In the opening round, held in Langley: …………………………………………………… The 12th-seeded Surrey Lord Tweedsmuir Panthers stunned the 5th-seeded Burnaby Central Wildcats 78-75. The Wildcats led 27-16, 39-30 and 56-53 at the quarters. The Panthers took their first lead at 61-59 and extended the margin to 75-62 in the fourth but the Wildcats ripped off a 9-0 run to trim the margin to 4, but their rally faltered with a 1-5 effort from the line over the final minutes. Panthers coach Mike Mitro told Varsity Letters that before the game, “I told the girls ‘We’re not a 12, let’s go out and shock them’. We watched some film and saw some things about them where if we could keep our tempo high the whole game, we knew we would be able to slide through some cracks, maybe try to get them in foul trouble. That was our whole goal. I knew my guards were quicker than their guards, and we knew we had to keep No. 3 (Ankita Chopra) from shooting threes. But then she started driving and then posting up, which was trouble for us. But we made a few adjustments and then we just did some smart things down at the end. … They are fired up. We knew coming into the game that we had a legitimate chance. We had to weather their initial storm and then we could get them tired. We’re a team that … we just gotta run right through the fourth quarter and then we get some easy stuff.” Hanna Grewal paced the Panthers with 28. Saavyn Mann added 21, Sammy Ma 17, Agam Mann 4, Arsh Bal 4 and Zara Mann 3, while Simran Lally, Annie Khosa, Sienna Juco, Pavan Bola, Madelein Juco, Shaan Sandhu, Elena Bortolome, Nakita Humphrey and Priya Khangura were scoreless. Ankita Chopra scored 30 to pace the Wildcats (coach Chris Ducharme). Sophia Morton added 17, Vobia Kalome 13, Kierra Blundell 10, Jayla Huynh 3 and Ella Ricketts 2, while Emerald Vo, Sarah Johal, Jaya Jawandha, Simran Minhas, Sonia Haure and Kylie Quach were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 4th-seeded Kelowna Okanagan Mission Huskies pounded the 13th-seeded Langley Walnut Grove Gators 75-54. The Gators led 16-7 after one quarter. The Huskies ripped off a 26-2 run to take a 41-26 at half and 55-45 after three quarters. The Gators trimmed the margin to 6 in the final frame closed out the affair with a 15-0 run. Presley Hopf paced the Huskies with 27. Faith Hunter added 15, Maya Andruchow 10, Jada Burden 9, Payton Friesen 7, Asia Borg 4, Shae Sandhu 2 and Ayla Mulleny 1, while Hana Friesen, Peyton Holmes, Carsen Carter and Monet James were scoreless. Kyanna Knodel paced the Gators with 26. Lyla McKay added 16, Avery Sorenson 5, Abby Louie 4 and Sarah Cowley 3, while Haruka Ushijima, Megan Greene, Emily Clark, Anna Koo, Alex Carroll, Marta Gracia San Felipe, Elie Knodel, Makayla George, Chloe Rutquist and Madison Pinch were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 6th-seeded Chilliwack G.W. Graham Grizzlies clipped the Coquitlam Dr. Charles Best Secondary Blue Devils 68-54 after leading 18-11, 33-20 and 50-42 at the quarters. Grizzlies coach Sarah Mouritzen told Varsity Letters that her squad kept their poise in the face of Blue Devils runs from 18-point deficits. “We were devastated to lose last year, but we weren’t ready. This year we are ready, we’re really ready. … We’re smarter. We have always been so emotional, so passionate and so competitive and that used to be our downfall. … When the other team started coming back before we would have crumbled, but we’re good now. They are just that much more mature. … This group is the same group we have had for three years, other than Jada who came up from the junior team. The fact is we’re not the youngsters or the underdogs anymore. We’re good enough to play with anybody. We said ‘Let’s win and go for dinner’.” Ashlyn Adams paced the Grizzlies with 18. Jada Paquin added 16, Brooklyn Klim 10, Carmen Folka 8, Emily Sprott 8, Abby Hopwood 4, Charley Ball 2 and Nicole Folka 2, while Varsha Padda, Rhianna MacDonald, Keira Bergen and Isabelle West were scoreless. Jessica Parkinson led the Blue Devils with 18. Denise Mendoza added 17, Elizabeth Fast 10, Hannah Brar 4, Anin Jahangiri 3 and Mahdiya Adnan 2, while Ileen Firoozi, Madison Day, Malaya Barroso, Sarah Kim, Bianka Mazan, Julia Blanc, Keisia Tshibang, Samantha Roy-Vieira and Maiysa Montakhab were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 3rd-seeded Delta Seaquam Seahawks blasted the 14th-seeded Victoria Claremont Spartans 94-38 after leading 26-15, 50-28 and 76-33 at the quarters. Camryn Tait paced the Seahawks with 18. Syra Toor added 17, including 5 from beyond the arc, Iria Etxezarraga 14, Callie Brost 10, Mackenzie Henderson 9, Neelum Sihu 9, Sydney Roufosse 8, Priya Toor 7 and Sukhman Brar 2, while Anika Dass, Rana Amarkhil and Maya MacKenzie were scoreless. Iva Kalabric scored 19 to pace the Spartans (coach Marissa Dheensaw, coach Darren Reisig). Marin O’Regan added 7, Carys Clarke 6, Isla Campbell 3, Kate McNicol 2 and Chelsea Neilson 1, while Sadie Neilson, Ally Schuetze, Zaara Sandhu, Paula Welcke, Avery Whitsitt, Gigi Nash and Abby Brosius were scoreless. ………………………………………………… The 7th-seeded Abbotsford Yale Lions clocked the 10th-seeded Victoria Oak Bay Breakers 84-47 after leading 24-0 early and 29-3, 50-19 and 74-32 at the quarters. Ella Bonn paced the Lions with 24. Kendal Dueck added 16, Aysia Kumar 13, Maeva Carnahan 12, Ava Heppner 12, Nimritha Dhesi 3, Hannah Singh 2 and Sloane Mason 2, while Aairya Gill, Lily Gronberg, Janielle Brown and Tylin Manning were scoreless. Eden Henderson scored 20 to lead the Breakers (coach Dean Fortin). Kya Jackson added 9, Amisha Lalli 5, Devon Lansdowne 4, Molly Andulajevic 4, Jessiah Brehaut 3 and Bree Lockyer 2, while Reva Zucko, Sophia Isbister, Aimer Golder and Georgia Hadfield were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 2nd-seeded North Vancouver Argyle Pipers mauled the 15th-seeded Fort St. John North Peace Grizzlies 106-24 after leading 26-8, 59-12 and 87-18 at the quarters. Reece Tam and Mariia Maydan each score 19 to pace the Pipers. Natalie Francis added 12, Saide Danks 12, Alex Danks 8, Alanna Schieman 8, Eva Woodward 7, Cassidy Nugent 5, Sophie Nicholson 4 and Isabella Miljkovic 2, while Taylor Johncox, Samantha Mulligan and Sophie Ezart were scoreless. Hayley Copes scored 12 to pace the Grizzlies (coach Jaclyn McNicol, coach Tawnya Copes). Nora Redford added 4, Madira Issoufou 4 and Kenzi Steiner 4, while Paige Dyck, Lilli Stockall, Isabelle Vojczuk, Brynn Adam, Israel Te Bulte, Ariel Hesketh, Sadia Horel and Hailey Shipley were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The top-seeded Port Coquitlam Riverside Rapids crushed the 16th-seeded Cranbrook Mount Baker Wild 102-24 after leading 27-2, 57-7 and 80-18 at the quarters. “We love an 8:30 game,” Rapids coach Paul Langford told Varsity Letters. “We got to sleep in this morning because we practice at 6 a.m.. We go until 7:30 so we’d have already been done by now. Today was like sleeping in.” Avery Sussex paced the Rapids with 34. Jorja Hart added 19, Isla Kelly 15, Rae Roycroft 10, Elandi Van Jaarsveld 7, Olivia Wheatley 6, Henna Virk 4, Maliyah Mendoza 3, Kaylee Jack 2 and Kaitlin Vergara 2, while Anabelle Neufeld, Mikelia Campanile and Natalie McCutcheon were scoreless. Cyrene Pecpec scored 8 to pace the Wild (coach Alan Nutini, assistant Josie Mackie, assistant Anna Ulmar). Sadie Thielen added 6, Calissa Haine 4, Kyri Ross 3, Janessa Thompson 2 and Bella Atherton 1, while Paige Tilley, Cassidy Adams, Sydney Archibald, Jillian Perry, Abby Ackison, Maddy Norman and Sophia Claude were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 8th-seeded Kelowna Owls dispatched the 9th-seeded Vancouver Sir Winston Churchill Bulldogs 70-56. The Bulldogs led 16-14 after one quarter. The Owls led 40-27 at the half and 53-47 after three quarters. Morgan Clark paced the Owls with 16. Emma Pinkerton added 14, Keira Eves 13, Ava Thiessen 9, Cali Ausenhus 9, Micah Ramsay 7 and Jasmin Guarasci 2, while Kim Enero, Mawleen Chahal and Jessica Rotaru were scoreless. Louise Dykstra scored 30 to lead the Bulldogs (coach Simon Dykstra). Sasha Neuhaus added 8, Anika Farrales-Parlan 7, Joslyn Ly 5, Lenzy Alob 4 and Crystal Charchuk 2, while Sophie Reimer, Chloe Chan, Jasmine Landry, Malvina Chinna, Ramaya Sidhu and Avani Kaila were scoreless.

       In the quarterfinals, the 3rd-seeded Delta Seaquam Seahawks spanked the 6th-seeded Chilliwack G.W. Graham Grizzlies 87-60 after leading 17-5 early and 24-9, 44-20 and 59-37 at the quarters. Seahawks coach Lucky Toor told Varsity Letters that “they’re just mentally prepared, mentally focused off the opening tip-off. We haven’t had too much of an energy drop-off, and that’s what I’ve liked. … At the end of the day, that’s a very hard-working team over there that’s well-coached, and we had to match that intensity. It wasn’t the prettiest, but sometimes, with playoff basketball, that’s what it is. You’ve just got to grind out moments and make plays, right? Sometimes people think of us as just a perimeter team, and we do shoot a lot of (perimeter) shots, obviously. But if we can establish ourselves inside, we can play an inside-out game, and that worked well for us.” Camryn Tait led the Seahawks with 19. Syra Toor added 17, including 5 treys, Callie Brost 13, Neelum Sidhu 11, Mackenzie Henderson 10, Sydney Roufosse 7, Priya Toor 6 and Irlan Etxezarraga 4, while Anika Dass, Rana Amarkhil, Maya Mackenzie and Sukhman Brar were scoreless. Emily Sprott scored 17 to pace the Grizzlies. Jada Paquin added 13, Ashlyn Adams 12, Carmen Folka 9, Brooklyn Klim 6, Charley Ball 2 and Abby Hopwood 2, while Varsha Padda, Rhianna MacDonald, Kiera Bergen, Isabelle West and Nicole Folka were scoreless. The Grizzlies (coach Sarah Mauritzen) also included Holly Rae Myrden.

       The 7th-seeded Abbotsford Yale Lions defeated the 2nd-seeded North Vancouver Argyle Pipers 74-66 after leading 16-14, 44-27 and 61-41 at the quarters. The Lions took control with a 14-0 second-quarter run and led by as many as 24 before 4 starters fouled out and they were forced to withstand a final Pipers charge. The Pipers bridged the final quarter with an 8-0 run and drew within 71-66 down the stretch but Lion guard Maeva Carnahan hit 5-6 from the line in the final minute to ice the win. “We were hanging on for dear life at the end,” Lions coach Bobby Braich told Varsity Letters. “We’re always a little under the radar, because we don’t have quite the arsenal some teams have, so we have to earn it the hard way. They’re homegrown grassroots players. We get them out of (W.A.) Fraser (Middle School), and we have them for four years with them. We don’t run any offseason club stuff, they just show up for the season and we try to do what we can to cultivate them. This is what you get when you have a lunch-bucket mentality, and everybody buying in. Ordinary people doing extraordinary things. … It’s a pretty good feeling for those kids (off the bench) who don’t get as much of an opportunity, to know they can come in and seal the deal,” Braich noted. “This sort of stuff, you grow exponentially. You can’t duplicate it in practice. You can practice for a year and not get to where we got to the last five minutes.” Ava Heppner scored 30 to pace the Lions. Maeva Carnahan added 18, Ella Bohn 12, Hannah Singh 11 and Kendal Dueck 3, while Minritha Desi, Aysia Kumar, Aairya Gill, Lily Gronberg, Janielle Braun, Sloan Mason and Tylin Manning were scoreless. Reese Tam scored 28 to pace the Pipers (coach Anthony Beyrouti). Nathalie Francis added 11, Braeli Adrian 11, Isabella Miljkovic 7, Marria Maydan 6 and Sadie Danks 3, while Taylor Johncox, Alex Danks, Sophie Nicholson, Samantha Mulligan, Sophie Ezart, Cassidy Nugent, Alanna Schieman and Eva Woodward were scoreless.

       The 4th-seeded Kelowna Okanagan Mission Huskies dispatched the 12th-seeded Surrey Lord Tweedsmuir Panthers 86-78. The Huskies led 18-10 early as Presley Hopf came out with fire. But the score was knotted at 22 after one quarter as Saavyn Mann drained a late trey. The Huskies led 43-34 at the half and broke the game open when Shae Sandhu began draining treys. They led 70-49 after three quarters. The Panthers rallied within 81-76 down the stretch but the Huskies iced it with a measure of stiff defence and timely free throw shooting. “It was a much different match-up (than yesterday),” Huskies coach Meghan Faust told Varsity Letters. “I enjoyed coaching this game a little bit better, just because of the speed and the back-and-forth play. “Shout-out to Tweeds for coming in as a 12 (seed) and taking the province by storm a little bit here. I think that we matched up really well with them, speed for speed, and the thing I kept harping on the girls and the only thing that kept us going was our defence. Just focusing on getting on stops, not worrying about scoring. … (Sandhu is) unreal. She’s such a spark of energy when she gets going. She usually starts it on the defensive end, and once she gets a feel for scoring, you can’t really stop her. That third quarter really changed the momentum, I think.” Presley Hopf led the Huskies with 22 to pac. Jada Burden added 18, Faith Hunter 18, Shae Sandhu 16,, Maya Andruchow 7 and Payton Friesen 5, while Hana Friesen, Asia Borg, Ayla Mulleny, Peyton Holmes, Carsen Carter and Monet James were scoreless. Saavyn Mann scored 27 to pace the Panthers (coach Mike Mitro). Hanna Grewal added 26, Sammy Ma 14, Zara Mann 9 and Pavan Bola 2, while Simran Lally, Annie Khosa, Sienna Juco, Madeleine Juco, Elena Bortolome, Shaan Sandhu, Agam Mann, Nakita Humphrey, Priya Khangura and Arsh Ball were scoreless.

       In the last quarterfinal, the top-seeded Port Coquitlam Riverside Rapids blasted the 8th-seeded Kelowna Owls 78-32 after leading 35-6, 47-20 and 63-26 at the quarters. Rapids coach Paul Langford told Varsity Letters that Isla Kelly and Annabelle Neufeld provided critical offensive punch. “(Kelly)  can shoot it and she is fast and super energetic for us, like she was today. … Annabelle didn’t score the day before and she was disappointed. So I told her that I didn’t need her to score. I also told her not to worry and maybe she’d score today which she did.” Avery Sussex paced the Rapids with 20. Isla Kelly added 18, Annabelle Neufeld 14, Jorja Hart 13, Maliyah Mendoza 6, Kaitlin Vergara 3, Rae Roycroft 2 and Olivia Wheatley 2, while Kaylee jack, Mikella Campanile, Elandi Van Jaarsveld, Henna Virk and Natalie McCutcheon were scoreless. Cali Ausenhus scored 10 to pace the Owls (coach Peter Guarasci). Micah Ramsay added 9, Emma Pinkerton 5, Ava Thiessen 3, Jasmin Guarasci 3 and Keira Eves 2, while Kim Enero, Mawleen Chahal, Morgan Clark and Jessica Rotaru were scoreless.

       In the semis, the 3rd-seeded Delta Seaquam Seahawks dusted the 7th-seeded Abbotsford Yale Lions 81-40 after leading 28-14, 48-16 and 74-24 at the quarters. The Seahawks hit 8-20 from the arc. Sydney Roufosse paced the Seahawks with 15, while nabbing 12 boards. Camryn Tait added 14, Callie Brost 13, Mackenzie Henderson 11, Irla Etxezarraga 10, Syra Toor 9, Priya Toor 3, Maya MacKenzie 3 and Neelum Sidhu 3, while Anika Dass, Rana Amarkhil and Sukhman Brar were scoreless. Maeva Carnahan paced the Lions with 16. Ava Heppner added 7, Ella Bohn 6, Aysia Kumar 5, Kendal Dueck 3 and Hanna Singh 3, while Nimritha Dhesi, Aairya Gill, Lily Gronberg, Janielle Braun and Sloan Mason were scoreless.

       In the other semi, the top-seeded Port Coquitlam Riverside Rapids dumped the 4th-seeded Kelowna Okanagan Mission Huskies 81-65 after leading 29-18, 48-37 after closing out the frame with a 14-6 run, and 68-46 at the quarters after opening the frame with an 11-2 run. The Rapids committed just 12 turnovers to the Huskies’ 25. Rapid guard Avery Sussex told Varsity Letters that “I think our experience is going to help us along the way. We’re going to give it everything we have – we’ve worked so hard. I want it so bad.” Avery Sussex paced the Rapids with 35, while nabbing 12 boards. Jorja Hart added 13, Maliyah Mendoza 13, Annabelle Neufeld 10, Isla Kelly 5, Henna Virk 2, Olivia Wheatly 2 and Rae Roycroft 1, while Kaylee Jack, Kaitlin Vergara, Mikella Campanile, Elandi Van Jaarsveld and Natalie McCutcheon were scoreless. Presley Hopf paced the Huskies with 21. Jada Burden added 9, Shae Sandhu 9, Maya Andruchow 8, Faith Hunter 8, Asia Borg 5 and Payton Friesen 5, while Hana Friesen, Ayla Mulleny, Peyton Holmes, Carsen Carter and Monet James were scoreless.

       In the bronze medal match, the 4th-seeded Kelowna Okanagan Mission Huskies edged the 7th-seeded Abbotsford Yale Lions 71-69 as Presley Hopf notched a pair of free throws with 4.6 seconds to play. Hopf told Varsity Letters that “for this entire season, the amount of running we’ve had to do, and we do a lot of drills on free throws. I just had to go up there and trust the work I’ve put in. I wasn’t having a great shooting game, but I knew that I wasn’t just up there shooting for myself – I was shooting for my team, my coaches. I just took a breath and let them go. … “We were a little bit sad at the beginning of the game. There’s six of us, six seniors (Hopf, Faith Hunter, Jada Burden, Asia Borg, Ayla Mulleny, and Payton Friesen), who won’t be playing together again. But we all knew that we were going to be playing for each other. We’re still at provincials – the big stage, the big dance. We came here to play for each other, and I think that helped keep us going, helped keep us focused, especially there at the end.” The Lions led 23-11, while capitalizing on a 19-2 run, and 40-30 and 53-50 at the quarters. The Huskies rallied to take a 66-58 lead in the final frame. But Maeve Carnahan hit a pair of tough buckets as the Lions rallied to knot the score at 69 with 3 seconds to play. Huskies coach Meghan Faust said “it was a hard game the night before, and our expectation were different, but I should have known. By the time we got in the car to get over here, their vibes were completely different, and they were hungry to win this one. … With these girls especially, except for Faith who just joined us more recently, they’ve been playing together since they were in Grade 4. I can’t imagine how much this game meant to them, but I’m happy we got the win for them.” Shae Sandhu paced the Huskies with 21. Faith Hunter added 17, Presley Hopf 13, Payton Friesen 9, Maya Andruchow 8, Jada Burden 2 and Asia Borg 1, while Hana Friesen, Ayla Mulleny, Peyton Holmes, Carsen Carter and Monet James were scoreless. Maeve Carnahan scored 22 to pace the Lions (coach Bobby Braich). Ella Bohn added 18, Kendal Dueck 11, Ava Heppner 9, Aysia Kumar 5 and Sloane Mason 4, while Nimritha Dhasi, Hannah singh, Aairya Gill, Lily Gronberg, Janielle Brown and Tylin Manning were scoreless.

       In the final, the 3rd-seeded Delta Seaquam Seahawks defeated the top-seeded Port Coquitlam Riverside Rapids 79-73. Defensive player of the tournament Camryn Tait told Varsity Letters that “we’ve been talking about this moment since we started in November. It’s a big moment for us, as well as Delta.” The Rapids led 21-19 after one quarter. The score was knotted at 34 at the half. The Rapids led 58-48 after three quarters as they ripped off a 6-0 run. But Seahawks coach Lucky Toor told his troops to abandon their man-to-man defence at the start of the final frame in favour of a 1-3-1 zone. The move stopped the Rapids from attacking off the dribble. Syra Toor drained a trey, Mackenzie Henderson added another and then Toor drained her second of the quarter as the Seahawks rallied within 59-57. Seahawks coach Lucky Toor said “we made a couple of defensive tweaks in what we were doing. It’s something (the 1-3-1 zone) we had in our back pocket that we hadn’t really tried all season. We had a good talk (in the minute between quarters) and we said ‘Well, it’s now or never.’ We have 10 minutes to define our season, let’s go out and leave it all on the floor. … We only played zone for a total of about 20 minutes all season. We have been a man-to-man team all season but we believed in our zone because we thought we could get some turnovers off of it, and that is all we were trying to do: Get some extra possessions in the fourth quarter.” Toor said the zone turned the tide. “It put them in scramble mode. They were not able to get back and set up in their zone.” Toor also put Tait at the front of the zone. “Her length and can bother a lot of people. We put Sydney (Roufosse) right in the middle. Then Syra (Toor) and Mackenzie (Henderson) [on the flanks] because they get a lot of tips in deflections. Then we had Callie (Brost) on the back end because we need a fast one there that can cover corner to corner.” Henderson later another trey, her seventh of the match, to give the Seahawks the lead for good at 64-62 with 5:46 to play, capping a 16-4 run in the span of 4:14. Henderson said “before every shot, I had to slow down and breathe. I know my role on the team and my job is to hit big shots at big moments.” The treys opened up the paint down the stretch. The Seahawks got two buckets from Brost and one apiece from Sydney Roufosse, Tait and Neelum Sidhu. Their final 7 points came from the line over the final 58 seconds as Toor went 4-6 and Brost 2-2. “Once the (three-pointers) started to fall the defence went out to the perimeter and the inside opened up, so I got much more open looks,” said Roufosse. “I am beyond happy. I love physical games, the games that I can give it.” Rapids coach Paul Langford said “I probably blew it by not stopping the momentum earlier. They were very good, they were physical against us and they hit some shots. We built a 10-point lead and we earned it, but they went into a zone and we had a couple of bad possessions.” Tournament MVP Avery Sussex said the Rapids “might have just gotten ahead of ourselves, a little too comfortable … but the whole game was a game of runs. We had ours, they had theirs. And they had another and we couldn’t stop it, so congrats to them.” Sussex added that winning the MVP award is “tough because I’d rather have the team thing. I feel bad getting it (coming from) the losing team because the winner deserves it. … Camryn Tait is an outstanding player and I would have given it to her right away. But I am grateful I got it because it makes me feel a bit better after losing.” Player of the game Mackenzie Henderson paced the Seahawks with 21. Camryn Tait added 10, Sydney Roufosse 14, Syra Toor 10, Callie Brost 8, Neelum Sidhu 4 and Priya Toor 2, while Anika Dass, Rana Amarkhill, Maya Mackenzie, Irla Extezarraga and Sukhman Brar were scoreless. Avery Sussex led the Rapids with 35. Jorja Hart added 16, Annabelle Neufeld 13, Isla Kelly 3, Maliyah Mendoza 2, Rae Roycroft 2 and Olivia Wheatley 2, while Kaylee Jack, Kaitlin Vergara, Mikella Campanille, Elandi Van Jaarsveld, Henna Virk and Natalie McCutcheon were scoreless.

       The all-tournament team featured MVP Avery Sussex (Riverside); Camryn Tait (Seaquam); Annabelle Neufeld (Riverside); Jorja Hart (Riverside); Mackenzie Henderson (Seaquam); and Presley Hopf (Okanagan Mission).

       The 2nd-team featured Reece Tam (Argyle); Maeva Carnahan (Yale); Faith Hunter (Okanagan Mission); Hanna Grewal (Lord Tweedsmuir) and Sydney Roufosse (Seaquam).

       The bronze medalist Kelowna Okanagan Mission Huskies: Presley Hopf; Shae Sandhu; Faith Hunter; Payton Friesen; Maya Andruchow; Jada Burden; Asia Borg; Hana Friesen; Ayla Mulleny; Peyton Holmes; Carsen Carter; Monet James; coach Meghan Faust

       The silver medalist Port Coquitlam Riverside Rapids: Avery Sussex; Jorja Hart; Annabelle Neufeld; Isla Kelly; Maliyah Mendoza; Rae Roycroft; Olivia Wheatley; Kaylee Jack; Kaitlin Vergara; Mikella Campanille; Elandi Van Jaarsveld; Henna Virk; Natalie McCutcheon; coach Paul Langford

The champion Delta Sequam Seahawks: Camryn Tait; Mackenzie Henderson; Sydney Roufosse; Syra Toor, Callie Brost; Neelum Sidhu; Priya Toor; Anika Dass, Rana Amarkhill, Maya Mackenzie, Irla Extezarraga; Sukhman Brar; coach Lucky Toor; assistant Jim Sidhu