In the opening round, held in Langley: …………………………………………………… The top-seeded Chilliwack Unity Christian Flames dusted the 16th-seed Victoria Brookes Westshore Rebels (Gryphons?) 85-45 after leading 22-10, 36-25 and 61-36 at the quarters. Flames coach Dave Bron told Varsity Letters that “we were a little sloppy. I gave them a little wake-up speech in no uncertain terms at halftime and we responded really well in the third quarter. The third quarter has been our best quarter. … It was a great break-in game, a great icebreaker.” Jay Smiens paced the Flames with 26. Levi Van Egdom added 18, Asher Toth 10, Ethan Vrolyk 7, Daxton Vander Kooi 6, Seth Schuurman 6, Evan Bowman 4, Gabe Koot 3, Natanael Haan 2, Lucas Devisser 2 and Ryunosuke Fukumoto 1, while Eli Kingman, Mason Bowman and Tyson Nickel were scoreless. Alex Buhr scored 13 to pace the Rebels (coach Aija Salvador, assistant Michaela Witte). Jack Xu added 11, Coen Salvador Brown 7, Stan Shih 7, Vigo Gamez Soromae 4, Mark Huang 2 and Jackson Jenkins 1, while Cameron Anderson, Hugo Lam, Brandon Bibeau, Kura Shiba, Adam Marmorstein and Seiya Katagiri were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 8th-seeded Smithers Bulkley Valley Christian Royals crushed the 9th-seeded Nanaimo Christian Trail Blazers 89-65 after leading 17-15, 38-36 and 61-52 at the quarters. Royals coach James Horner told Varsity letters that “Our best player sometimes gets all the attention … and when they put the box-and-one on us, we were kind of able to score at will four-on-four. We were happy with our best guy not to touch it and that’s when we went on our good run. It is really nice as a small school to have depth and guys that just want to compete. … Our guys just came out with a lot of energy. We really focused on rebounds and turnovers, that’s what we figured the difference would be and when it came down to it, our guys down low outrebounded and they just worked so hard that second half. I think it was even talent wise, it just came down to our guys working their butts off, so really proud of them.” Paul Jada paced the Royals with 40. David Loki added 20, David Hofsink 12, Malaki Beaubien-Day 4, Thomas Glanz 4, Linden Beredregt 4, Aneer Christopher 3 and Jesse Green 2, while Ethan Grasmeyer, Jake Bandstra, Salim Abu and Matthew Groot were scoreless. Jackson Tonsi scored 35 to pace the Trail Blazers (coach Breanne Quist, assistant Cayle Dillon, assistant Matt Morris). Calvin Vanderkooi added 24, William Johnson 5 and Cole Libbus 1, while Mattias Lindkvist, Ethan Reid, Jonah Yap, Garrett Miller, Jack Nelson, Nat Schmidt, Owen Phillips and Oakley Kempner were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 4th-seeded Fernie Falcons whipped the 13th-seeded Pemberton Red Devils 93-45 after leading 23-10, 48-22 and 72-31 at the quarters. The Falcons exploded to a 15-3 lead and were never threatened. Falcons coach A.J. Kennedy told Varsity Letters that “the kids were excited, they came out and played their game. … We moved the ball really well on offence. Shooting in these kinds of gyms is different for us because we don’t play in these kinds of gyms too often. We got inside and worked our way out.” Bronson Impey paced the Falcons with 17. Jaedon Chorostecki added 16, Diego Grijalva 14, Parker Anselmo 14, Max Hatt 10, Bryson Barr 10, Isaac Anderson 6, Jacob Barr 2, Trey Hobbs 2 and Michael Spoonhunter 2, while Mattias Larson and Cohen Musschoot were scoreless. Oliver Richman scored 25 to lead the Red Devils. Keita Fukuda added 5, Rylee Menzel 5, Adrian Miranda 3, Dylan Brown 3, Zenal Brathwaite-Coutu 2 and Arlo Trand 2, while Joe Cumin, Evan Mares, Eric Hargitt, Tegan Cruz, Sam Ellis and Lennox Davies were scoreless. The Red Devils (coach Mike Richman, assistant Alyssa Richman, athletic director Krista Walden) also included Carmine Sam-Finlay. …………………………………………………… The 5th-seeded Kelowna Christan Knights dispatched the 12th-seeded Fort St. James Falcons 68-51 after leading 20-14, 41-28 and 53-40 at the quarters. The Knights took control with an 8-0 run late in the first quarter. Knights coach Jamie Boreham said his troops were rusty after a two-week layoff. “Slow start for sure, but we got better as the game went on. … I think we tried to break the backboard today with some shots, but we started to figure it out, started to find a bit of rhythm on offence, and our defence picked up in the second half which kind of carried the game for us.” Jack Madden paced the Knights with 19. Sam Calderwood added 11, Matty Sader 11, Dom Platten 11, Ethan Gray 6, William Koopman 4, Adjatay Burke 4 and Jayden Poulin 2, while Jacob Boyd, Jackson Gerber, Michayah Lauman, Sam Cooper, Jonathan Dabrowski and Luke Downie were scoreless. Caiden Olund scored 20 to pace the Falcons (coach Andrew Mulroy, athletic director James Waddell). Tyler McVey added 11, Fritz Hentschel 9, Connor Frederick 8 and Samuel Trebula 3, while Carson Wenger, Dean Kristoffersen, Aaron McVey, Nate Frederick, Connor Frederick, Luke Bird, Cash Martin, Drew Lantz, Michael Walther and Leevi McNeill were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 2nd-seeded Glenlyon-Norfolk Gryphons stomped the 15th-seeded Vanderhoof Northside Christian Northstars 92-32 after leading 22-9, 47-19 and 68-29 at the quarters. Gryphons coach Harvey Thorau told Varsity Letters that player of the game Mason Carlson dominated. “He does a lot of things out there. He takes up space on the inside, he catches the ball, he is verbal with the guys … he’s a stud for us. … Their compete level was up there; they were moving the ball better. It is all about finishing around the rim and the little things. We keep on talking about that all season: do all the little things and the big things will be taken care of.” Mason Carlson paced the Gryphons with 25. Jacob Hier added 13, Callum Shillington 12, Harrison Stark 12, Colin Chen 8, Satchel Ramraj 8, Zach Scott 4, Shun Yamamoto 4, Seth Feldhuhn 3 and Anton Richards 3, while Harry Xu and Bryan Muller-Clemm were scoreless. Marek Durupt scored 15 to pace the Northstars (coach Ian MacLeod, assistant Mark Unger, manager and athletic director Doris Durupt). Caleb Giesbrecht added 6, Noah DeVries 4, Tyler Dyck 3, Raden? Giesbrecht 2 and Derek Giesbrecht 2, while Nolan Dyck, Carson Frey, Salem Birkenstock and Garret Schlamp were scoreless. ……………………………………………………
The 10th-seeded Barriere Cougars edged the 7th-seeded Maple Ridge Meadowridge Gryphons 68-66 on a trey from Spender Schilling with 3.6 seconds to play. Cougars inbounder Brayden York found Schilling in the corner after nothing opened inside. Schilling told Varsity Letters that “I saw (Brayden) and he was looking and looking, and we finally made eye contact and he passed it to me and I just shot it. It was such a surreal moment; I have so much adrenaline right now. I am shaking. This tops it 100 per cent. I have never made a shot like this before.” Cougars coach Travis Repka said ‘all the credit to our in-bounder for not forcing it and finding the open guy. … These guys make me so proud; they keep battling and never quit. We are a smaller team – our biggest guy is our point guard and (Meadowridge) have way more size but we just found a way to grit it out. We are full Ted Lasso with ‘Believe’, that is our mantra: B-Town Believes. (Barriere) is just a town of 2,000 people who love basketball. It always feels good to take down a higher seed first game, especially when you are a little public school and you have to go against these bigger Single-A private schools.” The Gryphons led 21-14 after one quarter and 35-32 at the half. The Cougars led 60-52 after three quarters. Tanner Schilling led the Cougars with 30. Ryan DeFelice added 18, Spencer Schilling 11, Brayden York 7 and Ryan Corrie 2, while Andrew Harris, Cameron Salle, Cohen Hunt, Fraser Schilling, Riley Kempter, Teagan Lawhead, Kaden VanNieuwkerk, Landon Alward and Logan Jones were scoreless. Arjun Hehar scored 29 to pace the Gryphons. Marcus Hui added 16, Zhiar Atthari 12, Carter Germain 6, Joel Ogunremi 2 and Aageel Kassam 1, while Ethan Banack, Cameron Spika, Kelvin Malo, Henson Han, Manny Bains, Andy Xu, Nathan Randhawa and Simer Bains were scoreless. The Gryphons (coach Tomas Oljaca, assistant Rob McCall, assistant Scott Spurgeon) also included Mustafa Ali Shan and John Fry. …………………………………………………… The 3rd-seeded Prince George Cedars Christian Eagles blasted the 14th-seeded Surrey Khalsa Lions 90-44 after leading 22-17, 49-28 and 76-36 at the quarters. Eagles coach Jeff Ludditt told Varsity Letters that “it is a war of attrition. We know if a team stays with us, it is OK, we are going to wear them down eventually. These guys (Khalsa School) battled hard, but I think in the end, if we put enough pressure on them for a long period of time, they’ll usually bend. … Our defence runs us; we feed off that, we feed off steals and we have some good shooters.” Tony Kibonge paced the Eagles with 23. Seth Hulka added 10, Mitch Crosina 11, Ryan Crosina 10, Jake Doerksen 10, Andrew Isaac 5, Zach Wagner 4, Jakob Oliver 4 and Tristan Bartrim 3, while Gabe Taylor and Liam Tiefensee were scoreless. Arman Johal scored 14 to pace the Lions (coach Doug Wong, assistant Matthew Wong, assistant Keenan Wong, manager Dilpreet S Nijjar, statistician Manrag S Nijjar, athletic director Michelle Kelly). Dilbaag Dhillon added 10, Robinjeet Benipar 4, Jasman Sindhar 4, Jarjan Sekhon 4, Mahajot Gill 3, Abhijeet Gill 3 and Gurveer Sidhu 2, while Jashanpreet Singh, Abagyjeet Sing, Ahhimanyu Khanna, Tahjot Sekhon, Jurraj Grewal and Manvir Bal were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 11th-seeded Kelowna Aberdeen Hall Gryphons nipped the 6th-seeded Vancouver King David Lions 80-76 after leading 17-9, 34-29 and 58-49 at the quarters. Gryphons coach Michael Hooper told Varsity Letters that “I just told the boys to enjoy every step and play with intensity and let the chips fall wherever they fall. … For us, getting here was huge. We have been close but there is a lot of good basketball in the Okanagan and it is tough to get out of there in the past few years. This is seven years of coaching and not getting to the tournament, so it felt really good to get here. (And to win), this is the icing on the cake. … They played our brand of basketball: moved the ball well and played with some confidence. We are pretty athletic, move the ball up and down the court and play hard ‘D’.” Liam Ozechowski paced the Gryphons with 21. Andrew Isa added 17, Raajin Hoonian 15, Cole Steele 14, Josh Kostek 8 and Kyler Assam 5, while Maxwell Hager, Wilson Cheung, Matthew Hill-Turner, Soren Crumb, Milan Bertolutti, Luka Louw and Nicholas Jackson were scoreless. Arel Steen led the Lions with 25. Jesse Millman added 16, Ari Altow 14, Ezra Heayie 11, Kristian Galazka 5, Micah Sacks 3 and Max Forman 2, while Chad Beron, Leo Kallner, Paul Zychkinski, Chase Dodek, Ethan Dreyshner were scoreless. Noah Bakonyi and Oliver Kraft were scratched (injury?). The Lions (coach David Amram, assistant Matt Dichter, assistant Sebastien Martimbault) also included Sidney Tolensky and Joseph Gabay.
In the quarterfinals, the top-seeded Chilliwack Unity Christian Flames clocked the 8th-seeded Smithers Bulkley Valley Royals 96-57 after leading 18-11, 55-29 and 81-44 at the quarters. The Flames took command with a 25-3 first-half run as they pushed the tempo and began garnering turnovers off their pressure. Flames coach David Bron told Varsity Letters that “they are a fun bunch when they get going like that. We are a deep team and If we run eight, nine deep, we can keep pushing the tempo. … Our defensive intensity was so much better (today). We enjoyed playing defence today and we really owned it. I think we feed off that and then it’s fast breaks, it’s open shots. Our team is fairly offensive-minded, if we can focus on the defensive end, then it comes.” Jay Smeins paced the Flames with 21. Levi Van Egdom added 17, Asher Toth 12, Evan Bowman 10, Daxton Vander Kooi 9, Ethan Vrolyk 8, Seth Schuurman 7, Eli Kingma 4, Natanael Haan 2, Ryunosuke Fukumoto 2, Gabe Koot 2 and Mason Bowman 2, while Tyson Nickel and Lucas Devisser were scoreless. David Loki scored 15 to pace the Royals (coach James Horner, assistant Chris Steenhof, manager Heidi Horner, trainer Mike Bandstra). Jesse Green added 11, David Hofsink 11, Paul Jada 10, Jake Bandstra 5, Ethan Grasmeyer 3 and Thomas Glanz 2, while Malakai Beaubien-Day, Aneer Christopher, Salim Abu, Matthew Groot and Linden Beredregt were scoreless.
The 4th-seeded Fernie Falcons smacked the 5th-seeded Kelowna Christian Knights 90-39. The Falcons broke to a 25-7 lead and romped. Falcons coach A.J. Kennedy told Varsity Letters that “they have put their nose to the grindstone and put the work in. They deserved this. … We played really well as a group. Our defence today was cleaner, limited the fouls, which helps out a lot and usually when your defence is playing well, your offence starts clicking.” Max Hatt paced the Falcons with 21. Michael Spoonhunter added 19, Diego Grijalva 17, Parker Anselmo 12, Trey Hobbs 6, Issac Anderson 4, Bronson Impey 4, Jaedon Chorostecki 3, Jacob Barr 2 and Mattias Larsen 2, while Bryson Barr and Cohen Musschoot were scoreless. Ethan Gray scored 11 to pace the Knights (coach Jamie Boreham, assistant Eric Gray, assistant Sara Gray, assistant Tanya Gray, assistant Tim Martens, assistant Elijah Francis). Jack Madden added 10, Dom Platten 5, Sam Calderwood 5, William Koopman 4, Adjatay Burke 3 and Matty Sader 1, while Jacob Boyd, Jackson Gerber, Michayah Lauman, Sam Cooper, Jonathan Dabrowski, Jaydyn Poulin and Luke Downie were scoreless.
The 2nd-seeded Victoria Glenlyon-Norfolk Gryphons stomped the 10th-seeded Barriere Cougars 74-44 after leading 24-10, 43-23 and 54-38 at the quarters. The Gryphons opened with an 18-1 run as their taller front-line quickly took command. Gryphons coach Harvey Thorau told Varsity Letters that “we had a lull in the third where scoring was a little difficult because we weren’t doing what we should have been doing in the middle of the key, but I was proud of their efforts: they took charges, they moved the ball, they were communicating. It is coming together.” Mason Carlson paced the Gryphons with 20. Satchel Ramraj added 14, Callum Shillington 9, Colin Chen 8, Zach Scott 7, Jacob Hier 5, Shunkichi Yamamoto 3, Harrison Stark 3, Anton Richards 3 and Seth Feldhuhn 2, while Harry Xu and Bryan Muller-Clemm were scoreless. Tanner Schilling scored 12 to pace the Cougars (coach Travis Repka, assistant Cam Kerslake, assistant Tyson Schilling, assistant Casey Brouwer, videographer Robin Schilling). Ryan DeFelice added 12, Brayden York 9, Spencer Schilling 5, Cameron Salle 4 and Cohen Hunt 2, while Andrew Harris, Ryan Corrie, Fraser Schilling, Riley Kempter, Teagan Lawhead, Kaden VanNieuwkerk, Landon Alward and Logan Jones were scoreless.
In the last quarterfinal, the 3rd-seeded Prince George Cedars Chrisian Eagles dispatched the 11th-seeded Kelowna Aberdeen Hall Gryphons 91-82 after leading 25-18, 42-41 and 70-60 at the quarters. Eagles coach Jeff Ludditt told Varsity Letters that his troops kept their poise and patience after falling behind 10-1 at the start. “We took their punch, but we battled back and kept playing our game. We knew it would take over eventually and it did.” Tony Kibonge paced the Eagles with 29. Mitch Crosina added 24, Seth Hulka 24, Jakob Oliver 9, Andrew Isaac 2, Jake Doerksen 2 and Ryan Crosina 1, while Gabe Taylor, Zach Wagner, Liam Tiefensee and Tristan Bartrim were scoreless. Kyler Assam paced the Gryphons with 26. Cole Steele added 18, Josh Kostek 14, Raajin Hoonjan 13, Andrew Isa 6, Liam Ozechowski 3 and Milan Bertolutti 2, while Maxwell Hager, Wilson Cheung, Matthew Hill-Turner, Soren Crumb, Luka Louw, Nicholas Jackson were scoreless. The Gryphons (coach Michael Hooper, assistant Akasha Bopp, manager Hugo Liao, athletic director John Gareau) also included Tristan Morris.
In the semis, the top-seeded Chilliwack Unity Christian Flames torched the 4th-seeded Fernie Falcons 91-67 after leading 22-18, 43-31 and 67-44 at the quarters. The Flames bridged the first and second quarters with a decisive 17-1 run. Flames coach Dave Bron told Varsity Letters that “it went well. It went our way. The key for us was just staying disciplined. It’s five basic things – keep your hands up, box out, those kind of things. It paid off today. We were able to get to a point where we could roll eight or nine deep in our lineup and shots just started falling. … I know they can score, but as a coach, it was just awesome to see the work they did on the defensive end. Getting in lanes, blocking shots, just being disruptive. It was great.” Levi Van Egdom paced the Flames with 24. Seth Schuurman added 20, Daxton Vander Kooi 15, Ethan Vrolyk 11, Asher Toth 9, Evan Bowman 6 and Jay Smeins 6, while Natanael Haan, Eli Kingma, Ryunosuke Fukumoto, Mason Bowman, Tyson Nickel and Lucas Devisser were scoreless. The Flames hit 29-63 (.460) from the floor, 9-22 (.409) from the arc and 24-37 (.649) from the line, while garnering 42 boards, including 7 on the offensive glass, 24 fouls, 11 assists, 11 turnovers and 8 steals. Bronson Impey paced the Falcons with 13. Isaac Anderson added 12, Jaedon Chorostecki 9, Bryson Barr 7, Max Hatt 6, A Stucky 6, Parker Anselmo 5, Mattias Larsen 5, Diego Grijalva 2 and Jacob Barr 2, while Trey Hobbs and Cohen Musschoot were scoreless. The Falcons hit 22-66 (.333) from the floor, 7-33 (.212) from the arc and 16-25 (.640) from the line, while garnering 38 boards, including 15 on the offensive glass, 31 fouls, 3 assists, 15 turnovers, 1 block and 7 steals.
In the other semi, the 2nd-seeded Victoria Glenlyon-Norfolk Gryphons edged the 3rd-seeded Prince George Cedars Christian Eagles 91-89. The Eagles led 30-21 after one quarter. The score was knotted at 51 at the half. The Gryphons led 68-65 after three quarters. The tight contest featured several lead changes and came down to the wire. The Gryphons took an 88-83 lead on back-to-back buckets from Mason Carlson and Callum Shillington with 12 seconds to play. But Mitch Crosina notched a catch-and-shoot trey to draw the Eagles within striking distance. Gryphons guard Satchel Ramraz countered with a pair of free throws. Jake Oliver answered with a bomb before Carlson iced it by hitting 1-2 from the line. Gryphons coach Harvey Thorau told Varsity Letters that “I keep bringing up the 2018-19 team. They lost in double overtime in this semifinal round, and man, that was tough. So all year, we’ve talked about keeping composure, and keeping the mental part of the game in check. Honestly, we didn’t do a great job of that, but we did enough physically to make it work. They [the Eagles] are smaller, but they’re so quick on the outside and have some excellent shooters.” Mason Carlson paced the Gryphons with 33, while nabbing 15 boards. Jacob Hier added 20, along with 12 boards, Callum Shillington 18, along with 16 boards, Satchel Ramraj 8, Zach Scott 4, Harrison Stark 4, Colin Chen 2 and Seth Feldhuhn 2, while Shunkichi Yamamoto and Harry Xu were scoreless. The Gryphons hit 37-80 (.463) from the floor, 0-8 from the arc and 17-34 from the line, while garnering 55 boards, including 24 on the offensive glass, 28 fouls, 14 assists, 23 turnovers, 2 blocks and 8 steals. Mitch Crosina paced the Eagles with 26. Tony Kibonge added 26, Jakob Oliver 13, Seth Hulka 10, Ryan Crosina 10 and Jake Doerksen 4, while Gabe Taylor, Zach Wagner and Liam Tiefensee were scoreless. The Eagles hit 32-68 (.471) from the floor, 5-17 (.294) from the arc and 20-32 (.625) from the line, while garnering 23 boards, including 6 on the offensive glass, 22 fouls, 6 assists, 16 turnovers, 2 blocks and 10 steals.
In the bronze medal match, the 3rd-seeded Prince George Cedars Christian Eagles nipped the 4th-seeded Fernie Falcons 70-69. Mitch Crosina paced the Eagles with 23. Tony Kibonge added 20, defensive player of the tournament Seth Hulka 15, Jake Doerksen 6, Zach Wagner 5 and Ryan Crosina 3, while Gabe Taylor, Liam Tifensee, Tristan Bartrim, Andrew Isaac and Jakob Oliver were scoreless. Max Hatt paced the Falcons with 20. Deigo Grijalva added 13, Bronson Impey 9, Jaedon Chorostecki 7, Isaac Anderson 6, Michael Spoonhunter 4, Parker Anselmo 3, Trey Hobbs 3 and Bryson Barr 3, while Jacob Barr, Mattias Larsen and Cohen Musschoot were scoreless. The Falcons (coach A.J. Kennedy, assistant Ian Johnson, athletic director Meghan Coultry) also included A Stucky.
In the final, the top-seeded Chilliwack Unity Christian Flames captured their second consecutive title by defeating the 2nd-seeded Victoria Glenlyon Norfolk Gryphons 89-71. The Gryphons led 21-13 after one quarter. The Flames led 50-31 at the half and 74-52 after three quarters. The Flames took command with a dominant second quarter after a sluggish start, notching a 23-4 run. They led by as many as 26. Flames coach Dave Bron said “we had to be mentally tough when we went down. But we just had to lean into that advantage. All season, we practiced playing up-tempo, good hard switching-D, pressing, and eventually the other team gets gassed.” Bron told Varsity Letters that the team’s motto was to “play fast, treat the ball like gold, and play gutsy defence.” Van Egdom said “our coaches have always had faith in us. They told us that we were going to be the next team competing for the provincial championships.” Bron said “we had a lot of things go our way. We wouldn’t have repeated (in 2021). That was Fernie’s year. They were going to be heavy favourites. But we have three good club programs out here, our boys bought in, and they grinded it out for a year. They put in their work. … We couldn’t get supervision for morning shoots so Levi and (guard) Seth (Schuurman) organized parents and teachers to come in early, just so the team could shoot. … We have a few big bodies so we are able to deal with size. And we had a lot of guys that were putting in work so we had guards that we could just roll.” Tournament MVP and player of the game Levi Van Egdom paced the Flames with 35 on 14-30 from the floor, 3-12 from the arc, 4-6 from the line, 5 boards and 4 steals. Seth Schuurman scored 15 on 6-11 from the floor, 3-5 from the arc, 0-1 from the line, 8 boards, 2 assists and 3 steals. Jay Smeins added 13 on 6-11 from the floor, 1-4 from the arc and 4 boards. Asher Toth notched 10 on 4-11 from the floor, 0-3 from the arc, 2-2 from the line, 8 boards, 2 assists and 2 steals. Daxton Vander Kooi added 8 on 3-11 from the floor, 0-4 form the arc, 2-8 from the line, 7 boards, 2 assists and 3 steals. Evan Bowman scored 6 on 3-6 from the floor and 3 boards. Ethan Vrolyk added 2 on 0-1 from the floor, 2-4 from the line and 6 boards, while Natanael Haan, Eli Kingma, Ryunosuke Fukumoto, Gabe Koot, Mason Bowman, Tyson Nickel and Lucas Devisser were scoreless. Haan nabbed 2 boards. The Flames hit 36-81 (.444) from the floor, 7-28 from the arc and 10-21 (.476) from the line, while garnering 43 boards, including 19 on the offensive glass, 16 fouls, 8 assists, 8 turnovers, 1 block and 14 steals. Callum Shillington paced the Gryphons with 21 on 8-18 from the floor, 2-4 from the arc, 3-5 from the line, 7 boards, 3 assists and 2 steals. Mason Carlson added 17 on 8-15 from the floor, 1-3 from the line and 4 boards. Jacob Heir notched 12 on 5-8 from the floor, 1-3 from the arc, 1-2 from the line and 13 boards. Harrison Stark scored 8 on 4-8 from the floor and 4 boards. Zach Scott added 7 on 2-5 from the floor, 2-4 from the arc, 1-2 form the line and 5 boards. Satchel Ramraj scored 6 on 2-10 from the floor, 0-5 from the arc and 2-2 from the line, while Colin Chen, Seth Feldhuhn, Harry Xu and Anton Richards were scoreless. Richards nabbed 3 boards. The Gryphons hit 29-67 (.433) from the floor, 5-16 (.313) from the arc and 8-19 (.421) from the line, while garnering 39 boards, including 12 on the offensive glass, 16 fouls, 7 assists, 18 turnovers, 3 blocks and 5 steals.
The all-tournament team featured MVP Levi Van Egdom (Unity Christian); Seth Schuurman (Unity Christian); Jay Smeins (Unity Christian); Mason Carlson (Glenlyon-Norfolk); Asher Toth (Unity Christian); and Mitch Crosina (Cedars Christian).
The 2nd-team featured Callum Shillington (Glenlyon-Norfolk); Evan Bowman (Unity Christian); David Loki (Bulkley Valley); Diego Grijalva (Fernie); and Tony Kibonge (Cedars Christian).
The bronze medalist Prince George Cedars Christian Eagles: Ryan Crosina; Gabe Taylor; Mitch Crosina; Zach Wagner; Seth Hulka; Liam Tiefensee; Tristan Bartrim; Andrew Isaac; Tony Kibonge; Jakob Oliver; Jake Doerksen; coach Jeff Ludditt; assistant Frank Crosina; manager Dany Tekeng; athletic director Steve Wilson
The silver medalist Victoria Glenlyon-Norfolk Gryphons: Colin Chen; Satchel Ramraj; Callum Shillington; Jacob Hier; Zach Scott; Shunkichi Yamamoto; Mason Carlson; Harrison Stark; Seth Feldhuhn; Harry Xu; Anton Richards; Bryan Muller-Clemm; coach Harvey Thorau; coach Steve King; manager Minh Phu Truong; manager Nathan Fourt
The gold medalist Chilliwack Unity Christian Flames: Levi Van Egdom; Asher Toth; Daxton Vander Kooi; Natanael Haan; Eli Kingma; Ethan Vrolyk; Seth Schuurman; Evan Bowman; Ryunosuke Fukumoto; Gabe Koot; Mason Bowman; Tyson Nickel; Jay Smeins; Lucas Devisser; coach Dave Bron; assistant Matt Van Muyen; assistant Noah Klassen; athletic director Dwayne Hansen