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University of Waterloo Athletics

Warriors badminton

Badminton

Warriors finish fourth at OUA Badminton Championship

The Waterloo Warriors badminton team put together a solid OUA championship going 2-1 in round robin play before dropping falling to Toronto 6-0 in the OUA semifinal matchup.  The Warriors then went into battle against McMaster for the OUA bronze medal but came up short by a score of 6-0.

Emily Lam (Toronto) had an outstanding championship for the Warriors winning three singles matches and three doubles matches.  Last year's rookie of the year, Stephen Lau (Richmond Hill) was also impressive in just his second championship.

Congratulations to the Warriors on a great event!

Full Championship Recap

The University of Toronto Varsity Blues won their second straight Ontario University Athletics (OUA) badminton championship on Sunday afternoon at the Tait McKenzie Centre at York University.

The result marks the fifth time since 1997 the Blues have won the team title. They earned the victory in convincing fashion, taking down the Western Mustangs 6-1 in the final to claim the banner. The Mustangs were forced to settle for the silver medal, an improvement from their bronze-medal showing last year, while the McMaster Marauders cruised to a 6-0 win over the Waterloo Warriors in the bronze-medal contest to finish in third place.

The Blues reached the final but dominating the Warriors to win 6-0 in the semifinals, while the Mustangs eliminated the Mustangs from gold-medal contention by narrowly winning their semifinal 6-4.

Toronto's Bethany So was named the female most valuable player at the end of the meet after going undefeated in six matches. In her four singles matches she outscored her opponents 168-53, including a 21-7, 21-5 triumph over Western's Claudia Tai in the championship match.

The MVP award on the men's side went to Clement Chow from the Marauders, who was also undefeated in six matches played, including fie singles victories.

His teammate, Jayme Carter, was named the female rookie of the year after a busy weekend in which she played in nine doubles matches and won eight of them. 

The male rookie of the year award was given to Jonathan Lai from the champion Blues. He won two singles matches in the preliminary round and picked up three mixed doubles victories.

The Blues' head coach, Stephane Cadieux, won the coach of the year award for the second straight year after leading his team to defend their title in just his second year at the helm.

In other results, the Ottawa Gee-Gees and Ryerson Rams battled for fifth place for the second straight year, with the Gee-Gees once again coming out on top, this year by a score of 6-4. Likewise, the Queen's Gaels and York Lions competed for seventh place, which this year was won by Queen's to avenge last year's loss. The Guelph Gryphons and Carleton Ravens finished ninth and 10th, respectively.

Final Standings
Gold – Toronto
Silver – Western
Bronze – McMaster
4th – Waterloo
5th – Ottawa
6th – Ryerson
7th – Queen's
8th – York
9th – Guelph
10th – Carleton
11th – UOIT 

OUA Major Awards

Male Most Valuable Player – Clement Chow, McMaster

Female Most Valuable Player – Bethany So, Toronto

Male Rookie of the Year – Jonathan Lai, Toronto

Female Rookie of the Year – Jayme Carter, McMaster

Coach of the Year – Stephane Cadieux, Toronto

OUA Male All-stars

Clement Chow, McMaster

Andrew D'Souza, Ottawa

Austin Flannigan, Ottawa

Jack Hall, Western

Bryan Jok, Western

Muhammad Kamaruddin, McMaster

Jonathan Lai, Toronto

Andrew Wilkinson, Toronto
 

OUA Female All-stars

Jayme Carter, McMaster

Giselle Chan, Toronto

Karissa Chan, Western

Joletta Cheung, McMaster

Vivian Kwok, Toronto

Emily Lam (Toronto), Waterloo

Bethany So, Toronto

Samantha Zheng, Western

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Players Mentioned

Stephen Lau

Stephen Lau

Men's
5' 11"
2
Emily Lam

Emily Lam

Women's
5' 6"
3

Players Mentioned

Stephen Lau

Stephen Lau

5' 11"
2
Men's
Emily Lam

Emily Lam

5' 6"
3
Women's