouble in the first half. We were able to make some adjustments in the second half, put the foot down on the gas a little bit, and we’re really happy with the result.” Connor Mabel paced the Jugglers with 29. Caleb Parrotta added 28, Nathan Roye 13, Niko Kuna 9, Saachin Rattan 2 and Klyde Tan 1, while Jaden Chan, Arrel Belnas, Nicolo Mauro, Sayjvir Gill, Josh Somera, Anson Cheung, Michael MacLeod, Yousef Ibrahim and William Craig were scoreless. Rei Ikeda paced the Dragons with 25. Abud Shawwa added 11, Mihail Lukic 10, Oleg Orlov 6, Leon Latinovic 5 and Brad McCullough 2, while Artem Grotskyy, Kairos Bakare, Mihajlo Lekic, Thomas Fowler, Teo Novicic, Enzo Acknin and Marek Dunn were scoreless.

       In the other semi, the 2nd-seeded West Vancouver Collingwood Cavaliers stomped the 11th-seeded Vernon Kalamalka Lakers 90-55 after leading 13-2 early and 31-12, 53-25 and 75-38 at the quarters. Cavaliers coach Andy Wong told Varsity Letters that “we’re a well-rounded team, and we don’t know who’s going to step up on what day. And today, Peter [Huang] was just feeling it. We’re the type of team that, when we feel confident, our level of play really rises up. Peter was feeling it, he was catching a rhythm and was able to hit the shots today. … We have pretty good game plans where we’ve got set rules on what we want to do, and I’m really proud of how the guys have executed those game plans. The last couple of games, we knew we wanted to play really fast. We talked about how Kalamalka is a very talented team. They’ve got superstars, but we wanted to play at a pace that, maybe, they haven’t seen this year. That was one of our intentional goals.” Elliot McNeil paced the Cavaliers with 23. Peter Huang added 18, Harry Bell 15, Bayan Dehghani 8, Daniel Pan 6, Easton Bruce 5, Sam Layden 4, Jake McAdam 4, Ethan Albiani 3, Lucas Di Marco 2 and Ken Wu 2, while Thomas (Tomas?) Villamil, Godfrey Mang, Teggen Murphy and Matt McAdam were scoreless. Tylen Lewis paced the Lakers with 16. Adam Mills added 9, Mason Clerke 8, Evan Cunningham 6, Sam He 5, Noah Bagan 4, Isaac MacDonald 4 and Cruz McLean 3, while Braden Blankley and Ty Johannson were scoreless.

       In the bronze medal match, the 11th-seeded Vernon Kalamalka Lakers clipped the 4th-seeded Vancouver King George Dragons 73-60. The Lakers led 11-7 after one quarter. The score was knotted at 29 at the half. The Lakers led 48-47 after three quarters. Mason Clerke paced the Lakers with 27. Tylen Lewis added 20, Isaac MacDonald 13, Evan Cunningham 7, Sam He 2, Braden Blankley 2 and Adam Mills 2, while Noah Bagan, Cruz McLean and Ty Johannson were scoreless. Abud Shawwa scored 22 to pace the Dragons (coach Jordan Price, assistant Roger McBride, manager Oliver MacInnes, manager Milan Ostaszeski, manager Ryan Zhang, athletic director Jacob Ross-Ewart). Leon Latinovic added 15, Mihailo Lukic 14 and Rei Ikeda 9, while Artem Grotskyy, Kairos Bakare, Mihajlo Lekic, Brad McCullough, Thomas Fowler, Teo Novicic, Oleg Orlov, Enzo Acknin and Marek Dunn were scoreless.

       In the final, the 2nd-seeded West Vancouver Collingwood Cavaliers dispatched the top-seeded Vancouver Notre Dame Jugglers 78-72 to capture their second title in three campaigns. The score was knotted at 18 after one quarter. The Cavaliers shifted to a 3-2 zone and ripped off a 16-2 run. “We’ve played a combination of man defence and 2-3 zone (against Notre Dame this season),” Cavaliers coach Andrew Wong told Varsity Letters. “We had tried some box-and-one on Caleb, and we were trying to see what fit the most by looking through all the game tape. … Even though it’s a traditional 2-3, we wanted to have one of our guards at the front really really putting some ball pressure up a little bit higher. And I think that did help in the second quarter just to give us a little bit of momentum and it gave us a lead. Obviously, we knew Notre Dame was going to fight back and they did, but that’s why every basket helps for sure.” The Cavaliers led 40-28 at the half and 57-51 after three quarters. The Jugglers rallied to take a 63-61 lead but the Cavaliers clamped down on defence and held on for the win. Cavalier Elliott McNeil said “I think there has been some added some motivation to win, especially this season. And I think that defensive play has helped lead us to more points on offence.” Jugglers coach Cam Wright said “we’ve seen those boys about three times over the course of the season. This time, they kind of showed different points. And, yeah, (McNeil) did a great job defensively in transition.” Elliot McNeil paced the Cavaliers with 30. Harry Bell added 21, Peter Huang 13, Ethan Albiani 6, Daniel Pan 4, Sam Layden 2 and defensive player of the tournament Jake McAdam 2, while Lucas Di Marco, Bayan Dehghani, Tomas Villamil, Easton Bruce, Ken Wu, Godfrey Mang, Matt McAdam and Teggen Murphy were scoreless. Caleb Parrota paced the Jugglers with 32. Nathan Roye added 20, Connor Mabel 9, Niko Kuna 7 and Saachin Rattan 4, while Jaden Chan, Arrel Belnas, Nicolo Mauro, Sayj Gill, Josh Somera, Anson Cheung, Klyde Tan, Michael MacLeod, Yousef Ibrahim and Will Craig were scoreless.

       The all-tournament team featured MVP Elliot McNeill (Collingwood); Mateo Duchek (Summerland); Caleb Parotta (Notre Dame); Connor Mabel (Notre Dame); Tylen Lewis (Kalamalka); and Harry Bell (Collingwood).

The 2nd-team featured: Jacob McKearney (Westsyde); Mason Clerke (Kalamalka); Rei Ikeda (King George); Abud Shawwa (King George); and Jaren Porter (Westsyde).

The bronze medalist Vernon Kalamalka Lakers: Noah Bagan; Cruz McLean; Sam He; Mason Clerke; Isaac MacDonald; Braden Blankley; Evan Cunningham; Adam Mills; Tylen Lewis; Jonah Hugenroth; Philip Rollar; Ty Johannson; coach Glenn Garvie; assistant Tim Thorpe; athletic director Jessie Bourgeois

The silver medalist Vancouver Notre Dame Jugglers: Caleb Parrotta; Connor Mabel; Jaden Chan; Arrel Belnas; Nathan Roye; Nicolo Mauro; Sayjvir Gill; Saachin Rattan; Josh Somera; Anson Cheung; Klyde Tan; Michael MacLeod; Niko Kuna; Yousef Ibrahim; William Craig; coach Cam Wright; assistant John Tagulao

The champion West Vancouver Collingwood Cavaliers: Lucas Di Marco; Ethan Albiani; Harry Bell; Elliot McNeil; Daniel Pan; Bayan Dehghani; Tomas Villamil; Yihan Wang; Peter Huang; Sam Layden; Easton Bruce; Ken Wu; Godfrey Mang; Jake McAdam; Ardavan Tehrani; Matt McAdam; Teggen Murphy; coach Andrew Wong; assistant Teresa Ross; assistant Jaden Narwal; manager Kayla Hakimzadeh; manager Allie Lavis; manager Katelyn Buckley; manager Annabel Brenninkmeyer