MHSAA 2025 Varsity Volleyball
December 2, 2025 by admin
Filed under Provincial and Territorial News
MHSAA 2025 Varsity Volleyball Championships
| GIRLS A | BOYS A | |
| Gold | Morweena Christian School | Glenboro School |
| Silver | Rivers Collegiate Institute | Miami School |
| Bronze | Miami School | Wawanesa School |
| Antique Bronze | Gilbert Plains Collegiate Institute | Baldur School/Cartwright Community Independent School (Co-Op) |
| GIRLS AA | BOYS AA | |
| Gold | Warren Collegiate Institute | Carberry Collegiate Institute |
| Silver | Collège Régional Gabrielle-Roy | Goose Lake High School |
| Bronze | Rosenort School | Elton Collegiate Institute |
| Antique Bronze | Hapnot Collegiate Institute | Major Pratt School |
| GIRLS AAA | BOYS AAA | |
| Gold | Westgate Mennonite Collegiate Institute | École secondaire Neelin High School |
| Silver | W C Miller Collegiate Institute | Garden Valley Collegiate Institute |
| Bronze | École secondaire Neelin High School | Linden Christian School |
| Antique Bronze | Collège Stonewall Collegiate | Collège Louis-Riel |
| GIRLS AAAA | BOYS AAAA | |
| Gold | Vincent Massey High School (Brandon) | St Paul’s High School (Winnipeg) |
| Silver | Collège Jeanne-Sauvé | Dakota Collegiate Institute |
All-Stars & MVP
Boys All-Stars: Charlie Steppler – Miami; Luke Swain – Miami; Thomas Poulsen – Miami; Dylan Granger – Wawanesa; Tucker Forbes – Glenboro; Brydon Cornock – Glenboro
MVP: Evan Griffin – Glenboro
Players Choice Award: Dylan Granger – Wawanesa
Girls All-Stars: Kinsi Swain – Miami; Paige Hanke – Gilbert Plains; Nia Dyck – Morweena; Petrova Klassen – Morweena; Annika Schmidt – Rivers; Jillian Hamm – Rivers
MVP: Raneisha Kornelson – Morweena
Players Choice Award: Annika Schmidt – Rivers
All Stars & MVP
Players Choice Award: Madelyn Eidse
All Stars: Teslyn Beauchamp Hapnot Kopper Kweens; Jenna Falk, Rosenort Redhawks; Abbie Parker, Gabrielle-Roy Les Roys; Sylvie Lemoine, Gabrielle-Roy Les Roys; Torie Galbraith, Warren Wildcats; Paige Seidel, Warren Wildcats
MVP: Julia Oliver, Warren Wildcats
All Stars & MVP
All Stars: Jorey Reichmuth, Major Pratt; Zach Rolland, Goose Lake; Tosh Johnson, Goose Lake; Gabriel Mignault, Carberry; Darius Schiemer, Immanuel Christian; Jack Hutton, Elton Collegiate
MVP: Josiah Glaser, Carberry Collegiate
Girls All-Star and MVP
All Star: #14 Sylver Ciupak – Stonewall Collegiate; #13 Katey Ward – Neelin High School; #6 Sage Wiebe – W.C. Miller; #9 Bella Peters – W.C. Miller; #21 Sara Buchel — Westgate; #24 Maiya Reimer – Westgate
MVP: Avery martens – Westgate
Boys All Star and MVP
Players Choice Award: Alfredo Enns Garden Valley Collegiate
All Star: Nolin Gallagher – Linden Christian; Sam Clarke – College Louis Riel; Adrain Buenaventura – Garden Valley Collegiate; Noah Vanden Berg – Garden Valley Collegiate; Lucas Gamache; Sam Rempel
Tournament MVP: Aiden Moore
Boston Pizza Provincial AAAA Volleyball Final Four
Player Awards – Girls
MVP: Hannah McGregor – Vincent Massey Vikings
All-Stars: Nasira Eheler – MBCI Hawks; Celeste Pelletier – Jeanne-Sauvé Olympiens; Zoe Redekop -Vincent Massey Vikings; Amara Shams – Jeanne-Sauvé Olympiens; Ashley Sullivan – Vincent Massey Vikings
Dairy Farmers of Manitoba Players Choice Award: Linnae Johnson – Jeanne-Sauvé Olympiens
Player Awards – Boys
MVP: Liam Mancer – St. Paul’s Crusaders
All-Stars: Jordan Bagnas – Dakota Lancers; Erik Neufeld – Steinbach Regional Sabres; Daniel Rom – Dakota Lancers; Oluwafisayomi Sofoluwe – St. Paul’s Crusaders; Colin Vermette – Gabrielle-Roy Les Roy; James Zang – St. Paul’s Crusaders
Dairy Farmers of Manitoba Players Choice Award: Abu Ebubechukwu – Vincent Massey Trojans
MHSAA 2025 VARSITY VOLLEYBALL PARTICIPANTS
| GIRLS | BOYS | |
| A | Elm Creek School | Baldur School/Cartwright Community Independent School (Co-Op) |
| Gilbert Plains Collegiate Institute | Chemawawin School | |
| Grand Rapids School | Fisher River High School | |
| Hamiota Collegiate Institute | Glenboro School | |
| Miami School | Hamiota Collegiate Institute | |
| Morweena Christian School | Miami School | |
| Reston School | Morweena Christian School | |
| Rivers Collegiate Institute | Rivers Collegiate Institute | |
| Ste Rose School | Riverton Collegiate Institute | |
| Wawanesa School | Wawanesa School | |
| AA | Collège Régional Gabrielle-Roy | Carberry Collegiate Institute |
| Carberry Collegiate Institute | Elton Collegiate Institute | |
| Goose Lake High School | Goose Lake High School | |
| Green Valley School | Green Valley School | |
| Hapnot Collegiate Institute | Immanuel Christian School | |
| Immanuel Christian School | Major Pratt School | |
| Landmark Collegiate Institute | Margaret Barbour Collegaite Institute | |
| Prairie Mountain High School | Morris School/ École régionale St Jean Baptiste (Co-Op) | |
| Rosenort School | Rosenort School | |
| Warren Collegiate Institute | Warren Collegiate Institute | |
| AAA | Calvin Christian Collegiate Institute | Calvin Christian Collegiate |
| Centre scolaire Léo-Rémillard | Collège Louis-Riel | |
| Churchill High School | Collège Stonewall Collegiate | |
| Collège Stonewall Collegiate | Dauphin Regional Comprehensive Secondary School | |
| École secondaire Neelin High School | École secondaire Neelin High School | |
| Garden Valley Collegiate Institute | Garden Valley Collegiate Institute | |
| Linden Christian School | Linden Christian School | |
| Niverville High School | Niverville High School | |
| Virden Collegiate Institute | St John’s High School | |
| St John-Ravenscourt School | St. Maurice High School | |
| W C Miller Collegiate Institute | Steinbach Christian School | |
| Westgate Mennonite Collegiate Institute | Westgate Mennonite Collegiate Institute | |
| AAAA | Collège Jeanne-Sauvé | Collège Collegial Gabrielle-Roy |
| Mennonite Brethren Collegiate Institute | Dakota Collegiate Institute | |
| Sturgeon Heights Collegiate | St Paul’s High School (Winnipeg) | |
| Vincent Massey High School (Brandon) | Steinbach Regional Secondary School |
Neelin defends AAA varsity boys title
Aiden Moore has once again led the Neelin Spartans to gold.
The Grade 11 setter was named MVP after Neelin defeated Garden Valley 25-21, 25-20 in the final of the AAA varsity boys’ volleyball provincial championship on Saturday.
Spartans attackers Lucas Gamache and Sam Rempel earned all-star nods following the team’s unbeaten run, which included a three-set semifinal victory over Louis-Riel.
With the win, Neelin becomes the first-ever AAA boys’ team to win three golds in a row.
The Neelin girls finished third, beating Stonewall 2-1 in the bronze-medal match after being swept by Altona’s W.C. Miller in the semifinals.
Westgate beat Miller 2-1 in the final.
Neelin’s Katey Ward made the all-star team.
At the AA provincials in Russell, the Carberry Cougars beat the Goose Lake Raiders 18-25, 25-15, 16-14 in the gold-medal match, while the Elton Sabres beat the host Major Pratt Trojans 2-1 for bronze.
Warren beat Gabrielle-Roy 2-0 in the AA girls’ final.
In the A provincials in Brandon, the Glenboro Panthers boys defeated the Miami Marlins 28-26, 30-28 in the final, with Wawanesa knocking off Baldur-Cartwright in straight sets for bronze.
On the girls’ side, the host Rivers Rams fell 2-0 to the Morweena Raptors for gold.
Miami edged Gilbert Plains 2-1 in the third-place match.
See Tuesday’s paper for a full story on the Neelin boys.
» The Brandon Sun
Vikings go back-to-back
By: Thomas Friesemn
WINNIPEG — The Jeanne-Sauve Olympiens fans made a big mistake, calling Hannah McGregor “Overrated.”
For nearly two hours on Monday, the Vincent Massey Vikings superstar proved she was absolutely, without a doubt, Manitoba’s best high school girls’ volleyball player.
McGregor heard the noise, hammered a huge kill, then acknowledged the crowd with a smile that instantly showed she would not be rattled during the AAAA provincial final at the University of Manitoba’s Investors Group Athletic Centre.
McGregor posted an astonishing 26 kills, four aces and 13 digs as the Vikings beat the Olympiens in the final for the second year in a row, 3-1 (25-15, 26-24, 23-25, 25-17).
“It was amazing. It just gave me more fuel to play harder,” the tournament MVP McGregor said of the chants.
The six-foot-one outside hitter started as a sophomore last year and was the catalyst the Vikings needed early in the provincial final.
This year, she was the engine.
“She’s an amazing athlete,” said Massey head coach Kelly DeRoo. “I kind of figured she’d go off in this match and just score, and they weren’t able to shut her down, so (setter) Kaitlyn (Couckuyt) and I had a conversation that unless they start digging her, we might as well just keep giving her the ball.”
While McGregor isn’t used a ton in the back row, Jeanne-Sauve didn’t get much relief during those rotations, as outside hitter Zoe Redekop was also exceptional.
The five-foot-nine senior may not have quite the same attack speed as McGregor, but she was as precise as she was fearless, tacking on 15 kills en route to a tournament all-star selection.
“Zoe does such a great job on out-of-system high sets. She scored on a few that I thought she was just going to roll out of court, but she swung for the fences, and she scored, so it was great,” DeRoo said.
“The first two sets, even, our passing wasn’t great. End of the third, we started passing better, and we weren’t running our middle as much because of our serve receive, so the fact that Hannah and Zoe are able to just find the ball and put it away on a set from the deep corner … it’s a big help in a match.”
Hannah McGregor (3) of the Vincent Massey Vikings leaps to put the ball over the net during the AAAA varsity girls volleyball provincial final against the Jeanne-Sauvé Olympiens at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg on Monday evening. (Tim Smith/The Brandon Sun)
The Vikings took the No. 2 seed, earning a bye to the quarterfinals. They quickly dispatched the Kelvin Clippers in straight sets on home court on Nov. 22, then defeated the third-ranked Sturgeon Heights Huskies 3-0 on Wednesday to reach the final.
Jeanne-Sauve was the fourth seed and beat No. 12 Garden City 3-1 in the quarterfinals. It reverse-swept the top-ranked Mennonite Brethren Hawks 3-2 in the semifinals.
The championship nerves were evident on both sides early, with the Olympiens making a few unforced errors early to trail 5-2. The Vikings gave a few points back to let it get tied 6-6.
But soon after, Hayden Wharf stepped back and served a massive six-point run to pull ahead 14-7. The Vikings did their damage while Manitoba’s No. 3-ranked player Celeste Pelletier was stuck in the back row. The setter/opposite was running the offence that desperately needed her scoring, while the other setter/opposite, Leah Derkatch, didn’t record a kill.
Ashley Sullivan served the Olympiens into more trouble and stretched a 16-10 lead to 21-10.
By the time Pelletier was back to her spot at the net, the set was all but over.
“After the first set, I thought I played really good so I thought Kaitlyn would give me a few more extra balls, but I was confident that everybody could play good,” McGregor said.
“Reece (Cowan), our (libero), she gets up everything, and I feel like she needs more recognition, but … everybody plays their part and we wouldn’t be here without everybody on our team.”
Massey fell into a 5-2 hole in the second set but kept plugging away and tied it 8-8.
The match stayed air-tight, with the Vikings leading 18-16 when Sophia Hullick subbed in to serve two huge aces in a row for Massey, on both sides of a Jeanne-Sauve timeout.
The Olympiens erased that four-point lead in a hurry on a few bad Viking passes and strong block defence on McGregor, who was more or less unstoppable to that point.
However, McGregor simply hit an even sharper cross-court shot after CJS tied it 22-22, painting the sideline to pull ahead. Then the best player in the province took an out-of-system set three metres off the net and chipped it down the line, off the block and out to bring up set point.
McGregor got blocked two points later, but scored off hands to retake the lead, then did it again to end the set and lead 2-0.
Pelletier led Jeanne-Sauve to success in the third as it raced ahead 10-4 in the third before Hullick launched a few more aces to narrow the gap. Massey tied it 12-12, but undid all its hard work on two quick scoring runs and trailed 18-13.
McGregor blasted a kill to send herself back to the service line down 20-15, then, as the Olympiens’ faithful chanted “Overrated” each time she stepped back with the ball in her hands, she served seven straight points with two aces and a few big-time Redekop kills before catching the back line on a back-row attack to pull ahead 21-20.
The Vikings led 23-21, but missed a serve and shanked two passes to fall behind and ultimately lose the set, keeping the Olympiens alive for a fourth.
DeRoo knew CJS was capable of overcoming a big deficit after the semifinal, but refocused her group well.
“I just reminded our girls that we’re here to win the match and we just need to win one more set, so that was our focus — worry about our side of the court, eliminate our errors and make sure that we’re scoring, and they were able to do that. They kind of just forgot about the third set and refocused themselves,” DeRoo said.
The Vikings turned it around with their defence.
After McGregor scored cross-court and down the line, McGregor and Wharf made back-to-back blocks to lead 6-2. Ella VanDaele and Sullivan got in on the block party for a few more to go up 9-3.
The large cushion proved helpful to shake off a few errors that otherwise could have rattled the Vikings more. They were able to laugh them off and keep getting into perfect positions to block, then find open court to tip when their big swings weren’t working.
The Vikings couldn’t help but smile between points with a 22-14 lead. They could see the end — the one they worked so hard for — in sight, and just had fun with it.
“I just think when we’re having fun, that brings out the best in all of us, and that really brought out the best in me,” Redekop said.
Massey got a little too excited and hammered the ball well out of the court on two championship points, but McGregor put the finishing touch on it with plenty of points to spare.
“This feels unreal right now,” Redekop said. “I’m just really grateful for this experience and to make it here with the people that were by my side through it all. That just really means a lot.
“Our whole team tried to look at it as the butterflies being more of an excitement and ‘This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.’ We have to feel that, over the nervousness that it could also be. Taking that and being confident with it really brought us to the end.”
Hullick finished with five aces, while Cowan made 10 digs and VanDaele posted four blocks.
The future is up in the air for McGregor, who’s moving to Saskatoon in the new year to play for Huskie Volleyball Club.
But she knew she wanted to deliver at least one more time for Massey, and she certainly did.
“It was amazing. I feel like in Grade 10 I was a bit more nervous but I knew my role this year and I was pretty calm all game,” McGregor said.
“I think that was my best game today and I’m happy I got to finish it off like that.”
» tfriesen@brandonsun.com
Crusaders oust Roys in straight sets
St. Paul’s and Dakota to go head-to-head for boys provincial volleyball glory
Few have been able to contain the St. Paul’s Crusaders’ offence this year, and that trend continued Thursday night.
The No. 1 Crusaders’ high-powered attack repeatedly flexed its muscles as they overwhelmed No. 4 Gabrielle-Roy Les Roys en route to a 3-0 (25-16; 25-13; 27-25) triumph in the first match of the AAAA varsity boys volleyball provincial semifinals at Investors Group Athletic Centre.
St. Paul’s will play the Dakota Lancers for the provincial championship Monday, back at IGAC (8 p.m.).
BROOK JONES / FREE PRESSDakota Lancers’ Jordan Bagnas spikes the ball while the Steinbach Sabres’ Joseph LeClair (No. 15) goes for the block Thursday night.
“Our game plan in this matchup was to swing,” said Crusaders middle Cy Hoorne, who was second on the team with eight kills. “I know I didn’t do much swinging, but our goal was to put the ball to the ground as quick as possible, because if they get a dig, their whole momentum goes up. That’s really it — put the ball to the floor and swing.”
The Crusaders return to the title match for the second year in a row and third time in the last four years, in search of their first championship since 2015.
They feel this year’s story will have a different ending.
“Everyone’s buying in. Everyone wants to win,” said Hoorne, who also had three aces and a block. “So I feel like if we all want to win, we’ll all try, and we’ll bust our butts, and then we’ll be fine.”
Head coach Dustin Spiring said his program’s experience will continue to play a major role in the championship.
“We have a lot of Grade 12s — a lot of good Grade 12s — in important positions, too,” he said. “And so I think they’re more ready for the task. And then our young guys, I mean, our Grade 10, Oluwafisayomi Sofoluwe was absolutely fantastic today. Our young guys, Ethan McNaught stepped up, too. I think we’re just more experienced and more prepared.”
St. Paul’s star outside hitter Liam Mancer, who was voted the top player in the province by a panel of coaches, was outstanding with a match-high 18 kills, including eight in the deciding set.
Nathan Brzak supplied 10 kills, while McNaught helped with six kills, a block and an ace.
“Guys like Cy and Oluwafisayomi will open up Liam, and allow him to be who he is and have the success he had tonight. James (Zang) did an awesome job moving the ball around, our passers passed very well, and then, yeah, Liam’s obviously very skilled, very big, strong, athletic guy,” said Spiring. “I think if we can set all of our hitters at all points, we’re gonna be a dangerous offence.”
St. Paul’s victory didn’t come without some adversity.
After having no answer for the Crusaders’ heavy hitters in the first two sets, Gabrielle-Roy had their opponents on the ropes in the third set, holding multiple leads late in the frame, including set point at 25-24.
Earlier in the frame, the Crusaders were dealt with unfavourable calls on three consecutive points. Brzak, who pleaded to officials on his coach’s behalf, was dealt a yellow card, as the Gabrielle-Roy crowd grew louder and the squad had legitimate life for the first time all match.
Spiring rallied the troops during a timeout.
“Just to reset and take a deep breath. We can side out against any team, and then we’re a good serving team, and if we execute our blocking defence, then we’re able to beat any team and stop them for points in a row,” Spiring told his team.
“It was definitely a good mental bounce back for sure.”
Logan Barnabé, voted the No. 2 player in the province, logged 10 kills and one ace for Les Roys, while Marek Goller supplied four kills. Kiel LaRochelle, Colin Vermette and Jamie Barnabé each had three kills apiece.
“We’ve had one goal in mind all year, and it’s been a provincial championship,” said Spiring. “So we’re counting down the sets here, and we’re excited to be back. I think the Grade 12s this year, who were in Grade 11 last year and played in it, know the atmosphere and know the pressure, and they wanted it all year long. We’re really, really thrilled.”
Meanwhile, the Dakota Lancers head to the provincial championship for the first time since 2023, in search of their first title since 2019 after earning a hard-fought 3-0 (26-24; 25-21; 25-20) victory over the Steinbach Regional Sabres in the second semifinal.
he Sabres had been a thorn in the side of the Lancers, but not on this night.
Dakota’s potent attack was led by a pair of young Grade 11 stars in Daniel Rom and Jordan Bagnas, who each had 13 kills.
Another Grade 11 talent, Quade Wortley, contributed four kills and a pair of aces.
For the Sabres, Mason Bergen led the offence with nine kills, while Liam Paton supplied eight kills and an ace.
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