In the opening round: …………………………………………………… The top-seeded Surrey Holy Cross Crusaders whipped the 16th-seeded Hazelton Spartans 82-24 after leading 25-8, 55-13 and 76-17 at the quarters. The Crusaders led by as many as 34. Alyssia Palma paced the Crusaders with 16. Isla Iannuzzi added 15, Jada Francis 10, Mia Guerrero 10, Solene Jackson 10, Arabella DiLiello 6, Chloe Mangalindan 6, Mila Wojciechowski 4 and Gillian Gonesto 1, while Lindsay Correa, Maryam Chaudry and Meghan McCash were scoreless. Sophia Andersen paced the Spartans (coach Tamara Storey) with 13. Tyanna Bear added 7 and Avryl Jones 4, while Twylah Starr, Renee Paquette, Alyssa Bussell, Kadence Pottinger and Hayden Russell were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 8th-seeded Vancouver Notre Dame Jugglers edged the 9th-seeded Victoria Lambrick Park Pride 68-64. The Pride led 22-20 after one quarter. The Jugglers led 34-29 at the half. The Pride led 47-43 after three quarters. Juggler Emily Chan drained a trey to give Notre Dame a 65-62 lead with 35 seconds to play. “That was clutch and I am not surprised,” Jugglers coach Tracy Clark told Varsity Letters. “She did not give up because she was not hitting a lot. That’s why she is a leader, a Grade 12. It was clutch and exactly what we needed. And we didn’t draw that one up, she did it all on her own.” Clark also said that grade 10 guard Selina Quilatan, who hit 3 treys and 10-10 from the line, did a great job attacking off the dribble. “And she played a great defensive game.” Clark added that “I knew it was going to be tough but we knew very little about Lambrick. We saw something on YouTube, so very little film. We knew they would be bigger and that is literally how they got most of their points … off rebounds and putbacks.” Selina Quilatan paced the Jugglers with 27. Emily Chan added 22, Peyton Cagampan 11, Lylah Mach 4 and Joana Pepe 4, while Angela Soriano, Hannah Tupeng, Arabella Ziebark, Lorena Iacobucci, Isabella Sorace and Zoey Gonzales were scoreless. Siena Kholsa paced the Pride (coach Alexis Wishlow) with 19. Wrenna Auld added 12, Briar Wishlow 8, Kaelyn Pitre 6, Abby Pilkington 6, Audrey Bestwick 5, Emily Pitre 3, Teya Madsen 3 and Hannah Pratt 2, while Chloe Dacre-Pearce and Cecile Thibodeau were scoreless. ………………………………………………… The 4th-seeded Burnaby St. Thomas More Knights spanked the 13th-seeded Vancouver St. Patrick Celtics 66-50. “Once the second half started, we just relied on creating turnovers and rebounding, and Kyla Limond, started making huge shots (four treys) and was a dog defensively,” Knights coach Cassie Lauang told Varsity Letters. “But, I’ve got to shout out our posts Meara McCormick and Avery Brown. While they don’t show up on the stat sheet as often as our three guards (Limond, Demicah Arnaldo and Mia Beliveau, they do everything dirty in the post that they needed to do. Avery must have had 12 or 13 rebounds and Meara is so tough down there that it’s hard to play 40 minutes when our posts are playing that tough and that physical. I think that became the separator in this game. … Avery Brown, for some reason, has taken it upon herself to say that ‘I am going to do everything dirty to make sure our guards can be successful,” Lauang professes. “She hedges ball screens, she rebounds, she is physical. She also made some huge shots for us today in the high post. She is someone that has been under-rated this season, but after the B.C. Catholics, she found a confidence in herself, and our guards have done a really good job of nurturing that. She has really done a good job of blossoming this season.” Kyla Limond (Liman?) paced the Knights with 18. Demicah Arnaldo added 17, Lauren Wong 13, Mia Beliveau 9, Avery Brown 7 and Kristina Prtenjaca 2, while Olivia Casumpang, Meara McCormick, Cassandra Molo and Grace Haffner were scoreless. Gabby Weiser paced the Celtics with 16. Kiara Bay added 14, Laya Alojado 10, Kayla Dela Cruz 4, Ava Labrador 2, while Camilla Carrion 2, while Brooklyn Caratao, Sade Ebanks, Leah Mudalo, Lisley Baron, Nadia McKorcza and Lina McClellen were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 5th-seeded Surrey Southridge Storm dispatched the 12th-seeded Kamloops Westsyde Whundas 67-50. The Storm led 12-10 after one quarter. The Whundas led 31-21 at the half. But the Storm opened the second half with a 19-0 run and led 47-33 after three quarters. Storm coach Paul Chiarenza told Varsity Letters that “we have high expectations for ourselves, so the fear of not getting there started to creep in. (At halftime), we just reminded everybody who they were, and what they bring to the table … Just go out there and play your game. … Rianna Brar, who’s our point guard, took what we talked about at halftime about trying to get
into the dirty areas and do something and got two buckets right away, and I think when
everybody else saw the ball go in, everybody just kind of exhaled, and we started playing our
game.” Chiarenza added that Jayda Rhandawa, playing on a rolled ankle, was outstanding. “To have her come in and do what she did, it was just probably one of the guttiest wins I’ve ever had.” Jayda Randhawa paced the Storm with 19. Rianna Brar added 13, Rihanna Bath 9, Nicole Lofing 9, Mira Sanghe 8, Sophia Purewal 4, Mayo Oladipo 2 and Charlotte Trotman 2, while Monroe Robins, Elsa Kowalczyk, Reese Doneghani, Meghan McDonald, Trinity King, Addie McMullen and Ella Feddersen were scoreless. Claire Connolly paced the Whundas with 13. Meena Litt added 10, Hudsyn Morrison 8, Ryen Scott 6, Georgia Chambers 5, Hannan Hansen 4 and Shelby Reibin 4, while Brooklyn Haddock was scoreless. The Whundas also included Addie McMullen. …………………………………………………… The 2nd-seeded Victoria St. Michael’s Blue Jaguars dusted the 15th-seeded Vanderhoof Nechako Valley Viqueens 79-28 after leading 20-4, 43-9 and 64-16 at the quarters. Charlie Anderson paced the Blue Jaguars with 19. Avery Geddes added 15, Mikaela Dube 14, Olivia Pickering 10, Isabella Herrara Orduna 9, Caitlyn Chen 4, Elspeth Rodger 4 and Linn Kuepper 4, while Mya Beare, Cate Pontefract, Joss Olcen, Indigo Edington, Crystal Cai and Leila Mostachfi were scoreless. Abby Dykstra paced the Viqueens (coach Sam Dargis) with 9. Molly Black added 7, Rachel Brooks 7, Ava Bailey 4 and Bryson Bangs 1, while Soraya Janzen, Ariana Scott-Unger and Aurorah Wiebe were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 7th-seeded Surrey Pacific Academy Breakers clipped the 10th-seeded West Vancouver Mulgrave Titans 64-54. The Titans led 16-13 after one quarter. The score was knotted at 33 at the half. The Breakers led 47-44 after three quarters. Breakers coach Jody Wandzura point guard Emily Barils demonstrated “composure. … She took care of the ball so well for us. Also, Meghan Thompson, it’s her first game back after being out for four weeks. As the game went on, she slowly started really picking it up and really attacking like she used to, and she came back to her regular self. Those two were fantastic in the game. I think the team believed so I want to give full credit to the whole team for encouraging each other as well.” Meghan Thomson dominated the paint in the second half. “It’s really exciting for me because an injury took me out for a little bit, and so to play really well gives me a lot of momentum for the rest of Provincials,” Thompson said. “It’s really uplifting to see that I can come back from injury and still play strong. … As I get older and improve, I think as much as I can be vocal, I can help others improve and lift up my teammates. I feel like the better I play and the more I lead, the more I can help the whole team. That’s just my plan, to uplift everybody.” Eden Hansen paced the Breakers with 23. Megan Thompson added 17, Amelie Baril 10, Sarah Ude 5, Abbey Boehm 5, Gizelle Russell 3 and Omuwa Idanwekhai 1, while Natania Nip, Livia Armitage, Mei Ming, Elizabeth Jerezano and Omone Idanwekhai were scoreless. Maryam Mojarradi paced the Titans (coach Christine Leduc, assistant Claude Lee?) with 26. Deanna Naemi added 10, Erika Panahanden 8, Mikaela Nyandoro 6, Arianna Cau 2 and Lauren (Laura?) Alekson 2, while Riley Armstrong, Lisa Saba, Teagan Vodrey, Abby Kubyshyn, Tatiana Calderon, Wing Lai and Emma Hoogendoorn were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 3rd-seeded Langley Christian Lightning spanked the 13th-seeded Fernie Falcons 70-41. Fernie broke to a 7-0 lead but the Lightning countered with a 29-0 run to close out the first quarter. The Lightning led 45-17 at the half and 59-28 after three quarters. Lightning coach Dani Gardner told Varsity Letters that “we just sought after it on defence and started to settle down a little bit, so that first game is always jittery. We’ve got a lot of new kids here, for some of them their first provincials or in different roles. So it was just about settling down and working hard on defence, which led to some offence for us. … I thought Gaby (Vis) was great inside for us. I thought Brielle (Hilmer) and Georgia Van Der Waarde brought some things and obviously Zoe (Bradshaw) and Peyton (Brunoro) were solid from the outside. Rainey (Dewit) just tough for us, so I think it was a good team effort.” Payton Brunoro paced the Lightning 29th 25. Georgia Van Der Waarde added 14, Zoe Bradshaw 12, Gaby Vis 10, Rainey Dewit 5, Brielle Hilmer 2 and Piper Wright 2, while Emma Houweling, Ryanne Applin and Eden Dryfhout were scoreless. Taylor Witbeck led the Falcons (coach Jen Kennedy, assistant Rylee French) with 17. Billie Kennedy added 8, Desiree French 7, Jacey Anderson 7 and Erika Phillips 2, while Norah Fraser, Olivia Blumhagen, Harley Findley, Lenny Polit and Evie Woodall were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 6th-seeded Vancouver Brittania Bruins defeated the 11th-seeded Mill Bay Brentwood College Blackhawks 65-58 after leading 24-15, 37-33 and 53-42 at the quarters. Bruins coach Mike Evans told Varsity Letters that the team’s maturity was critical. “A lot of great 12s. We’ve played a lot of games and we’ve changed. We have actually been calmer, and in the pregame talk, I talked about the speaker last night.
We talked about having confidence, getting your shoulders back, taking the court in a confident way, and playing that way and owning the gym. So maybe that translated. … (In the second half), we calmed down a bit, so we didn’t press as much as we were in the first half. We moved things to center, and we tried to win the game between the centre line and the three-point line. So instead of playing down there, which they were doing a good job of meeting us, we just moved it back and then made their court shorter, if you look at it that way.
And I think we helped on defence and really that that was a difference. Plus, the kids stole the ball and made some free throws, which we don’t normally make, so that was good.” Bianca Padolina paced the Bruins with 23. Chenesayi Kagande added 18, Tessa Scarlett-Charleson 9, Jemilla Zongo 7, Teagan Lee 6 and Ashauni Nadrazsky 2, while Ainsley Wong, Kiran Saeed, Eliot Scott, Tina Chang and Nina Colijn-Rattan were scoreless. Ruby McDougald paced the Blackhawks with 14. Kionah Williams added 12, Siera Edstrand 9, Gabby McArthur 8, Willa Shepard 8 and Cleo Kestler 7, while Katie James, Zoe Gage, Hillary Stone, Joanne Chang, Ava Heenan, Sisi Goldberg-Goris, Libby Code and Basma Jama were scoreless.
In the quarterfinals, the 4th-seeded Burnaby St. Thomas More Knights dispatched the 5th-seeded Surrey Southridge Storm 47-33 after leading 17-9, 26-19 and 38-25 at the quarters. A trio from beyond the arc by Denicah Arnaldo proved the difference as the Knights built an early lead. The Storm rallied no closer than seven but Arnaldo, Mia Beliveau and Meara McCormick notched critical buckets to quell the comeback. Demicah Arnaldo paced the Knights with 16. Mia Beliveau added 13, Lauren Wong 7, Avery Brown 6, Meara McCormick 3 and Kyla Liman 2, while Olivia Casumpang, Casandra Molo, Kristina Prtenjaca and Grace Haffner were scoreless. Rianna Brar led the Storm with 13. Nicole Lofing added 11, Jayda Rhandawa 7 and Charlotte Trotman 2, while Monroa Robins, Rihanna Bath, Elsa Kowalczyk, Reese Doneghani, Meghan McDonald, Mira Sanghe, Sophia Purewal, Trinity King, Addie McMullen, Moyo Oladip and Ella Feddersen were scoreless.
The 2nd-seeded Victoria St. Michael’s Blue Jaguars mauled the 7th-seeded Surrey Pacific Academy Breakers 72-28 after leading 15-4, 35-24 and 56-20 at the quarters. A 21-0 run at the end of the first quarter proved decisive. A 14-0 run in the third quarter buried the Breakers. Blue Jaguars point guard Avery Geddes told Varsity Letters that “it’s a lot different being here this year. I see myself more as a leader now. Back then (in 2022) I had to be a leader as a point guard, but now I’m a leader on and off the court, giving my teammates more feedback.” Blue Jaguars coach Lindsay Brooke (Geddes’ mother) said “honestly, I probably won’t reflect on it too much until it’s over. I’ve coached her forever, I’ve coached her in middle school… it’s just kind of what happens when your mom is a coach and a teacher. She grew up around basketball. I’m so proud of her. It’s amazing, watching her. I love her style of play, I love that she’s a point guard. At the end of the day, she’s a great human being and a super-nice kid, and she loves basketball. I want her to just go, you know? Her tourney’s not over. That part of it is bittersweet.” Player of the game Avery Geddes paced the Blue Jaguars with 17. Charlie Anderson added 14, Olivia Pickering 9, Linn Kuepper 7, Mikaela Dube 6, Isabella Herrera Orduna 6, Joss Olcen 4, Indigo Edington 4, Crystal Cai 3 and Mya Beare 2, while Caitlyn Chen, Cate Pontefract, Leila Mostachfi and Elspeth Rodger were scoreless. Omuwa Idanwekhai paced the Breakers (coach Jody Wandzura) with 8. Amelie Baril added 7, Sarah Ude 4, Eden Hansen 2, Natania Nip 2, Elizabeth Jerezano 2, Gizelle Russell 2 and Megan Thompson 1, while Livia Armitage, Mei Ming, Omone Idanwekhai and Abbey Boehm were scoreless.
The 6th-seeded Vancouver Brittania Bruins nipped the 3rd-seeded Langley Christian Lightning 57-55. The Lightning led 10-9 after one quarter and 24-22 at the half. The Bruins ripped off a 14-0 run, featuring treys from Chenesayi Kagande and Taegan Lee, and led 44-32 after three quarters. They opened the final frame with a 6-0 run to make it 50-32 but the Lightning stormed back. Payton Brunoro hit a trio from beyond the arc, and when Bruin Tessa Scarlett-Charleson fouled out, the cut the margin to 53-49 with less than two minutes to play, when Bruins point guard Bianca Padolina took a sharp knee to the thigh and lay on the ground in pain. Coach Mike Evans hollered “Bianca, get up!” Padolina told Varsity Letters that she heard his voice and snapped out of it. “These are memories for a lifetime, right?” Evans said. “I didn’t want her to end up with a coulda, woulda, shoulda. ‘I could have stayed in the game,’ know what I mean? There’s something about that mentality about not giving up and not giving in, and she did it.” Padolina picked herself up and hit 1-2 free throws. Brunoro answered with a driving layup and Zoe Bradshaw a steal for a runout to draw the Lighting with 54-53. Lee countered with 1-2 form the line. Padolina added two free throws and the Bruins escaped with the win. Padolina said “I just can’t believe it, I don’t know what to say. I’m so happy to do this in front of our community and our fans, and my whole family came out today. I’m doing this for them.” Kagande said “at no point did we not think we could win. We’re a really strong team, and our coaches told us we were in this game no matter what – to walk out with our heads held high and play our game.” Bianca Padolina paced the Bruins with 16. Chenesayi Kagande added 15, Taegan Lee 14, Tessa Scarlett-Charleson 9 and Ashauni Nadrazsky 3, while Ainsley Wong, Kiran Saeed, Eliot Scott, Tina Chang, Jemilla Zongo and Nina Colijn-Rattan were scoreless. Gabi Vis paced the Lightning with 15. Payton Brunoro added 13, Zoe Bradshaw 13, Georgia Van Der Waarde 8 and Brielle Hilmer 6, while Emma Houweling, Ryanne Applin, Rainey Dewit, Piper Wright and Eden Dryfhout were scoreless.
In the last quarterfinal, the top-seeded Surrey Holy Cross Crusaders stomped the 8th-seeded Vancouver Notre Dame Jugglers 82-47. The Crusaders led 38-27 at the half and ripped off a 21-3 run to open the third quarter, blitzing the Jugglers with their rapid transition game and wearing them down for the remainder of the contest. Crusaders guard Isla Iannuzzi, who was chosen player of the game, told Varsity Letters that “we do a lot of running at practice, and that for sure translates to the game, with our ability to play faster than everyone else and our ability to push the ball. We have some really good passers and really good finishers, and I think we did a good job executing that today. Anyone can make that long pass (down the floor), as long as somebody’s running up there. We’ve got a lot of track girls, so we’ve usually got lots of girls running.” Alessia Palmer led the Crusaders with 21. Iannuzzi added 20 and Solene Jackson 15. Selina Quilatan led the Jugglers with 20. Emily Chan added 13. The Jugglers (coach Tracy Clark) also included Peyton Cagampan, Lylah Mach, Joana Pepe, Angela Soriano, Hannah Tupeng, Arabella Ziebark, Lorena Iacobucci, Isabella Sorace and Zoey Gonzales.
In the semis, the top-seeded Surrey Holy Cross Crusaders clipped the 4th-seeded Burnaby St. Thomas More Knights 81-73 after leading 18-10, 45-22 and 64-45 at the quarters. The Crusaders led by as many as 32 but the Knights stormed back within a 22-9 run and trimmed the margin to 78-73 on treys by Lauren Wong and Mia Belliveau. Crusaders guard Isla Iannuzzi pulled out the win by hitting 6-8 from the line in the final two minutes. “We ran into foul trouble and then, honestly, we stopped playing defence,” Crusaders coach Amy Beauchamp told Varsity Letters. “It was like we didn’t even know how to play defence and we let them back into the game. But we were able to gather our composure and finish it off.” Iannuzzi free throws were essential, Beauchamp added. “She’s our leader, our floor leader. She keeps us all in line, knows exactly what’s going on. When things go crazy, she keeps everyone calm. … “My heart is really beating. It was intense. But I knew it was going to be a hard-fought game. STM is a really fiesty, talented group.” Crusader guard Jolene Jackson said “we don’t have a lot of height on our team and STM’s not big, so I had to go inside and try to get easy buckets.” Jolene Jackson paced the Crusaders with 25, while nabbing 11 boards. Isla Iannuzzi added 23, Alyssia Palma 8, Jada Francis 7, Mila Wojciechowski 5, Chloe Mangalindan 4, Maryan Chaudhry 3 and Lindsay Correa 2, while Arabella DiLiello, Mia Guerrero, Gilliam Gonesto and Meghan McCash were scoreless. Mia Beliveau paced the Knights with 29. Demicah Arnaldo added 17, Lauren Wong 16, Kyla Limon 6, Kristina Prtenjaca 2 and Avery Brown 1, while Olivia Casumpang, Meara McCormick, Cassandra Molo and Grace Haffner were scoreless.
In the other semi, 2nd-seeded Victoria St. Michael’s Blue Jaguars torched the 6th-seeded Vancouver Brittania Bruins 55-22 after leading 22-6 after one 33-14 at the half. “I don’t know if it (the offence) ever really got untracked,” St, Michael’s coach Lindsay Brooke told Varsity Letters. “They went zone after the first quarter and we didn’t shoot the ball well. We didn’t shoot the ball well yesterday either.” Guard Charlie Anderson said “we just took a while to get in the groove. … You have to have the mind of a goldfish, just really get over the last play. It’s hard sometimes and I struggle with that, but the game doesn’t depend on one moment, one point. And you have to keep pushing, keep working hard the whole game.” Olivia Pickering, Charlie Anderson and Avery Geddes each scored 12 to pace the Blue Jaguars. Mikaela Dube added 7, Isabella Herrera Orduna 5, Mya Beare 3, Cate Pontefract 2, Joss Olcen 2 and Crystal Cai 2, while Indigo Edington, Caitlyn Chen, Leila Mostachfi, Elspeth Rodger and Linn Kuepper were scoreless. Bianca Padolina paced the Bruins with 8. Teagan Lee added 4, Chenesayi Kagande 4, Jemilla Zongo 3, Ashauni Nadrazsky 2 and Tessa Scarlett-Charleson 1, while Ainsley Wong, Kiran Saeed, Eliot Scott, Tina Chang and Nina Colijn-Rattan were scoreless.
In the bronze medal match, the 6th-seeded Vancouver Brittania Bruins clipped the 4th-seeded Burnaby St. Thomas More Knights 74-60. The score was knotted at 17 after one quarter. The Bruins led 36-28 at the half and 58-42 after three quarters. Bianca Padolina paced the Bruins with 21. Teagan Lee added 17, Nina Colijn-Rattan 15, Tessa Scarlett-Charleson 9, Chensayi Kagande 8 and Ashauni Nadrazky 4, while Ainsley Wong, Kiran Saeed, Eliot Scott, Tina Chang and Jamilla Zongo were scoreless. Mia Beliveau scored 20 to pace the Knights (coach Cassie Lauang, assistant Leilani Carney; assistant Emily Dias, assistant Gabrielle Laguerta, assistant Rylan Monks). Demich Arnaldo added 17, Lauren Wong 9, Avery Brown 6, Kyla Limon 4 and Grace Haffner 4, while Olivia Casumpang, Meara McCormock, Cassandra Nolo and Kristina Prtenjaca were scoreless.
In the final, the 2nd-seeded Victoria St. Michael’s Blue Jaguars defeated the top-seeded Surrey Holy Cross Crusaders 62-54. The score was knotted at 18 after one quarter. The Blue Jaguars led 30-26 at the half and 46-43 after three quarters. After two consecutive silver medals at the Triple-A level, the Blue Jaguars were elated to finally win a title. “All the early morning practices, they were all worth it in the end,” Avery Geddes told Varsity Letters. “This team was willing to work hard on defence and we have a willingness to do whatever it takes to win.” Forward Olivia Pickering said “it was super-tough to lose multiple times, but then to come back again and come out with the win, it’s an awesome experience.” Brooke added that Pickering “had the tournament of her life. Literally, that is the best she has played in five years. You go in (to provincials) and you think ‘How are players going to play in that moment’. She was a star and that is the ‘magic’ piece in all of this. That’s the stuff you can’t script.” Brooke that an early season thumb injury to daughter Avery Geddes proved critical to the team’s success. While it “set her back, but in the long term it was really good for us, because the other girls had to step up and play. … Someone asked me earlier this week what it’s like to coach her … she is amazing. You saw today, she is just so calm, and that is such an asset in a big game. Nothing rattles her.” Crusaders coach Amy Beauchamp said Pickering’s boardwork “killed us. She just worked so hard, and she got really key rebounds at really important times and that really hurt us.” Player of the game Avery Geddes paced the Blue Jaguars with 25. Charlie Anderson added 13, Olivia Pickering 11, Isabella Herrera Orduna 6, Espeth Rodger 4, Mikaela Dube 2 and Joss Olcen 1, while Myra Beare, Caitlyn Chen, Cate Pontefract, Indigo Edington, Crystal Cai, Leila Mostachfi and Linn Kuepper were scoreless. Defensive player of the tournament Solene Jackson paced the Crusaders with 24. Isla Iannuzzi added 17, Alyssia Palma 6, Chloe Mangalindan 3, Maryam Chaudry 2 and Mila Wojciechowski 2, while Arabella DiLiello, Jada Francis, Lindsay Correa, Mia Guerrero, Gillian Gonesto and Meghan McCash were scoreless.
The all-tournament team featured MVP Avery Geddes (St. Michael’s); Charlie Anderson (St. Michael’s); Isla Iannuzzi (Holy Cross); Olivia Pickering (St. Michael’s); Bianca Padolina (Brittania); and Mia Beliveau (St. Thomas More).
The 2nd-team featured Alyssia Palma (Holy Cross); Teagan Lee (Britannia); Demica Arnaldo (St. Thomas More); Payton Brunoro (Langley Christian); and Selina Quilatan (Notre Dame).
The bronze medalist Vancouver Brittania Bruins: Bianca Padolina; Teagan Lee; Nina Colijn-Rattan; Tessa Scarlett-Charleson; Chensayi Kagande; Ashauni Nadrazky; Ainsley Wong; Kiran Saeed; Eliot Scott; Tina Chang; Jamilla Zongo; coach Mike Evans; assistant Trevor Stokes; assistant Mitra Tshan; assistant Ron Suzuki
The silver medalist Surrey Holy Cross Crusaders: Alyssia Palma; Isla Iannuzzi; Jada Francis; Mia Guerrero; Solene Jackson; Arabella DiLiello; Chloe Mangalindan; Mila Wojciechowski; Gillian Gonesto; Lindsay Correa; Maryam Chaudry; Meghan McCash; coach Amy Beauchamp, assistant Nerissa Davis
The champion Victoria St. Michael’s Blue Jaguars: Avery Geddes; Charlie Anderson; Olivia Pickering; Linn Kuepper; Mikaela Dube; Isabella Herrera Orduna 6; Joss Olcen; Indigo Edington; Crystal Cai; Mya Beare; Caitlyn Chen; Cate Pontefract; Leila Mostachfi; Elspeth Rodger; coach Lindsay Brooke