In the opening seeding round, held in Welland: …………………………………………………… The top-seeded Welland Confederation Jaguars dusted the 11th-seeded Rainy River Owls 55-25 after leading 18-0, 28-11 and 36-17 at the quarters. Kaitlyn McPherson paced Confederation with 11. Melissa Cianflone added 11, Courtney McPherson 9, Hailey Kenworthy 6, Natasha Patel 6, Nicole Marion 4, Chantel Henri 2, K Boutin-Miller 2, T Blanchard 2 and Noella Iradukunda 2. Kaylee Heyens paced Rainy River with 11. Chelsey Brown added 7, Courtney Hansen 5 and J Anderson 2. After taking an 18-0 lead into the second quarter before allowing a point and substituting freely to start in the opening half, the Jaguars cruised to the easy win. Confederation dominated play on both sides of the ball, with four steals on defence resulting in a gift of eight points in the first half alone, but head coach Ron Marion wasn’t completely satisfied with the way his reigning gold medalists began the tournament. “They lacked intensity at times. I’m not too happy about that. We need to elevate our game, because I know we’re capable of a whole lot more.” He couldn’t say whether the start was because of “opening-game jitters” or letting Rainy River set the pace once victory was assured for his veteran squad. “I want to see intensity, no matter who the opposition is,” said Marion. For Jaguars forward Melissa Cianflone, there is a “big difference” playing in the provincial finals as the defending champions. “There’s a lot more pressure on us. Last year we went in and no one knew who we were, but all the teams are looking at us at this tournament. That kind of pressure is good, it’s motivation to play hard.” …………………………………………………… The 6th-seeded North Bay Algonquin Barons defeated the 16th-seeded Barrie E.S. Catholique Nouvelle-Alliance Les Tornades 44-38 after leading 5-4, 21-7 and 34-26 at the quarters. Shannon Jerome paced Algonquin with 10. Natalie Dupuis added 9, Shayla Lamoureux 8, Emilie Goulet 7, Stephanie Hunt 4 and Emily Kraft 2. Rebecca Alize-Minty led Nouvelle-Alliance with 15. Cirakea Kappel added 9, N Desjardins 6, Melissa Ayotte 4 and K Lawson 2. …………………………………………………… The 3rd-seeded St. Catharines Ridley College Tigers crushed the 9th-seeded Windsor John L. Forster Spartans 44-32 after leading 16-6, 27-12 and 33-27 at the quarters. Charlotte Clarke, LeAndrea Armbrister and Ainsley Camroux-Peacock each scored 9 to lead Ridley. Laura Vorgtlander added 8, Franziska Streit 5, Elizabeth Allison 2 and Emma Rigg 2. Jasmyn Good paced Forster with 17. Jimicia Brand added 9, Alexandra Dennie 4 and Emily Lemieux 2. …………………………………………………… The 8th-seeded Ottawa Elmwood Eagles crushed the 14th-seeded Toronto Runnymede Ravens 48-21 after leading 16-2, 28-9 and 42-16 at the quarters. Jaran Lewars paced the Eagles with 19. Julia Clark added 11, Samantha Peters 8, Courtney Peters 6 and Julie Caragianias 2. Brittania Brown paced Runnymede with 9. Robyn Burns added 3, Fatumatta Seebi 2, Numa Seebi 2, Chanel Tat 2, Melissa Buchanan 2, Anna-Kay Hyatt 2 and Kadijah Smith 2. …………………………………………………… The 2nd-seeded Elgin Rideau District Lions crushed the 12th-seeded Parkhill North Middlesex Marauders 48-28 after leading 20-6, 34-12 and 42-16 at the quarters. Brooke Kelly paced Rideau with 19. Tessa Morris added 10, Louise Harvey 8, Maddy Morris 7, Meg Morris 3 and Becca Elliot 1. Kristen Bullock led North Middlesex with 10. Brayden Lisiecki added 6, Rachel Cunningham 6, Nicole Bullock 4 and Katelyn Hochanhka 2. “I had everybody in the game in the first quarter,” said coach Ron Stenzl. “We started running different offences. I drew up plays we’ve never run before and let (scouts) try to figure out what we were trying to do. We just want to go with an up-tempo style and we came out with that same mindset we did at EOSSAA. We just came at them.” Stenzl said it was apparent very early in the game that Rideau’s strength wasn’t going to be challenged and within the first four minutes had a 15-point lead. “We hit our first six shots, three of them three-pointers,” said Stenzl. “It looked like they had a young team, an up-and-coming team. We’re healthy, we’re happy, we’re playing an up-tempo style everybody feels very comfortable with.” North Middlesex coach Bill Thomson said “we didn’t play very well at the start — I think the nerves got to them. They played better in the fourth quarter and I think we’ll be all right because the girls are a bit more confident in themselves after playing that better fourth quarter.” …………………………………………………… The 5th-seeded Sudbury Ecole Secondaire du Sacre-Coeur Griffons whipped the 15th-seeded Walkerton Raiders 43-7 after leading 13-2, 23-6 and 35-6 at the quarters. Emily Tymchuk paced Sacre-Coeur with 10. Isabelle Giroux added 9, Chantal McMahon 9, Larissa Rivard 8, Alexie Michaud 3 and Meagan McCullagh 2. Megan Lamont led Walkerton with 3. Jessica Geense added 2, Bethany Aubrey 1 and Rebecca Scott 1. The Griffons held the Raiders to just a single second-half point. The Griffons, returning to the all-Ontario playdowns for the second time in as many years, looked solid through two quarters, building up a 23-6 lead before outscoring the Raiders 20-1 in quarters three and four. …………………………………………………… The 10th-seeded Vankleek Hill Collegiate nipped the 4th-seeded Kapuskasing District Kolts 27-26. Kapuskasing led 4-0, 10-9 and 18-15 at the quarters. Liz Tuner paced Vankleek Hill with 10. Megan MacCallum added 7, Trisha Overvest 4, Bailey Hughes 2, Annie Allen 2 and Becky Allen 2. Courtney Barbour led the Kolts with 11. Julia Rankumar added 8, Cristy Vos 5 and Leslie Clatworthy 2. ………………………………………………… The 7th-seeded Welland Jean-Vanier Lynx defeated the 13th-seeded Oakville King’s Christian Collegiate Cavaliers 40-33 after leading 10-2, 21-7 and 27-20 at the quarters. Mel Tanguay led Jean-Vanier with 15. Sarah Dillon added 8, Brooke Murdoch 6, Sonia Giroux 4, Dallas Tanguay 2, Chelsea Leveille 2 and Mela Michaud 1. Tori Odefude led the Cavaliers with 16. Charity Novoselac added 7, Amber Scheuk 5, Katy Moes 3 and Alice Song 2. After King’s Christian College from Oakville only made two baskets in the opening half, Jean Vanier’s production was nearly as paltry the rest of way. The Lynx, comfortably ahead 21-7 at the half, netted only eight points from the floor after switching ends. Fortunately, Vanier had Melanie Tanguay’s sure-fire success from the free-throw line. While the Lynx missed at least eight sure-fire baskets as they anxiously watched a 14-point cushion deflate to two with four minutes remaining in the game, Tanguay went 8-10 in free throws in the final quarter. “I think we started panicking when they started scoring and we couldn’t. There was definitely a lid on that basket,” a happy and relieved Tanguay said. “Today was all about getting the nerves out. This was our first game at OFSAA and we were a little nervous.” Assistant coach Tricia Poulin conceded the pace sometimes was off as was the shooting after a high-scoring first half. “Sometimes, they lack patience. They need to slow down, but they’re athletes. They make mistakes. No worries.”
In the second round: …………………………………………………… The 6th-seeded Algonquin Barons defeated the 11th-seeded Rainy River Owls 33-25 after leading 9-3, 19-9 and 26-17 at the quarters. Shayla Lamoureux paced the Barons with 8. Morgan Wardell added 6, Whitney Miller 5, Emilie Goulet 4, Natalie Dupuis 4, Franceska Tremblay 2, Stephanie Hunt 2 and Emily Kraft 2. Kaylee Heyens led Rainy River with 13. Courtney Hansen added 5, Chelsey Brown 4, Rylee Mowe 2 and Andrey Chojko-Bolec 1. …………………………………………………… The 3rd-seeded St. Catharines Ridley College Tigers clipped the 14th-seeded Toronto Runnymede Ravens 63-29 after leading 14-10, 34-20 and 55-25 at the quarters. Ainsley Camroux-Peacock led Ridley with 17. Laura Voigtlander added 8, Charlotte Clarke 3, Franziska Streit 3, Leandrea Armbrister 2 and Emma Rigg 1. Brittania Brown led Runnymede with 15. Melissa Buchanan added 2, Robyn Burns 2 and Quynh Chau 1. …………………………………………………… The top-seeded Welland Confederation Jaguars clubbed the 16th-seeded Barrie E.S. Catholique Nouvelle-Alliance Les Tornades 48-21 after leading 18-0, 22-9 and 34-12 at the quarters. Courtney McPherson paced the Jaguars with 14. Danielle Marion added 23, Courtney McPherson 6, Nicole Marion 6, Hailey Kenworthy 6, Melissa Cianflone 4 and Kaitlyn McPherson 4. Rebecca Alize-Minty led the Tornades with 7. Coralea Kappel added 5, Rosemarie Conway 4, Nikki Blackall 3 and Melissa Ayotte 2. …………………………………………………… The 8th-seeded Ottawa Elmwood Eagles nipped the 9th-seeded Windsor John L. Forster Spartans 38-37 despite trailing 11-8, 23-19 and 28-22 at the quarters. Janan Lewars paced the Eagles with 14. Julia Cork added 12, Courtney Peters 7 and Catherine Bergeron 5. Jazmyn Good led the Spartans (coached by Des-reen Burnett Curry) with 15. Britney Browning-Poho added 6, Jimicia Brand 6, Alexandra Dennie 5 and Cindy Keo 5. …………………………………………………… The 2nd-seeded Elgin Rideau District Lions clubbed the 15th-seeded Walkerton Raiders 62-13 after leading 18-2, 37-2 and 45-6 at the quarters. Tessa Morris led the Lions with 16. Brooke Kelly added 11, Madeline Morris 8, Avalon Olesen 7, Ashley Hartin 7, Meg Morris 4, Katelyn Truyens 4, Louise Harvey 3 and Becca Elliott 2. Katherina Garland paced Walkerton with 4. Justine Gayman added 3, Taylor Gray 3, Megan Lamont 2 and Kaeley Hanna 2. …………………………………………………… The 7th-seeded Welland Jean-Vanier Lynx dumped the 4th-seeded Kapuskasing District Kolts 33-22. The score was knotted at 2 after one quarter. Jean Vanier led 14-7 at the half and 23-14 after three quarters. Brooke-Lyn Murdoch led Jean-Vanier with 11. Melanie Tanguay added 9, Sarah Dillon 7, Tori Badaway 3, Dallas Tanguay 2 and Tori Belleville 1. Leslie-Anne Clatworthy notched 6 for the Kolts, as did Julie Ramkumar. Marisa Petrovic added 4, Christy Vos 3 and Michey Heon 3. “We told each other before the tournament that we’re not a ‘consolation team.’ We’re going for it, we want to place,” assistant coach Tricia Poulin said. “There’s a reason we were ranked among the top eight and we showed it today. The girls realized what they need to do to play at this level,” agreed head coach Tara Poulin. While Dillon, her ankle tightly taped and cushioned by a hard brace, played only sparingly and not at all in the fourth quarter, the Grade 10 student said she was determined to play “if I could,” suggesting that the pain of not playing would hurt more than the ankle. I was hoping that it wouldn’t hurt as much when I woke up this morning. I really wanted to play because this is OFSAA. I’m only in Grade 10, but you never know. This might be the last chance I get.” …………………………………………………… The 5th-seeded Sudbury Bay Ecole Secondaire du Sacre-Coeur Griffons dusted the 12th-seeded Parkhill North Middlesex Marauders 34-16 after leading 10-6, 24-7 and 32-8 at the quarters. Emily Tynchuk paced the Griffons with 20. Isabelle Giroux added 6, Chantal McMahon 4, Alexie Michaud 2 and Larissa Rivard 2. Nicole Bullock led the Marauders with 6. Brayden Lisiecki added 4, Kristen Bullock 4 and Katelyn Hochachka 2. …………………………………………………… The 10th-seeded Van Kleek Hill District Warriors defeated the 13th-seeded Oakville King’s Christian Collegiate Cavaliers 40-31 after leading 11-9, 19-15 and 26-20 at the quarters. Magan MacCallum led Van Kleek Hill with 16. Elizabeth Turner added 14, Rebecca Allen 8, Trisha Overvest 2 and Andrea Allen 1. Adetoriala Odetunde paced the Cavaliers with 13. Alice Song added 8, Katy Moes 4, Marya Van Beilen 4 and Sarah Skelding 2.
In the quarterfinals, the 3rd-seeded St. Catharines Ridley College Tigers crushed the 6th-seeded Algonquin Barons 42-24 after leading 9-6, 29-10 and 41-13 at the quarters. Ainsley Camroux-Peacock paced the Tigers with 22. Laura Voigtlander added 7, LeAndrea Armbrister 4, Franziska Streit 3, Elizabeth Allison 3 and Charlotte Clarke 2. Shayla Lamoureux paced Algonquin with 9. Franceska Trenblay added 4, Emily Kraft 4, Emilie Goulet 3, Shannon Jerome 3 and Natalie Dupuis 1.
The top-seeded Welland Confederation Jaguars clubbed the 8th-seeded Ottawa Elmwood Eagles 59-38 after leading 12-10, 36-15 and 47-28 at the quarters. Courtney McPherson, Danielle Marion and Kaitlyn McPherson each scored 12 to pace the Jaguars. Nicole Marion added 10, Hailey Kenworthy 4, Natasha Patel 3, Chantal Henri 2, Noella Iradukunda 2 and Melissa Cianflone 2. Julia Cork, Janan Lewars and Courtney Peters each scored 8 to pace the Eagles. Catherine Bergeron added 4, Juliet Caragianis 4 and Samantha Peters 4. “The girls have just been getting better and better. I think everybody knows this is it for this team. We’ve already won it, so we know we can do it again,” coach Ron Marion said.
The 2nd-seeded Elgin Rideau District Lions dumped the 7th-seeded Welland Jean-Vanier Lynx 53-43. The Lions led 13-11 after one quarter, trailed 26-25 at the half and led 43-35 after three quarters. Brooke Kelly paced Rideau with 25. Meg Morris added 11, Tess Morris 8, Maddie Morris 8 and Louise Harvey 1. Sarah Dillon led Jean-Vanier with 15. Brooke Murdoch added 9, Melanie Tanguay 9, Tori Badaway 6, Sonia Giroux 2 and Robyn Molnar 2. Jean Vanier came out strong and had the Lions on the ropes during the first half. “They came out hard on us,” said Lions coach Ron Stenzl. “They had a pretty good game plan. They came out ready to play and they jumped on us.” When Jean-Vanier jumped out to an early 9-2 lead, Stenzl knew it was time to take a timeout. “I had to call a timeout to settle the girls down” he said, adding that the club responded in the second quarter and trailed by just one point heading into the second half. We made some adjustments … offensively we had to change it up a lot because they figured out what we were doing.” Stenzl said Louise Harvey shut down the opposition’s top scorer in the second half.
In the last quarterfinal, the 5th-seeded Sudbury Ecole Secondaire du Sacre-Coeur Griffons clipped the 10th-seeded Vankleek District x 53-39 after leading 11-5, 22-11 and 34-23 at the quarters. Chantal McMahon paced the Griffons with 21. Larissa Rivard added 12, Emily Tymchuk 12 and Isabelle Giroux 8. Magan MacCullum led Vankleek with 20. Elizabeth Turner added 13, Rebecca Allen 4 and Trisha Overvest 2.
In the semis, the 2nd-seeded Elgin Rideau District Lions edged the 3rd-seeded St. Catharines Ridley College Tigers 48-42 after leading 12-5, 23-12 and 32-27 at the quarters. Tessa Morris led the Lions with 14. Brooke Kelly added 12, Madeline Morris 9, Louise Harvey 8 and Meg Morris 5. Ainsley Camroux-Peacock paced the Tigers with 21. Emma Rigg added 7, Franziska Streit 4, LeAndrea Armbrister 5 and Laura Voigtlander 4. The Lions led by 11 at halftime and hung on for the win.
In the other semi, the top-seeded Welland Confederation Jaguars dumped the 5th-seeded North Bay Ecole Secondaire du Sacre-Coeur Griffons 35-24 after leading 15-12, 23-16 and 33-22 at the quarters. Nicole Marion led the Jaguars with 8. Courtney McPherson added 8, Chantal Henri 7, Danielle Marion 6 and Kaitlyn McPherson 6. Emily Tymchuk paced the Griffons with 10. Chantal McMahon added 8, Larissa Rivard 6 and Isabelle Giroux 2.
In the bronze medal game, the 3rd-seeded St. Catharines Ridley College Tigers edged the 5th-seeded Sudbury Ecole Secondaire du Sacre-Coeur Griffons 31-31 after leading 14-2, 20-13 and 24-20 at the quarters. Ainsley Camroux-Peacock notched the winner on a buzzer beater. Ainsley Camroux-Peacock paced the Tigers with 18. Laura Voigtlander added 22, Franziska Streit 4, Charlotte Clarke 2, Emma Rigg 1 and LeAndra Armbrister 1. Chantal McMachon paced Sacre-Coeur with 14. Emily Tymchuk added 9, Larissa Rivard 6, Stephanie Leduc 1 and Isabelle Giroux 1. Trailing 31-28 with under a minute to play, veteran Tiger and Co-Captain Charlotte Clarke stole the ball at mid-court and ran the rest of the way down the court for an uncontested layup that brought Ridley within one point. Two missed foul shots by Sacre-Coeur post player Emily Tymchuk and a good box-out by Ridley gave Tiger Head Coach D.C. Whitty the opportunity to call his final timeout with 14.1 seconds remaining. Ridley Co-Captain Ainsley Camroux-Peacock drove down the floor and missed her initial jump shot but, with less than 3 seconds remaining on the game-clock, she managed to get her own rebound and connect on an off-balance jump shot from just inside the arc. “If I would have said we would be playing for a bronze medal at OFSAA at the start of the year, people would have called me crazy,” noted Griffons’ coach Justin Brogden. “We accomplished so much this season. This game is about the journey, about the growth of a person’s character, through competition and team work. I got to sit and watch a team live success and suffer in loss, but through it all they grew.”
In the final, the top-seeded Welland Confederation Jaguars nipped the 2nd-seeded Elgin Rideau District Lions 35-33 in overtime to capture their second consecutive title. The Jaguars led 8-7 after one quarter. The Lions led 20-16 at the half and 24-22 after three quarters. Courtney McPherson and Kaitlyn McPherson each scored 9 to lead the Jaguars. Danielle Marion added 8, Nicole Marion 5 and Chantal Henri 4. Tessa Morris paced the Lions with 15. Brooke Kelly added 8, Louise Harvey 8 and Madeline Morris 2. With 17 seconds left in regulation and the defensive battle deadlocked 30-all, the Lions were on the line but one free throw from taking the lead and, perhaps, the gold. Though Rideau didn’t make the shot, leaving the game tied, the Lions got the ball back after Confederation was called for travelling. Rideau District tried to end the drama with a buzzer beater but it was Courtney McPherson who wound up ending the drama with a rebound on defence for the Jaguars that sent the game into overtime. In the extra frame, it was Rideau demonstrating the glitz, draining a three-pointer to open the scoring, but Confederation held onto the gold with its grit on both sides of the ball. All but two of the Jaguars’ hard-earned points came on the free-throw line after drawing fouls inside heavy traffic under the basket. McPherson came down with two rebounds that kept the ball away from the Lions, all night the hotter of the two teams in terms of shooting. Ron Marion’s conviction that strong defence is crucial to winning on the court and the Welland attorney’s unflinching confidence that Confederation’s defence was more than strong enough to make up for an off night on offence was one of the keys to victory. “The coach (Marion) kept telling us we already had the silver in our pockets, so the pressure was on all on them to take the gold. We just had to believe and keep our focus,” said Courtney McPherson, who came down with two momentum-shifting defensive rebounds for Confederation late in overtime and netted nine points to share the team lead in scoring with older sister Kaitlyn. Chantal Henri, whose strong play on defence and on the point in four minutes of nail-biting overtime also kept the ball out of the hands of Rideau’s sure-handed shooters, likewise found her coach’s confidence in the team’s ability to battle back from adversity infectious – especially when the Jaguars trailed 20-16 at halftime and had yet to find their shooting eye. “I just said ‘We just need a couple of threes and we’re right back in it’,” a relieved Henri said. “It’s frustrating when you don’t score, but you can’t let it bother you on defence. You need to keep your focus and believe you can win.” She added that winning at home was a plus. “It’s nice to have more than three people in the stands rooting for you.” Courtney McPherson said “this one was better for me because all the people were behind us tonight.” Coach Ron Marion said he will also treasure this year’s gold medal “a little more. It’s harder to defend as champions and we knew they were coming after us. This is the game they’ve been waiting for all year,” he said of a Rideau team that, like the Jaguars, returned all its starters for the rematch in the gold medal final. While Rideau also held its own when it didn’t have the ball – “They’re a very good team,” the Jaguars coach said — Confederation didn’t do itself any favours on offence when it missed several easy layups in the first half. The Jaguars were nearly as cold from beyond the three-point arc, getting outscored 12-3 by the Lions in the game. But the defending champions defended like champions. Their 12 steals resulted in eight key points on the transition, compared to only four points on five takeaways for Rideau, and the Jaguars, not the Lions, were the kings of the jungle when it came to rebounding in the second half and in overtime. “As I always tell the girls, ‘Defence wins championships,’ and we proved it tonight. If things aren’t dropping on offence, you better make sure you make up for it on defence and we did that tonight.” Despite a back-and-forth battle that had emotions rising and falling, almost with each change in possession, Marion felt assured of victory at the halftime — when Confederation was trailing 20-16. “We knew if we press them long enough, we could get the chances to win this game. I remember telling the girls at halftime ‘We’re going to win this game.’ When it went into overtime, I reminded them I never told them how long it would take to win,” he said. “We’re really dejected,” said Lions head coach Ron Stenzl. “It’s a tough day today. I’d rather lose a game by 10 and say we got beat by a better team, but we got beat by a team that … we’re just two equal teams.” It was equal right down to the last second of regulation time in a predominantly defensive game before the Lions succumbed in overtime. “They’re big across the board with good ballhandlers and good shooters,” said Stenzl, “but they don’t have that great post presence.” Stenzl said the perimeter game of the bigger team, which moved the ball around and employed a weave, pass and cut offence, was tough for any team to handle. “They can be a load for any team to handle,” he said. “We just played a whale of a game defensively. … We just did a great job.” The Lions’ defence held strong throughout the first half and the offence managed to forge a four-point lead at the half, despite the Jaguars blanketing Brooke Kelly with a double-team defence. Kelly was held to a tournament low eight points in the final. “It was really tough on her,” said Stenzl. The Lions had their chances late in the game with two free throws with about 30 seconds on the clock. After missing the first, Tess Morris drained the second to tie the game. “I give her a lot of credit for making the second one because that was a lot of pressure,” said Stenzl. As time was winding down, Stenzl had one more trick up his sleeve to try and pull off the win with little time left for the Jaguars to respond. It came within an inch of happening. Stenzl instructed Becca Elliott to position herself in the corner because he felt she was due to make a three-pointer if the opportunity arose. “I said to her if you get the ball down there just put it up. She got a wide-open look, I was standing right behind her, and it was perfect, and it just maybe came up an inch or two short. It just caught the rim and skipped out. It was so close.” Louise Harvey had another outside chance as the final 10 seconds wound down, but the shot missed as well. “We had our chances and I’m really proud of the kids for get- ting into position late and taking some shots that could have won the game for us. Louise Harvey really stepped up and knocked down some shots and Tess Morris had a terrific game down on the low post and the baseline,” said Stenzl, who described the final as a “low-scoring fistfight. It was as physical a game I have been involved in in probably 10 years.” He knew that applying a press would likely not turn the ball over because the Jaguars handled it so well, but it would take them out of their comfort zone. “They were gassed at the end, but they did enough to hang on and win the game,” said Stenzl. While the Lions are disappointed not to come away with one gold in two consecutive tries, Stenzl said the Rideau basketball program is not a one or two-shot wonder like many teams. The Lions have collected seven OFSAA medals in the past 10 years. “I’m really disappointed in a second straight silver, but what I’m really looking at is our seven OFSAA medals in the last 10 years,” said Stenzl, acknowledging that total could have had been two gold in the last two years. “I wouldn’t trade seven medals for two gold. We got the ball in the low post and we had a ton of good shots.” Stenzl felt his team should have been rewarded a bit more by the referees. “I’m not happy (with the officiating),” Stenzl said. “Some of my kids made some great moves and just didn’t get the calls.”
The bronze medalist St. Catharines Ridley College Tigers: Ainsley Camroux-Peacock; Charlotte Clarke; LeAndrea Armbrister; Laura Voigtlander; Franziska Streit; Elizabeth Allison; Emma Rigg; Uzochukwu Azoba; Chelsea English; Christina Kompson; Linda Mtui; coach D.C. Whitty; assistant N.A. Ronald; assistant Walt Szpilewski
The silver medalist Elgin Rideau District Lions: Brooke Kelly; Tessa Morris; Louise Harvey; Madeline Morris; Meg Morris; Becca Elliot; Avalon Olesen; Ashley Hartin; Katelyn Truyens; coach Ron Stenzl
The gold medalist Welland Confederation Jaguars: Kaitlyn McPherson; Danielle Marion; Melissa Cianflone; Courtney McPherson; Hailey Kenworthy; Natasha Patel; Nicole Marion; Chantal Henri; Krysta Boutin-Miller; Tessa Blanchard; Noella Iradukunda; Sierra Grant; coach Ron Marion; assistant Dominyk Kuhn-Bach; assistant Janet Marion