Tuesday, March 3, 2026
Brock's Only Independent Student Newspaper
One of the only worker-managed newspapers in Canada

Badgers’ women’s basketball team concluding their exhibition schedule with a tournament in Montreal

|
|

The McGill Basketball Classic should bring tough battles and matchups, which is exactly what the Badgers need in preparation for the start of the OUA season. 

The Brock Badgers women’s basketball team will be competing in the McGill Basketball Classic in Montreal, Quebec from Oct. 20th to 22nd as they conclude their exhibition schedule before the regular season begins at home on Nov. 3rd

The Badgers are coming off a 1-1 weekend at home where they lost to Laval University 80-65 on Friday but defeated St. John Fisher University 91-62 on Sunday afternoon.  

In their first game of the tournament, the Badgers will be up against the 2023 Reseau du Sport Etudiant du Quebec (RSEQ) Runner-up Bishop’s Gaiters. The Gaiters dominated the regular season a year ago, winning 14 of 16 matches en route to the top spot in the league. Their only two losses of the regular season were by one point and three points, putting up a hard-fought effort in every game. 

Bishop’s will be without last season’s graduating star Amaiquen Siciliano, but the Gaiters still have many quality pieces which should test the Badgers as they prepare for the start of the OUA season. 

One of the key pieces for Bishop’s, who should have a bigger role in Siciliano’s absence, is forward Victoria Gauna. The Argentinian averaged 12.2 points per game and 6.5 rebounds per game last season in 15 games played. Gauna’s versatility as a big, scoring from in the paint but also stretching the floor shooting 34 per cent from three last season, will test Brock’s Madison MacInnis and Olivia Fiorucci. Guarding Gauna will serve as beneficial preparation for forwards MacInnis and Fiorucci as they’ll likely be matched up with similar players all season long. 

In Brock’s second game of the tournament, the Badgers are up against the University of New Brunswick Reds.  

The Reds finished last season in fourth place in the Atlantic University Sport (AUS) Conference amassing a 12-8 record. UNB squeaked past Memorial University by one-point in the quarterfinals before falling to Acadia in the semis. 

Leading the Reds is senior wing Jayda Veinot. The six-footer had a remarkable season a year ago showcasing her capabilities on both sides of the ball. Offensively, the Nova Scotia-native scored 17.5 points per game last season which was fifth-most in the AUS, along with the fourth-highest three-point percentage at 41.6, and the third-highest field goal percentage at 50.6 percent. On the defensive end, Veinot ranked third in steals with 37 and secured the fifth-most rebounds on the defensive glass with 98. 

Veinot’s athleticism will test the Badgers’ defence that had a solid statistical season last year. Brock’s defence allowed the fourth-lowest field goal percentage, fifth-lowest points against per game and sixth-lowest three-point percentage against in the OUA in 2022-23. Head coach Mike Rao will be looking for defenders Theresa Brown and Noor Bazi to step up against Veinot in anticipation of similar statured and styled players that OUA rivals – McMaster, Carleton and Ottawa – have to offer. 

To conclude the tournament, McGill – the hosts – will be Brock’s final opponent of the 2023 exhibition schedule. 

While McGill had a poor season a year ago, finishing in last place in RSEQ with a 3-13 record, there are many intangibles from that game that can prepare the Badgers for the upcoming season. 

The hostile McGill crowd at Love Competition Hall in Montreal is one of them and will serve as an electrifyingly devious atmosphere against the Badgers. The experience of playing in an atmosphere like that is important for when those similar environments arise come playoff time and at the U Sports National Championship in Alberta that Brock hopes to be a part of. 

The McGill game will also be the final in-game opportunity for fringe players to show Coach Rao why they deserve to be in the rotation to start the season. Expect that the Badgers will play hard from start to finish, with bench players getting the bulk of the minutes hoping to seize the opportunity. 

The Badgers open the regular season at home on Nov. 3rd against the Toronto Varsity Blues. For more information on the Brock Badgers women’s basketball team click here. 

More by this author

RELATED ARTICLES

Was NBA All-Star weekend finally saved?  

Since the pandemic shut down sports around the world, All-Star games in all four major sports leagues have taken a hit in terms of player participation and overall draw. NBA players have treated the weekend like a joke, turning an event that is supposed to showcase the league's best players into a train wreck. Fast forward to 2026, many considered this past event to be the best in years. However, it didn’t come without its flaws. Let’s look at the good, the bad and the ugly of the 2026 NBA All-Star weekend. 

Brock sweeps Ottawa away in quarter-final matchup   

Another year called for another OUA playoff appearance for the Brock women’s volleyball team, as they took on the Ottawa Gee-Gees in the first round on Feb. 20 in the Bob Davis Gymnasium.

The memorable headlines from the Milano-Cortina 2026 games 

While the Winter Olympics feature a smaller field of athletes competing across fewer disciplines, there’s something about the cold-weather Games that makes them uniquely susceptible to drama, scandal and unforgettable cultural moments.  

Alysa Liu’s unforgettable rise at Milano-Cortina 

At just 20 years old, Alysa Liu did what many figure skaters once believed was impossible: become a better skater after retirement. 

Women’s March Madness takes shape 

As Selection Sunday nears on March 15, women’s college basketball fans are gearing up for one of the most compelling March Madness tournaments in recent memory. The 68-team field will be revealed that night, officially kicking off the road to the Sweet 16, Elite 8, Final 4 and ultimately the National Championship. 

All-Star ratings rebound after years of decline  

For more than a decade, the NBA All-Star Game has been fighting slow, but noticeable, rating declines. What was once a guaranteed television draw — regularly pulling between eight and 10 million viewers in the early 2010s — gradually lost traction as fan frustration grew over lackluster effort, inflated scores and minimal defence. By 2023 and 2024, the number had fallen to roughly 4.6 to 4.7 million viewers, marking some of the lowest audiences in the event’s history.  

Khelif Willing to Undergo IOC Testing for LA 2028 

Imane Khelif, the Algerian boxer who became an Olympic champion in 2024, continues to be at the centre of one of the most contentious and widely covered sports eligibility stories in recent years. While she remains celebrated for her achievements in the ring, the conversation around her eligibility and future competence career has significantly evolved since her gold medal run at the Paris Olympics. 

Pockar dominates as Brock takes down Ottawa in quarter finals   

The Brock Badgers men’s basketball team hosted the Ottawa Gee-Gees in a quarter-final matchup on Feb. 21 in a game holding major stakes for both teams.