POOL A ALTA NS ONT SASK NB Record  
  Alberta —– 76-46 72-58 58-44 76-49 (4-0)  
  Nova Scotia 46-76 —– 55-62 64-51 56-41 (2-2)  
  Ontario 58-72 62-55 —– 59-61 50-46 (2-2)  
  Saskatchewan 44-58 51-64 61-59 —– 74-53 (2-2)  
  New Brunswick 49-76 41-56 46-50 53-74 —– (0-4)  
                 
  POOL B BC NFLD QUE MAN PEI Record  
  British Columbia —– 91-77 72-43 89-41 91-37 (4-0)  
  Newfoundland 77-91 —– 88-61 80-74 86-53 (3-1)  
  Quebec 43-72 61-88 —– 89-41 72-41 (2-2)  
  Manitoba 41-89 74-80 41-89 —– 63-44 (1-3)  
  PEI 37-91 53-86 41-72 44-63 —– (0-4)  
                 
  Semi Alberta 87 Newfoundland 81
  Semi British Columbia 76 Nova Scotia 55
  9th New Brunswick 57 Prince Edward Island 55
  7th Saskatchewan 62 Manitoba 48
  5th Ontario 73 Quebec 71
  Bronze Newfoundland 73 Nova Scotia 52
  Final Alberta 66 British Columbia 54
     

        In Pool A round robin play, held in North Vancouver: …………………………………………………… Ontario clipped Nova Scotia 62-55 after leading 34-28 at the half. Katherine Quackenbush led Nova Scotia with 11. Sara Limpert added 5 and Sam Leger 2. ……………………………………………………  Nova Scotia defeated Saskatchewan 65-53 as Alexa Holm scored 13, Katherine Quackenbush 11, Heather Ross 8 and Sarah Limpert 8. …………………………………………………… Alberta clipped Saskatchewan 58-44. …………………………………………………… Alberta stomped New Brunswick 76-49. ……………………………………………………  Alberta dusted Ontario 72-58. …………………………………………………… Alberta clocked Nova Scotia 76-46. ……………………………………………………

        In pool B play: …………………………………………………… Newfoundland defeated Manitoba 80-74 as Maureen Murrin and Jenine Browne each scored 19. Jessica Ryan added 14. Coach Tami Pennell said defence proved the difference. “We’re playing what I call small ball but we’re playing it well. We’re using our quickness and playing some great post defence.” …………………………………………………… British Columbia defeated Newfoundland 91-77, despite trailing 45-43 at the half. Sayer Walsh led Newfoundland with 22, including 18 in the first half. Jenine Browen added 18. …………………………………………………… Newfoundland defeated PEI 86-53 as Jenine Browne scored 18, Jessica Ryan 15 and Maureen Murrin 15. …………………………………………………… Newfoundland defeated Quebec 88-61 as Sayer Walsh scored 21, Maureen Murrin 17 and Jenine Browne 15. “It’s a very good start for us,” said coach Tami Pennell. “Quebec, like most of the other teams here, is bigger than us and I think they were expecting us to play a certain style of game.” …………………………………………………… Quebec defeated PEI 72-41 despite 10 points apiece from Aimee Cameron and Terryl O’Brien. …………………………………………………… Manitoba defeated PEI 63-44. Terryl O’Brien led PEI with 9. …………………………………………………… B.C. thrashed PEI 91-37 as Mandy Hutchins scored 12. Jessica Richardson led PEI with 11. Terryll O’Brien added 9.

        In the semis, Alberta defeated Newfoundland 87-81 after rallying from a seven-point half time deficit. When Newfoundland’s Amy Dalton and Jenine Browne got in foul trouble down the stretch, Alberta roared back, tying the game with 1:30 to play and then pulling away in the final minute. Dalton led Newfoundland with 24. Browne added 22 and Maureen Murrin 16.

        In the other semi, B.C. thrashed Nova Scotia 76-55.

        In the ninth-place match, New Brunswick edged PEI 57-55. Jessica Richardson led the Islanders with 11. Leslie MacNeil added 9. PEI (coached by Chris Annett, assisted by Karen Cameron and Elliot Deighan) also included Megan Deighan, Tamara MacDougall, Shannon Curtis, Aimee Cameron, Terryll O’Brien, Jenna Connolly, Rebecca Walker, Kelli Arsenault, Megan McMillan and Katherine Walters.

        In the 7th-place playoff, Saskatchewan clipped Manitoba 62-48.

        In the 5th-place playoff, Ontario edged Quebec 73-71.

        In the bronze medal match, Newfoundland thrashed Nova Scotia 73-52 as Jessica Ryan and Sayer Walsh each scored 16. Newfoundland led 33-30 at the half but turned up the defensive pressure in the second half, holding Nova Scotia to 8 points over the first 15 minutes as they pulled away. “We came out very slow and we didn’t play the way we have in this tournament (largely because of the seven-point loss to Alberta in the semis). That took so much energy out of us, both mentally and physically, that I wasn’t sure what to expect. It was extremely hard for them to get up for the game. For a while I thought they were going to wilt.” Alexa Holm led Nova Scotia with 15. Sara Limper and Veronica Bailey each added 10.

        In the final, Alberta dumped British Columbia 66-54. “Our kids were so focused, because our whole focus was to do this,” Alberta coach Rick Frey told the Lethbridge Herald, adding that his troops were determined to avenge a 63-56 loss a month earlier in the Western Canada Games final. “We didn’t like losing to them before. We played good, good defence, and we shut down the people we had to. And I really do think this is a great tournament. Once you got here, the atmosphere was unbelievable. The people who ran this tournament did a great job. You can’t find a single flaw in what they’ve done.” B.C. simply was overmatched by the Albertans. They couldn’t keep up with guard Jennifer Elford, who raced up and down the floor like she had rocket boosters on her high-tops. And they couldn’t hold off broad-shouldered post Katy Paterson. Alberta was up 17-3 before BC settled down. “The things we had problems with all summer were rebounding and guarding big players, simply because we aren’t that big a team,” said B.C. coach Jim Day. “I knew that if a bigger, stronger team was able to handle our pressure, we’d be in trouble.” Paterson finished with 19 points, while forward Christine Shewchuk added 12 and Beth Clawson 10. Campbell and backcourt mate Dani Langford led BC with 14 apiece. Cassi Born had 11 and Mandy Hutchins 10. BC rallied to within 37-30 at the half. Alberta started the second half on a 12-4 run to up the margin to 49-34, but B.C. responded with a 13-4 spurt of their own to get it to within two three-pointers, at 53-47. But Alberta turned up the tenacity on defence and hit their foul shots down the stretch to coast to victory.

        The all-tourney selections were: MVP Katy Paterson (Alberta); Christine Shewchuk (Alberta); Devon Campbell (BC); Dani Langford (BC); Amy Dalton (Newfoundland); Jana Schweitzer (Saskatchewan)

        The bronze medalists from Newfoundland: Amy Dalton; Jessica Ryan; Sayer Walsh; Jacinta Loder; Jenine Browne; Elizabeth Dohey; Michelle Bartlett; Jennifer Kinsella; Maureen Murrin; Teresa Butler; Renee McGrath; Deanne Rose; coach Tami Pennell; assistant Bonnie Armstrong

        The silver medalists from BC: Elana Arnold; Cassi Born; Devon Campbell; Maren Corrigal; Chrissy Dumas; Jade Humble; Mandy Hutchins; Anne-Marie Krygsveld; Dani Langford; Lisa Roberts; Ashley Burke; Julia Wilson; coach Jim Day; assistant Karen Brydon

        The gold medalists from Alberta: Christine Shewchuk; Katy Paterson; Jennifer Elford; Cori Bekkering; Beth Clawson; Angela Thompson; Lisa Moser; Brandi Greenstein; Delhi ‘Beth’ Clawson; Charene Welsh; Katherine Adams; Carmen Gassmer; April Kanderka; Colleen Yukes; Laura Watson; alternate Brandi Greenstein; coach Rick Frey; assistant Shannon Mackintosh