In the opening round, held in Langley: …………………………………………………… The top-seeded Langley Walnut Grove Gators bombed the 16th-seeded Cranbrook Mount Baker Wild 116-34 after leading 40-7, 72-13 and 97-25 at the quarters. Andrew Goertzen paced the Gators with 20. James Woods added 15, Ty Rowell 13, Jake Cowley 13, Brett Christensen 11, Dannon Sturn 11, Sheldon Frew 10, Noah Shopland 7, Azino Tyrell Urefe 6, Alasdair Coyle 6, Luke Chalk 2 and Luke Adams 2. The Gators hit 50-101 (.495) from the floor, 10-29 (.345) from the arc and 6-13 (.462) from the line, while garnering 50 boards, including 26 on the offensive glass, 17 fouls, 30 assists, 15 turnovers and 31 steals. Sebastian Butler paced the Wild with 9. Dalton Gallina added 8, Colden Edey 5, Dawson Atwood 4, Spencer Gartside 4, Tace Bradwell and Preston Gramm, while Reyce Johnston, Jordan Sam, Cameron Modeste, Bryden Vaughan and Shea Turner were scoreless. The Wild (coach Dean Atwood, assistant Thomas Fentie) hit 12-45 (.267) from the floor, 3-10 from the arc and 7-17 (.412) from the line, while garnering 23 boards, including 5 on the offensive glass, 8 fouls, 5 assists, 42 turnovers, 1 block and 9 steals. …………………………………………………… The 8th-seeded Vancouver Kitsilano Blue Demons clipped the 9th-seeded Surrey Semiahmoo Totems 79-69 after leading 30-14, 42-38 and 58-50 at the quarters. Luka Lizdek paced the Blue Demons with 29. Tyrone Asenoguan added 20, Yannick Dougnet 14, Diallo Oballa 7, George Dokmanovic 5 and Filip Sokic 3. The Blue Demons hit 31-76 (.408) from the floor, 6-28 (.214) from the arc and 10-19 (.526) from the line, while garnering 38 boards, including 11 on the offensive glass, 15 fouls, 9 assists, 8 turnovers, 1 block and 8 steals. Brian Wallack led the Totems with 22. Vlad Mihaila added 21, Adam Paige 16, Jordan Chen 7 and Cole McAvoy 3, while Ray Chuang, Eric He, Janik Rai, Aassem Abdel Aziz, Jas Johal, Cayman Saliken, Tyson Brown, A Phallur, Dominick Wells, Waylon Saliken and Raj Hundal were scoreless. The Totems (coach Ed Lefurgy, assistant Steve Janzen, assistant Mike Shen, trainer Will Chen) hit 28-67 (.418) from the floor, 6-17 (.353) from the arc and 7-10 from the line, while garnering 36 boards, including 10 on the offensive glass, 19 fouls, 9 assists, 20 turnovers, 3 blocks and 4 steals. …………………………………………………… The 4th-seeded Vancouver College Fighting Irish dispatched the 13th-seeded Abbotsford Yale Lions 89-81. The Lions led 24-15, 41-34 and 66-56 at the quarters. After the game, Yale coach Euan Roberts was suspended by the BC High School Association for three games for having ran onto the court to complain about the officiating. He was issued two technical and ejected. The Lions led by as many as 19 in the first half but the Irish rallied with a 17-5 run to start the second half. Roberts “will be suspended for tomorrow’s (consolation) game automatically (due to his ejection),” continued BCHSAA president Paul Eberhardt told Varsity Letters.ca. “Once the second technical foul is received and you are ejected from the game, the rules require that you leave the playing area immediately. He did not. He stayed on the floor. Several people tried to get him to leave and he wanted to continue to make his point. Not leaving in a timely manner is one of the reasons that there has been discipline.” Jack Cruz-Dumont paced the Fighting Irish with 22. Cam Wright added 21, Jovanic Castillo 19, Sam Bailey 17, along with 17 boards, Emilio Gonzalez-Ruiz 5, Joshua Jaurigue 3 and Anthony Pilar 2. The Fighting Irish hit 26-71 (.366) from the floor, 7-24 (.292) from the arc and 30-43 (.698) from the line, while garnering 43 boards, including 12 on the offensive glass, 10 fouls, 15 assists, 15 turnovers, 3 blocks and 6 steals. Noah Nickel paced the Lions with 30. Bradley Braich added 27, along with 16 boards, R Hudson 10, Damon Byns 8, along with 13 boards, Gagan Gill 4 and Carter Harbut 2, while Connor Byron, Prab Sran, Isaak St. Jean and Max Kerr were scoreless. The Lions hit 34-87 (.391) from the floor, 7-19 (.368) from the arc and 6-9 from the line, while garnering 44 boards, including 20 on the offensive glass, 24 foul, 17 assists, 12 turnovers, 1 block and 10 steals. The Lions (coach Euan Roberts, assistant Bobby Braich, manager Ali Tessarolo, trainer Alan Klein, trainer Nylan Roberts) also included John Boulanger, Russell Gillroy. …………………………………………………… The 5th-seeded Surrey Holy Cross Crusaders defeated the 12th-seeded Victoria Belmont Bulldogs 58-47. The Bulldogs led 15-11, 26-22 and 41-36 at the quarters. Uyi Ologhola paced the Crusaders with 15. Gabriel Takeawoa added 13, Marcus Garcia 12, Michael Risi 10, Marcus Browne 4 and Ian Park 4. The Crusaders hit 23-87 (.264) from the floor, 4-31 (.129) from the arc and 8-20 (.400) from the line, while garnering 36 boards, including 19 on the offensive glass, 18 fouls, 13 assists, 17 turnovers, 3 blocks and 25 steals. Nishad Tarak paced the Bulldogs with 19. Dontae Bull added 16, along with 15 boards, Isaac Ickovich 6, Lucas Gage 2, Julius Kennedy 2 and Nolan Zaragoza 2, while Perry Panganiban, Maxwell Leeder, Moises Corpus, Nathan Johal, Blair Tahouney, Tyler Hardy and Tyler Spaven were scoreless. The Bulldogs (coached by Kevin Brown) hit 15-46 (.326) from the floor, 2-7 (.286) from the arc and 15-25 (.600) from the line, while garnering 41 boards, including 5 on the offensive glass, 19 fouls, 10 assists, 36 turnovers, 6 blocks and 9 steals. …………………………………………………… The 2nd-seeded Kelowna Owls torched the 15th-seeded Fort St. John North Peace Oscars 106-46 after leading 31-4, 50-24 and 82-39 at the quarters. “It was good to get control early and then maintain the intensity with the bench working hard to show what they could do,” Owls coach Harry Parmar told Kelowna Now. “It was a nice start. We just need to be ready to take another step forward in the quarters. It’s going to be a big challenge.” Mason Bourcier led the Owls with 17. Matt Williamson added 15, Juan Carlos de Alba 12, Owen Keyes 11, Parker Johnstone 10, David Wieczorek 9, along with 11 boards, Jackson Obst 8, along with 14 boards, Justin Peleshytyk 8, Spencer Braam 7, Jacob Bos 5, Dale Castro 2 and Gavin Saini 2, while Casey Diopita was scoreless. The Owls hit 41-104 (.394) from the floor, 8-32 (.250) from the arc and 16-22 (.727) from the line, while garnering 60 boards, including 30 on the offensive glass, 21 fouls, 20 assists, 15 turnovers, 1 block and 22 steals. Tanner Sandberg and Lorenzo Petrucci each scored 14 to pace the Oscars. Lucas Ziebart added 8, Hunter Prouse 4, Hunter Badke 3, Bret Olsen 3 and Blake Hedges 3, while Christopher Legg, Nathan Wideman, Tegan Huk, Tyler Coulter and Brandyn Sharron were scoreless. The Oscars (coach Mike Redford, assistant Jon Zaleski, assistant Alex Neily, manager Dianne Sandberg, trainer Rod Hedges) hit 18-57 (.316) from the floor, 7-20 (.350) from the arc and 6-18 from the line, while garnering 34 boards, including 7 on the offensive glass, 17 fouls, 4 assists, 36 turnovers, 3 blocks and 10 steals. …………………………………………………… The 7th-seeded Vancouver St. Georges Saints crushed the 10th-seeded Surrey Lord Tweedsmuir Panthers 89-56 after leading 27-15, 54-29 and 73-41 at the quarters. The Saints led by as many as 33. Jacob Van Santen paced the Saints with 20, along with 15 boards. Jamie Catliff added 18, Roberto Mazzone 11, Louis Sujir 10, Justin Huang 6, Adrian Bacic 6, Jerric Palma 5, Nicholas Varabioff 4, William Lin 4, Sam Sirlin 2, Mark Epshtein 2 and Alex Ference 1. The Saints hit 38-84 (.462) from the floor, 5-16 (.313) from the arc and 8-11 (.727) from the line, while garnering 61 boards, including 18 on the offensive glass, 15 fouls, 24 assists, 21 turnovers, 2 blocks and 15 steals. Dylan Kinley paced the Panthers with 22. Gavin Gill added 8, Brandon Tabing 7, Arjun S 6, Thomas Box 5, Elijah D 4, Dilsharan Gill 2 and Brennan Slawter 2, while Dawson Helders, Doogie Lester, Michael Mugabo, Braedon Martin, Brandon D 3, Alex Lamb-Oyesiku and Tanveer Sekhon were scoreless. The Panthers hit 23-76 (.303) from the floor, 4-26 (.154) from the arc and 6-12 from the line, while garnering 27 boards, including 8 on the offensive glass, 9 fouls, 11 assists, 19 turnovers, 1 block and 16 steals. The Panthers (coach Raj Bagry, assistant Robin Oyesiku, assistant Mike Mitro, manager Mckenna Milos-Johnson) also included Tyson Devison, Parm Manan and Jaden Hoff. Saints coach Bill Drisbow told Varsity Letters (which is usually written by Howard Tsumura, the dean of BC high school hoops reporters) on his blog that “it was a wonderful start. I said to them at the end of the first quarter that they couldn’t have started any better. They were so focused. You look around the change room and you just know. I knew they were in trouble. … We have faced major struggles this season, but these kids listen and they believe.” …………………………………………………… The 3rd-seeded Victoria Oak Bay Bays whipped the 14th-seeded Coquitlam Pinetree Timberwolves 92-64. The Bays led 26-18 after one quarter. The score was knotted at 41 at the half. The Bays led 66-52 after three quarters. Diego Maffia paced the Bays with 23. Caelan Scott added 18, Jaden Touchie 18, Isaiah Romanow 15, Cameron Henderson 7, Tyler Hills 4, Riley Cronk 2, Andrew Pittman 2, Kenny Ngwenya 2 and Jack Mulcahy 1. The Bays hit 33-76 (.434) from the floor, 11-27 (.407) from the arc and 15-28 (.536) from the line, while garnering 47 boards, including 13 on the offensive glass, 17 fouls, 20 assists, 14 turnovers and 8 steals. Armon Taef paced the Timberwolves with 22. Landon Hiney added 18, Maban Teny 10, Hammed Hewaidi 4, Jordan Olley 4, along with 10 boards, Xavion Fleary 3 and Jordan Jimenez 3, while Solomon Anim, Andy Lin, Simon Hsieh, Josh Hortilossa, Shawn Bae, Justin Masigan, Imran Hudda and Farhoud Abedini were scoreless. The Timberwolves (coached by Luke Ireland) hit 22-75 (.293) from the floor, 7-27 (.259) from the arc and 13-21 (.619) from the line, while garnering 37 boards, including 11 on the offensive glass, 20 fouls, 14 assists, 18 turnovers, 2 blocks and 10 steals. …………………………………………………… The 6th-seeded Abbotsford W.J. Mouat Hawks edged the 11th-seeded North Vancouver Handsworth Royals 60-55. The Royals led 12-8 after one quarter. The Hawks led 31-25 at the half. The Royals led 41-40 after three quarters. Hawks coach Rich Ralston told Howard Tsumura’s blog that “I knew Handsworth was a very good team, they always have that intense North Shore playoff to get to the B.C.’s. They are young like us, and I thought we gutted one out. It wasn’t pretty, it’s that 8:30 (a.m.) game and the guys wanted it a lot.” As always, Ralston added, Kenan Hadzovic played “like the spiritual leader of our team.” Hadzovic kept attacking off the dribble. He drew an and-one opportunity with 2:45 to play that gave the Hawks a 52-48 lead. Handsworth’s Stanley Choo hit a trey with 2:25 remaining to make it 52-51, but Mouat’s Sukhi Kang answered with a bucket to re-store the lead at 55-51 and the Hawks 5-6 from the line down the stretch to pull out the win. “I think it was our play on the defensive end that was big for us,” said Hadzovic. “They out-rebounded us on the offensive end, but we stuck together.” Ralston said “slashing is a real strength of (Hadzovic’s) game and now that he is fully healthy, he can really show what he is all about.” Kenan Hadzovic paced the Hawks with 21 points and 10 boards. Sukhi Kang added 13, Zach Plummer 9, Dhivaan Bhogal 7, Harvir Garcha 5, Prav Gill 3 and Reis Sekhon 2. The Hawks hit 20-60 from the floor, 3-18 (.167) from the arc and 17-30 (.567) from the line, while garnering 35 boards, including 12 on the offensive glass, 20 fouls, 12 assists, 17 turnovers, 4 blocks and 14 steals. Ben Grant paced the Royals with 16. Stanley Choo added 12, Josh Butler 8, Baptiste Grandjean 6, Blake McLean 5, Copeland Jandrisch 3, Nic Mollison 3 and Riley Shanks 2, while Jake Horn, Austin Dunn, Nate Watters, Brendan McWilliams, Robert McCurdy, Amir Hajisafar and Magnus Butenschon were scoreless. The Royals (coach Cameron Mowat, assistant Rahim Pendleton, assistant Arman Amini) hit 19-72 (.264) from the floor, 6-19 (.316) from the arc and 11-17 (.647) from the line, while garnering 41 boards, including 19 on the offensive glass, 23 fouls, 11 assists, 20 turnovers, 5 blocks and 7 steals.
In the quarterfinals, the top-seeded Langley Walnut Grove Gators stomped the 8th-seeded Vancouver Kitsilano Blue Demons 100-64 as grade 11 guard James Woods scored 30 on 14-22 from the floor, 9 boards, 3 assists and 3 steals. Ty Rowell added 26, along with 10 boards and 4 steals, and Andrew Goertzen 17 on 7-9 from the floor. “We were supposed to contain (Blue Demons guard) Luka (Lizdek), but even though he went off, it was still a real team effort,” Woods told VarsityLetters.ca. “We tried our best but he still played well. He is an excellent player. He does a bit of everything. … We’re ranked No. 1 but we stay humble,” he said. “Everyone is gunning for us, but we’ll just stay humble and keep working for the prize.” Luke Lizdek led the Blue Demons with 31. Cort Armstrong added 14 and Yannick Douguet 12. The Blue Demons (coach Sylvester Noel, assistant Greg Fong, manager Nina Skaaning, manager Amanda Lath, manager Tricia Tsamis, manager Nicolette Siridopolous) also included Stefan Poluga, Kevin Wang, Marko Przulj, Tyrone Asenoguan, Filip Sokic, George Dokmanovic, Duncan Ross, Diallo Oballa, Riley Robertson, Enzo Lin and Forrest Scarrwener.
The 5th-seeded Surrey Holy Cross Crusaders stunned the 4th-seeded Vancouver College Fighting Irish 99-86 in overtime as grade 9 guard Uyi Ologhola scored 37. The Crusaders led by 17 in the third quarter and trailed by 4 with 1:20 to play before forcing overtime. “It was just crazy man because I just took my chances and went the hoop and scored and scored and scored and we won,” Ologhola told VarsityLetters.ca. “I didn’t expect it. I don’t really have words right now.” When forward Sam Bailey of the Irish scored in close with 1:20 left to make it 84-80, Ologhola hit the Crusaders last two buckets, including one that forced overtime with the score tied at 84 with 31 seconds left. “He carries our water bottles, he carries our bags when we’re on trips,” said Crusaders coach Anthony Pezzente. “The guys treat him like a Grade 9 and he accepts it. This is what this is about. It’s a brotherhood.” Crusader guard Marcus Garcia scored 9 on his 13 points in overtime. Marcus Browne added 11, along with 16 boards and 8 assists. “That is why he is our Grade 12 leader,” Pezzente said. Ian Park scored 17, while nabbing 11 boards, and Gabriel Takeawoa 12. The Irish were outscored 15-2 in the extra session. Emilio Gonzalez-Ruiz led the Irish with 21. Cam Wright added 19, Sam Bailey 17 and Jack Cruz-Dumont 17. The Fighting Irish (coach Lloyd Scrubb, assistant Matt Sartorelli, assistant Doug Beers, assistant Christine Bradstock, manager Alex Chang, manager Connor Stainsby) also included Anthony Pilar, Joshua Jaurigue, Nathan Hilpert, Jovanic Castillo, Kenzi Limtong, David Chan-Kent, Kapilan Kumanan, Max Andrews, Levin Dvorak and Joshua Laberge.
The 2nd-seeded Kelowna Owls pounded the 7th-seeded Vancouver St. Georges Saints 67-41. The Owls broke to an uncharacteristic 10-0 lead. “A big disadvantage has been our slow starts in big games, so that was a focus,” Kelowna guard Mason Bourcier told VarsityLetters.ca. “We got a good sweat going in the warm-up and we did it with energy. Right now, we’re playing like a family.” Bourcier notched back-to-back buckets on a driving layup and then a steal from Saint post Jacob van Santen for a runout that gave the Owls a 26-14 lead. “We play good defence, I believe we do and today you saw the way we can play defence,” said Owls coach Harry Parmar. “That is a good team that we basically held to 30 points.” Bourcier finished with 25 points, 11 boards, 7 assists and 7 steals. “Last year he was a spoke in the wheel,” Parmar said. “This year he is the rubber.” Bourcier said “this year we got off to a bit of a slow start. But we are learning and we can beat any team in the province. We have the same work ethic and the same grit (as the 2016 Owls) and I think anything is possible.” Owen Keyes added 17 points and 16 boards for the Owls. Spencer Braam nabbed 12 boards, while Matt Willamson scored 11. Jacob van Santen paced the Saints with 14, along with 17 boards. Justin Huang scored 8. The Saints (coach Louis Johnson, coach Bill Drisbow, manager Bobby Miller, trainer Jon Hayduk) also included William Lin, Alex Ference, Nicholas Varabioff, Jerric Palma, Arseny Tyulenev, Sam Sirlin, Adrian Bacic, Jon Mikhlin, Chris King, Jamie Catliff, Roberto Mazzone, Mark Epshtein and Louis Sujir.
In the last quarterfinal, the 3rd-seeded Victoria Oak Bay Bays dusted the 6th-seeded Abbotsford W.J. Mouat Hawks 74-52. Guard Jaden Touchie helped the Bays lockdown their defence in the second half as they limited the Hawks to 21 points. “It’s a consistency on defence for stretches that we have done well with,” Bays coach Chris Franklin told VarsityLetters.ca. “We have guarded the ball well, Jaden had a heck of a second half, Riley Kronk did well when they tried to go to a zone, so I am quite pleased. Jaden’s been coming here for three years. He’s a tough kid, the heart of the team, and the rest of the kids follow suit.” Touchie scored 18, while pilfering 7 balls. Riley Kronk added 15, along with 11 boards, Diego Maffia 12 and Isaiah Romanow 11. Dhivaan Bhogal led the Hawks with 23, along with 14 boards. Kenan Hadzovic added 16. The Hawks (coach Rich Ralston, coach Bal Sekhon) also included Zach Plummer, Navdeep Khera, Taran Dubb, Prav Gill, Reis Sekhon, Harvir Garcha, Gary Dhaliwal, Jasmohit Aulakh, Sukhi Kang and Preet Toor.
In the semis, the top-seeded Langley Walnut Grove Gators clocked the 5th-seeded Surrey Holy Cross Crusaders 90-58.
In the other semi, the 2nd-seeded Kelowna Owls dispatched the 3rd-seeded Victoria Oak Bay Bays 86-74. The Owls led 19-18 after one quarter, while the Bays led 35-33 at the half. But the Owls opened the second half with a 9-0 run and never again trailed, leading 62-48 after three quarters. They led by as many as 17 and iced it from the line, where they were 24-30 on the night. Mason Bourcier led the Owls with 41, along with 9 boards and 7 assists. Owen Keyes added 21, along with 10 boards, David Wieczorek 8 and Matt Williamson 8. “It was a tough game, but no one said it would be easy,” Owls assistant Brad Heuser told Kelowna Now. “Now we’re going to find out how much energy we’ve got left in the final.”
In the bronze medal match, the 5th-seeded Surrey Holy Cross Crusaders dumped the 3rd-seeded Victoria Oak Bay Bays 58-46. The Bays (coach Chris Franklin, assistant Rob Parris, assistant Sam Shury, manager Drew Henderson) included Freeman Taylor, Jack Mulcahy, Jaden Touchie, Kenny Ngwenya, Diego Maffia, Caelan Scott, Cameron Henderson, Tyler Hills, Ben Watts-Wooldridge, Valdi Alarie-Hills, Lachlan Kratz, Riley Cronk, Andrew Pittman and Isaiah Romanow.
In the final, the top-seeded host Langley Walnut Grove Gators defeated the 2nd-seeded Kelowna Owls 78-65. Both team’s big guns – Ty Rowell of the Gators and Mason Bourcier of the Owls – put on a second-half demonstration of stardom, hitting buckets from all over the floor. “Feeling great, the game was really tense, tight battle. But we had a great second half especially in the fourth quarter, we changed some stuff up defensively that we needed to do,” Gators coach George Bergen said. “At the half, I told the guys we need to keep fighting. Who is going to put in more effort? Both teams put on a show, it was awesome.” Bergen later told VarsityLetters.ca that when Rowell and Bourcier caught fire, “I can tell you exactly what I was thinking when that started. The show is on.” Rowell led the Gators with 31 points, 7 boards and 5 assists, while player of the game Bourcier led the Owls with 29 points, 5 boards and 8 assists. Rowell said he was determined to duplicate the championship feat of former Gator great Jadon Cohee. “I saw Jadon and that is what made me strive to want to win this as well.” Gators coach George Bergen said “what does it mean? Jadon is right over there. He is a lifelong Gator, and that is what this moment is all about. It’s the culture and the legacy this all leaves.” Bourcier said of the loss, “it’s hard to describe with words. It’s a bittersweet ending, but if you look at how far I’ve come and my team has come since we were young, and I have played with some of these guys since Grade 7, they mean the world to mean even if we lose.” Tournament MVP guard James Woods added 23 for the Gators, while Jake Cowley nabbed 16 boards, despite playing with two sprained ankles and a cut chin. Owen Keyes scored 18 and nabbed 8 boards, for the Owls. David Wieczorek added 11, along with 10 boards, and Matt Williamson 2. Bergen said “I think both teams performed at an equal level. But I think we got a little edge in the category of changing our defence.” In the fourth quarter, the Gators went to a 1-3-1 zone defence, and with the wingspan of Jake Cowley, Andrew Goertzen and Brett Christensen ground the Owls to a halt. “It neutralized Mason,” said Bergen. “There was a bit of uncertainty, a bit of tentativeness. So that was a changing point.” The Gators finished the game with a 20-8 run. Owls coach Harry Parmar said “they’re good. But really, in the end, it didn’t come down to much.” The Owls’ Matt Williamson was chosen defensive MVP of the tournament. The Owls led 21-18 after one quarter and then extended the lead to 30-24 on back-to-back treys by Keyes. The Gators led 37-32 at the half on a long trey by Rowell with 8 seconds remaining on the clock. The Gators led 58-57 after three quarters despite Bourcier’s off-balance buzzer-beating trey. The Gators hit two buckets midway through the final quarter to take a 71-65 lead and Owls never threatened thereafter. The win was the fifth of the season for the Gators over the Owls. Parmar told Kelowna Now that “we wanted to go back and win gold and the guys gave it everything they had. We had trouble with their size and just couldn’t find a way to beat them. It came to down just inches here and there, but that’s the way it is. … Mason opened a few more eyes at provincials and piqued the interest of some schools down south. He put the team on his back this season. After the players we lost from last year, he took it to heart and really showed his character. He was outstanding for us. Hats off to our guys for the year they had. It was a big accomplishment to get back to the final.”
The bronze medalist Surrey Holy Cross Crusaders: Nuno DeSousa; Keegan Konn; Jamal Osei-Anim; Marcus Garcia; Marcus Browne; Paolo Lujan; Lorenzo Judalena; Michael Risi; Uyi Ologhola; Jovan Santiago; Gabriel Takeawoa; Ian Park; James Bernardino; Cole Barron; coach Matt LeChasseur; assistant Lance Hurtubise; assistant Kevin Wallsmith
The silver medalist Kelowna Owls: Dale Castro; Casey Diopita; Gavin Saini; Parker Johnstone; Jackson Obst; Justin Peleshytyk; Jacob Bos; Matt Williamson; Juan Carlos De Alba; Mason Bourcier; Spencer Braam; David Wieczorek; Owen Keyes; coach Harry Parmar; assistant Brad Heuser
The gold medalist
Langley Walnut Grove Gators: Azino Tyrell Urefe; Luke Chalk; Min Kim; Alasdair Coyle; Brett Christensen; James Woods; Sheldon Frew; Ritesh Nandakumar; Ty Rowell; Dannon Sturn; Noah Shopland; Andrew Goertzen; Jake Cowley; Luke Adams; coach George Bergen; assistant Jared Bergen; assistant Ben Miller; manager Randy Bauth