In the opening round: …………………………………………………… The top-seeded North Vancouver Argyle Pipers dusted the 16th-seeded Cranbrook Mount Baker Wild 100-17 after leading 41-2, 68-6 and 90-10 at the quarters. Wild coach Alan Nutini told Varsity Letters that “We know the first game is tough. They (the Pipers) are clearly No. 1 for a reason . . . but I tell them they’re just 15-, 16-, 17-year-old girls like you are. So just make sure you put an effort on the floor for 40 minutes. Don’t get discouraged, work hard and be supportive of each other and never give up. Make sure you leave an impression.” Wild guard Sadie Thielen said “it’s definitely very hard. And it’s not even the physical part, it’s the mental part, going into the game knowing you’re going to lose, but that you’re still going to have to perform at your best and play your hardest.” Mariaa Mayden paced the Pipers with 21. Sadie Danks added 16, Sophie Nicholson 14, Eva Woodward 10, Cassidy Nugent 9, Sophie Ezart 9, Alanna Schieman 8, Taylor Johncox 2 and Donya Namvar 2, while Freya Hackshaw, Serena Guo, Annie Baillie and Kelsey Hungle were scoreless. Calissa Haine led the Wild (coach Alan Nutini) with 7, Sadie Thielen, Sophia Claude, Cyrene Pecpec, Grace Bevans and Sarah Johnson each added 2, while Maddy Norman, Kiana George, Sydney Archibald, Cassidy Adams, Charlie Lockhart, Dyllan Beal, Abby Ackison, Shanna (Ghanna?) Palande and Emma Peterson were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 8th-seeded Victoria Oak Bay Bays clipped the 9th-seeded Surrey Semiahmoo Totems 75-64 after leading 28-10, 40-28 and 64-46 at the quarters. Breakers coach Quinn Campbell told Varsity Letters that “I think especially that start of the game was very telling of how far we have come. The whole narrative of the start of the season was we’d get punched in the face early and we would just be crawling to get back into the game. So to come out and to actually throw the first punch (a 28-6 outburst) was big for us and that is something that has been a good trend that I am hoping we can keep up.” Eden Henderson paced the Bays with 26. Adelle Bergmann added 18, Molly Andulajevic 15, Devon Lansdowne 5, Jessiah Brehaut 3, Ashly Mackie 2, Kya Jackson 2 and Ella Beames 2, while Sofia Isbister, Georgia Hadfield, Maryam el Dekhakhny, Morgan Cunningham and Naomi Young were scoreless. Jaida Claypool paced the Totems (coach Simrat Bindra) with 28. Sonum Sran added 15, Priya Sangha 11, Elia Sparling 7 and Mya Thompson 3, while Cora Juco, Savanna Wong, Celeste Liang, Regan Arlitt and Rio Dirksen were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 4th-seeded Langley Brookswood Bobcats spanked the 13th-seeded Victoria Claremont Spartans 69-37 after leading 16-10, 40-20 and 56-34 at the quarters. Jordyn Nohr paced the Bobcats with 30. Hazel Phillips added 9, Georgia Hunt 8, Mac Pogue 7, Kaia Hutton 6, Fabi Taylor 5 and Ashley Vande Ven 4, while Isla Hunt, Emma Lehnoff, Sam Pogue, Carly Taylor, Emma Chorney and Aedan McCaig were scoreless. Iva Kalabric paced the Spartans (coach Marissa Dheensaw, assistant Brooklyn White?) with 14. Raiya Newnes added 5, Isla Campbell 5, Sadie Neilson 3, Marin O’Regan 3, Kate McNichol 3, Chelsea Neilson 2 and Carys Clarke 3, while Sofija Markovic, Mila Russoli and Abby Brosius were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 5th-seeded Chilliwack G.W. Graham Grizzlies whipped the 12th-seeded South Delta Pacers 75-43 after leading 18-11, 43-18 and 59-28 at the quarters. Grizzlies coach Colleen Folka told Varsity Letters that “I like the fact that we can rely on everyone and trust anyone on our team to make that shot. And I think our execution is pretty good, and we’re working hard on locking down on defence and being tough on the boards. … When one person gets a little hot then we can facilitate that more on the floor.” Carmen Folka paced the Grizzlies with 16. Ashlyn Adams added 15, Nicole Folka 14, Jada Paquin 11, Emily Sprott 7, Holly-Rae Myrden 5, Macie Svehla 3 and Keira Bergen 3, while Amber Mercado, Isabelle West and Lane Tunnicliffe were scoreless. Zoe Millette paced the Pacers (coach R Miller?) with 24. Kyra Millette added 7, Jade de Fon 5, Kassandra Sharpe 4, Ryan Assaly 2 and Marin Marano 1, while Brynne McKintuck, Jalen De Dios, Sara Brotherston, Helena Panteli, Payton Kilpatrick and Makena Tukutau were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 2nd-seeded Delta Seaquam Seahawks crushed the 15th-seeded Port Moody Heritage Woods Kodiaks 80-49 after leading 27-8, 53-18 and 73-35 at the quarters. Mackenzie Henderson, who’d expanded her game in the offseason to include more attacks off the dribble, told Varsity Letters that “I was excited at the start of the season to expand my role and tonight I demonstrated that the work I have put in to do that … Lots of it for me is mental, thinking to myself ‘Get downhill when my shot’s not there’… just looking for another option when my shot is taken away. Coach Lucky (Toor) always tells me when my shot is not there, get down hill.” Mackenzie Henderson paced the Seahawks with 27. Callie Brost added 18, Camryn Tait 12, Neelum Sidhu 7, Syra Toor 5, Ashleen Sidhu 3, Rishima Malik 2, Gurleen Bal 2, Sydney Roufosse 2 and Diya Gill 2, while Anjali Dass, Priya Toor and Aaliyah Toor were scoreless. Izzy Lloyd led the Kodiaks with 16. Anita Tavaszi added 14, Natasha Chan 7, Milana Zuzolo 4, Lainey Simpson 3, Nathalie Raesler 2, Danya Khatibi 2 and Surveen Chada 1, while Zoey Baker, Tavia Lange, Annika Turpin, Mikayla Hsue and Payton Tomlinson were scoreless. The Kodiaks also included Nathalie Lange. …………………………………………………… The 10th-seeded Kelowna Owls dispatched the 7th-seeded Coquitlam Dr. Charles Best Secondary Blue Devils 56-42 after leading 12-2, 28-19 and 45-33 at the quarters. Owls coach Peter Guarasci told Varsity Letters that guard Mavleen Chahal “pound for pound … is one of the best players in this tournament. She competes so hard on both ends, I mean I must think she had 12 or 13 rebounds tonight. She’s not the biggest girl out there. She plays with confidence, she cares about the team first. She is kind of like a coach’s dream. A bit of a cheat code for me. … She’s got the killer instinct in her. She wants to win.” Guarasci added that his troops “did what we had to do in terms of being scrappy defensively. We put a lot of ball pressure on them and made them handle the ball a bit more than they are maybe used to,” while containing entry passes to Blue Devil post Jessican Parkinson. “She was a big challenge for us. As a big, you need the guard to pass you the ball. So we were trying to make life difficult for them, and I thought our guards did that well.” Mavleen Chahal paced the Owls with 28. Micah Ramsay added 12, Ava Thiessen 6, Jasmin Guarasci 4, Sarah Kershaw 4 and Karina Haggerty 2, while Kim Enero, Emma Rockwell, Layna Haggerty, Amber Nicoll, Chloe Neufeld and Cali Ausenhus were scoreless. Jessica Parkinson led the Blue Devils with 19. Mahal Barroso added 8, Ashreya Sanghera- Gulamhussein 7, Natalie Piasentin??? 5 and Madison Day 3, while Maddiya Adnan, Leila Pitts, Sydney McNaughton, Julia Blanc, Nvonvo Zhang, Sophie Lorenzin, Elizabeth Fast, Isabella Granados, Ketsia Tshibang and Bianka Mazan were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 3rd-seeded Port Coquitlam Riverside Rapids stomped the 14th-seeded Surrey Lord Tweedsmuir Panthers 79-38 after leading 12-9, 34-23 and 61-27 at the quarters. Rapids assistant Jeremy Neufeld told Varsity Letters that the difference was “our constant pressure and our constant fitness, up and down the court, transition-wise… I think Tweedsmuir just got worn out… They couldn’t deal with our pressure. … It was the Grade 12s leading the 11’s, the 10’s, the Grade 9s [in preseason endurance workouts]. For us, fitness was going to have to be a big thing because we didn’t have any size. We have no post players again, so just the pressure, the running up and down is what we have to really zone in on.” Jorja Hart paced the Rapids with 26. Mikella Campanile added 15, Kaitlin Vergara 8, Jazz Landry 8, Annabelle Neufeld 6, Hanna Virk 6, Maliyah Mendoza 5, Francisca Salonga 3 and Kaylee Jack 2, while Caitlyn Moore, Olivia Neuman and Natalie McCutcheon were scoreless. Saavyn Mann paced the Panthers (coach Mike Mitro, coach Gary Ma) with 9. Sammy Ma added 8, Marta Palavo 6, Hanita Ghuman 6, Madeleine Juco 3, Camryn Sheils 3 and Elena Bartolome 3, while Nina Sauder, Mia Gyai, Emmerson Beuk, Zara Mann, Zaara Syal, Nisha Khangura, Sukham Mann, and Karys Suomi were scoreless. The Panthers also included Zara Atwal. …………………………………………………… The 6th-seeded Abbotsford Yale Lions clubbed the 11th-seeded Kelowna Okanagan Mission Huskies 64-24 after leading 14-0 early and 20-3, 39-6 and 59-16 at the quarters. After a dominant performance, the Lions Maeva Carnahan told Varsity Letters that “I love making plays on defence. Steals and easy transition buckets, those are my favorites. It just feels so good.” Lions coach Bobby Braich said “forty minutes, every end of the floor. Lightning quick reflexes, total motor, doesn’t stop. Can shoot the ball, great passer. There’s nothing she can’t do. I’d put her up with anybody in B.C. right now, wouldn’t trade her for anybody. … Our kids were very ready defensively. We got a lot out of the (full court press) early and then just backed off a bit in the second half, just trying to contain a little bit and not give them a flow to the game. At halftime, it was a tough game for them to get back into.” Maeva Carnahan paced the Lions with 31. Kendal Dueck added 21, Elana Negra-Tiana 4, Aysia Kumar 4 and Sloane Mason 4, while Jenny Kang, Monica Demeter, Nimritha Dhesi, Aariya Gill and Lily Gronberg were scoreless.Maya Andruchow paced the Huskies with 6. Carsen Carter added 5, Shae Sandhu 4, Jessie Umeris 3, Shay Anderson 2, Kali deVeer 2 and Peyton Holmes 2, while Hana Friesen, Kendall Carter, Riley Cunningham, Addyson Joyce and Monet James were scoreless.

       In the quarterfinals, the 2nd-seeded Delta Seaquam Seahawks blasted the 10th-seeded Kelowna Owls 77-38 after leading 23-4, 41-20 and 66-30 at the quarters. Seahawks coach Lucky Toor told Varsity Letters that the team was focused after watching two tight quarterfinals. “That kind of actually motivated us because it was a reminder that once you’re into the Final 8, it’s the provincials and everyone wants to win. You can’t take any possession lightly, any team lightly, we just have to be dialled in. It was added motivation and we talked about it for a good minute or two in pregame for sure.” Syra Toor paced the Seahawks with 26. Mackenzie Henderson added 19, Callie Brost 13, Camryn Tait 4, Neelum Sidhu 4, Sydney Roufosse 4, Aaliyah Toor 3, Anjali Das 2 and Diya Gill 2, while Rishima Malik, Ashleen Sidhu, Priya Toor and Gurleen Bal were scoreless. Mavleen Chahal paced the Owls with 15. Layna Haggerty added 6, Ava Thiessen 5, Emma Rockwell 4, Kim Enero 2, Jasmin Guarasci 2, Sarah Kershaw 2 and Karinna Haggerty 1, while Micah Ramsay, Chloe Neufeld and Cali Ausenhus were scoreless.

       The top-seeded North Vancouver Argyle Pipers defeated the 8th-seeded Victoria Oak Bay Bays 78-72 after leading 23-18, 55-36 and 63-43 at the quarters. The Bays rallied to within 74-67 behind Molly Andulajevic and Eden Henderson with two minutes to play but the Pipers held on for the win. Pipers coach Anthony Beyrouti told Varsity Letters that “nothing comes free at provincials. You have to go after it. People aren’t quitting. You have to go and force them into submission.” Eva Woodward and Sophie Nicholson each scored 16 to pace the Pipers. Sadie Danks added 14, Isabella Miljkovic 13, Alanna Shieman 8, Mariia Maydan 6, Sophie Ezart 3 and Cassidy Nugent 2, while Taylor Johncox, Freya Hackshaw, Serena Guo, Kelsey Hungle and Donya Namvar were scoreless. Molly Andulajevic paced the Bays (coach Quinn Campbell, assistant Paul Bergman, assistant Mike Anderson?) with 35. Eden Henderson added 15, Adelle Bergmann 13, Devan Lansdown 4, Kya Jackson 3 and Ashlyn Mackie 2, while Jessiah Brehaut, Sofia Isbister, Ella Beames, Georgia Hadfield, Maryam el Dakhakhny, Morgan Cunningham and Naomi Young were scoreless.

       The 4th-seeded Langley Brookswood Bobcats dispatched the 5th-seeded Chilliwack G.W. Graham Grizzlies 69-62. The Grizzlies led 19-3, 36-18 and 48-40 at the quarters. The Bobcats rallied from a 20-point third-quarter deficit as Jordyn Nohr and Ashley Vande Ven finally got on track. “I think we just didn’t come out prepared enough,” Nohr told Varsity Letters. “We didn’t have enough energy and we let them play their game. But in the second half, we just knew that this is the season, this is the game we had to win.” Bobcats coach Chrissy Nohr said “they were taking Jordyn out of the game and other kids weren’t hitting shots. “As soon as the second-half opened, a few other kids scored and it opened things up for Jordyn. … Our girls have always been really good about always fighting back and never letting halftime determine anything.” Jordyn Nohr added that Grizzlies guard Emily Sprott did a stellar defensive job in the first half. “They are a very aggressive team, quick and athletic, so it’s hard to get around, especially when they are throwing double teams, especially with someone (coming) from behind. It was hard to break… but I think the second half, we just knew how to do it, how to beat it.” Jordan Nohr paced the Bobcats with 37. Hazel Phillips added 17, Ashley Vande Ven 10, Kaia Hutton 2, Mac Pogue 2 and Fabi Taylor 1, while Georgia Hunt, Isla Hunt, Emma Lehnoff, Sam Pogue, Carly Taylor, Emma Chorney and Aedan McCaig were scoreless. Carmen Folka led the Grizzlies (coach Colleen Folka) with 20. Nicole Folka added 13, Macie Svehla 11, Emily Sprott 9, Jada Paquin 7 and Ashlyn Adams 4, while Amber Mercado, Isabelle West, Keira Bergen, Lane Tunnicliffe and Holly Rae-Myrden were scoreless.

       In the last quarterfinal, the 3rd-seeded Port Coquitlam Riverside Rapids defeated the 6th-seeded Abbotsford Yale Lions 78-70 after leading 27-21, 43-40 and 61-50 at the quarters. Rapids coach Paul Langford told Varsity Letters that guard Annabelle Neufeld had “probably her best game this year I would say. … We brought her in when she was in Grade 10 and she was a surprise, but now people know who she is and it’s a different world for her. But tonight Yale did a good job on Jorja (Hart) so it was nice to see her step up and rise to the occasion.” Neufeld said that “once the shots kept falling, it felt better. It was just nice to be able to make some shot and get us some momentum.” Player of the game Annabelle Neufeld led the Rapids with 23. Muliyah Mendoza added 22, including 5 treys, Jorja Hart 14, Mikella Campanile 7, Kaitlyn Vergara 6 and Hanna Virk 6, while Kaylee Jack, Francesca Salonga, Jazz Landry, Caitlyn Moore, Olivia Nueman and Natalie McCutcheon were scoreless. Aysia Kumar led the Lions with 19. Sloan Mason added 16, Kendal Dueck 13, Maeva Carnahan 12 and Aariya Gill 10, while Jenny Kang, Monica Demeter, Elana Negra-Tiana, Nimritha Dhesi and Lilly Gronberg were scoreless.

       In the semis, the 4th-seeded Langley Brookswood Bobcats stunned the top-seeded North Vancouver Argyle Pipers 67-51. The Pipers led 12-10 after one quarter. The Bobcats led 28-27 at the half and 53-40 after three quarters. The Bobcats took command in the final frame as Jordyn Nohr hit a pair of treys, Hazel Phillips hit an improbable fallaway shot in the paint and Ashley Vande Ven notched a runout, Phillips a pull-up jumper, Vande Ven a steal for a runout and Nohr a stepback trey. The Pipers rallied no closer than 9. Phillips told Varsity Letters that “as a team, our mentality is always to come out stronger after a timeout, after a quarter, after a halftime. It’s obviously really nice when it all comes together. … One thing about us is, we all have a specific role, and we’re all going to go out and do what we can. When we all come together, it works beautifully.” Bobcats coach Chrissy Nohr said “we really talk about getting three stops in a row. So we were just trying to get defensive stops, and then our shots started falling. It worked out for us.” Phillips said “obviously Jordyn is a very, very, very good player, and a crucial part of our team. But something we’ve been working on is getting other people scoring opportunities, so in situations like that (Nohr being in foul trouble in the fourth quarter), we’re able to keep going.” Pipers coach Anthony Beyrouti said “we battled as hard as we could – we emptied the tanks, we just couldn’t hit a shot. We’re a usually pretty good shooting team … Tonight we were 2-for-24 from the three, and you can’t win games like that. Brookswood is a very good team, and you almost have to be perfect to beat them, we just weren’t tonight. The beginning of the third quarter, we just didn’t have it. We weren’t locked in, we lost focus. Good teams punish you when you lose focus like that.” Jordyn Nohr paced the Bobcats with 32. Ashley Vande Ven added 14, Hazel Phillips 14, Carly Taylor 3, Fabi Taylor 3 and Kaia Hutton 1, while Georgia Hunt, Emma Lehnoff, Sam Pogue, Mac Pogue and Emma Chorney were scoreless. Isabelle Miljkovic paced the Pipers with 22. Mariia Maydan added 10, Sadie Danks 9, Sophie Nicholson 8, Eva Woodward 4, Cassidy Nugent 3 and Alanna Shieman 2, while Taylor Johncox, Freya Hackshaw, Serena Guo, Sophie Ezart, Annie Baillie, Kelsey Hungle and Donya Namvar were scoreless.

       In the other semi, the 2nd-seeded Delta Seaquam Seahawks dispatched the 3rd-seeded Port Coquitlam Riverside Rapids 75-61 after leading 10-9, 33-26 and 51-40 at the quarters. Reserve Neelum Sidhu came off the bench when leading scorer Camryn Tait picked up her fourth foul early in the final quarter. She promptly nailed three treys. Sidhu told Varsity Letters that she was inspired by an injury to teammate Priya Toor, who tore an ACL in the South Fraser playoffs. “I felt her energy everywhere on that court was with us … from diving for balls, to getting rebounds, that was all Priya out there. … Honestly, the one thing we said in that locker room was to play for one another, but especially for one of my best friends and my sister for life, Priya. We just had to leave it all out on the court for her because, out of everyone, she deserved to be in this game.” Rapids coach Paul Langford said “they shot it well and from deep out. We gave it our all but we needed to play a little better and they needed to play a little worse for us to have a chance.” Seahawks coach Lucky Toor said Sidhu was “unbelievable in that moment, and as soon as she walks off I go ‘I love yah kid’ because that is what you hope for from Grade 12’s. It’s to show up in these moments and boy did she show up … Every time that they would kind of go on a little run or close the gap, she had that one dagger shot. For somebody who doesn’t even shoot (threes) all that often to understand that in the moment, when they’re doubling others that this is the right shot to take, and to take it with confidence … unbelievable.” Neelum Sidhu paced the Seahawks with 27. Syra Toor added 17, Mackenzie Henderson 11, Callie Brost 9, Camryn Tait 9 and Sydney Roufosse 2, while Rishima Malik, Anjali Dass, Ashleen Sidhu, Priya Toor, Aaliyah Toor, Gurleen Bal and Diya Gill were scoreless. Jorja Hart paced the Rapids with 33. Annabelle Neufeld added 11, Henna Virk 8, Minella Campanile 4 and Maliyan Mendoza 3, while Kaylee Jack, Francesca Salonga, Jazz Landry, Caitlin Moore, Olivia Neuman and Natalie McCutcheon were scoreless.

       In the bronze medal match, the top-seeded North Vancouver Argyle Pipers clipped the 3rd-seeded Port Coquitlam Riverside Rapids 76-63 after leading 19-17, 41-24 and 64-39 at the quarters. Eva Woodward and Mariia Mayden each scored 17 to pace the Pipers. Sophie Nicholson added 14, Cassidy Nugent 11, Isabella Miljkovic 7, Sadie Danks 5, Sophie Ezart 3 and Kelsey Hungle 2, while Taylor Johncox, Freya Hackshaw, Serena Guo, Annie Baillie, Alanna Schieman and Donya Namvar were scoreless. Jorja Hart paced the Rapids, who’d captured the 2024 3A title and moved up a division, with 26. Annabelle Neufeld added 13, Maliyah Mendoza 12, Kaitlin Vergara 9, Mikella Companile 2 and Kaylee Jack 1, while Francesca Salonga, Jazz Landry, Caitlin Moore, Olivia Neuman, Henna Virk and Natalie McCutcheon were scoreless.

       In the final, the 2nd-seeded Delta Seaquam Seahawks nipped the 4th-seeded Langley Brookswood Bobcats 68-67 to capture their second consecutive title. The Bobcats led 18-14, 31-30 and 50-47 at the quarters. The Bobcats led 68-62 with 3:14 to play but were held scoreless down the stretch, while Seahawk Syra Toor drained four treys as part of a 12-7 run. Toor told Varsity Letters that “we said that we were going to shoot our way out of this one. It was what was going to keep us in the game. I knew since I didn’t have a great shooting first half, I knew they were going to drop in the second. I just trusted myself and the work I had put in and I kept shooting.” Seahawks coach Lucky Toor was at a loss to explain why his troops struggled shooting until the final frame. “I am not sure exactly what led to it all, but at the end of the day we weren’t shooting anywhere near our normal percentage, and that’s a little bit of the Arena Bowl effect with the depth perception. … It’s just different because you’re not looking at a wall. So at the end of the day I figured that might be an issue, so we started shooting more corner threes because you didn’t have to worry about everything that is behind the hoop. … We live and die by that shot sometimes, I am not going to lie. But all I keep telling the girls is believe, believe, believe that we are going to shoot our way out of it. Let’s not change who we are. Let’s keep letting them fly.” Camryn Tait said the team had faith that the shots from the arc would start to fall. “That’s Seaquam basketball. We know things are sometimes going to be rocky, but trusting all the work we put in … that’s what it’s all about, knowing that things will fall into place. You always have to meet their compete level. And Jordyn is obviously an amazing player. It’s always fun to play against someone like her, and how she challenges us on the defensive end.” Toor said “my hats off to Brookswood. I have the utmost respect for that team, for that coaching staff and for Jordyn Nohr. I told her that she didn’t let me sleep last night because I was up trying to game plan because of her and how dominant she is.” Camryn Tait, who was chosen tournament MVP, said “Obviously, it’s super special, but the banner … that’s where it’s all at. … There’s nothing I’d rather have hanging up in the gym than a banner because it’s about the people I accomplished it with. It’s not about my personal accolades.” But Toor said “to us (the MVP award) means absolutely everything because as Camryn Tait goes, we go. Her getting (the MVP), that, to me, is an accumulation of the two years she has put together. And that is not taking away anything from (2024 winner) Avery Sussex (of Riverside). She was a phenomenal talent last year and it was well deserved. Avery deserved to win. But it’s just nice to see Camryn finally getting a little bit of recognition for everything she does for us, because she is such a selfless player.” Syra Toor paced the Seahawks with 20. Player of the game Camryn Tait added 19, Mackenzie Henderson 13, Callie Brost 12 and Neelum Sidhu 4, while Rishima Malik, Anjali Dass, Ashleen Sidhu, Priya Toor, Aaliyah Toor, Gurleen Bal, Sydney Roufosse and Diya Gill were scoreless. Jordyn Nohr paced the Bobcats with 25. Defensive player of the tournament Ashley Vande Ven added 21, Hazel Phillips 7, Fabi Taylor 5, Georgia Hunt 2, Isla Hunt 2, Kaia Hutton 2, Mac Pogue 2 and Carly Taylor 2, while Emma Lehnoff, Sam Pogue, Emma Chorney and Aiden McCaig were scoreless.

       The all-tournament 1st team featured MVP Camryn Tait (Seaquam); Jorja Hart (Riverside); Isabella Milijkovic (Argyle); Syra Toor (Seaquam); Mackenzie Henderson (Seaquam); and Jordyn Nohr (Brookswood)

       The 2nd-team featured Carmen Folka (G.W. Graham); Sophie Nicholson (Argyle); Callie Brost (Seaquam); Hazel Phillips (Brookswood); and Ashley Vande Ven (Brookswood)

       The bronze medalist North Vancouver Argyle Pipers: Eva Woodward; Mariia Mayden; Sophie Nicholson; Cassidy Nugent; Isabella Miljkovic; Sadie Danks; Sophie Ezart; Kelsey Hungle; Taylor Johncox; Freya Hackshaw; Serena Guo; Annie Baillie; Alanna Schieman; Donya Namvar; coach Anthony Beyrouti; assistant Michael Kidd

       The silver medalist Langley Brookswood Bobcats: Jordyn Nohr; Ashley Vande Ven; Hazel Phillips; Carly Taylor; Fabi Taylor; Kaia Hutton; Georgia Hunt; Emma Lehnoff; Sam Pogue; Mac Pogue; Emma Chorney; Aedan McCaig; coach Chrissy Nohr

       The champion Delta Seaquam Seahawks: Neelum Sidhu; Syra Toor; Mackenzie Henderson; Callie Brost; Camryn Tait; Sydney Roufosse; Rishima Malik, Anjali Dass, Ashleen Sidhu, Priya Toor, Aaliyah Toor, Gurleen Bal; Diya Gill; coach Lucky Toor; assistant Jim Sidhu