Canadian women's, men's 3x3 wheelchair basketball teams win gold at inaugural world championships
The Canadian women completed an undefeated run with a 17-12 victory over Spain in the final, going 6-0 at the three-day event.
Canada's women's team is comprised of Kady Dandeneau of Pender Island, B.C., Tamara Steeves of Mississauga, Ont., Élodie Tessier of Saint-Germain de Grantham, Que., and Toronto's Puisand Lai.
"Spain came out insanely physical, we knew they would. They were hitting chairs and, in our face – all over us," Dandeneau said. "I think we kept our composure and still competed with them and stuck to what we've been doing, which is playing our game."
Dandeneau was named tournament MVP while Tessier collected tournament all-star honours.
"I think being any kind of world champion is pretty sweet," Dandeneau added. "To do it for the first time — it's history."
WATCH l Full replay of Canada-Spain women's final:
Canada topped Great Britain 15-10 in the semifinals earlier in the day, while Spain edged Australia 9-7 to reach the final.
The Canadians also beat Spain in its opening game, 14-7.
WATCH l Dandeneau on how 3x3 format offers lower barrier to entry:
The Canadian men's squad won its historic world title by rallying past Spain 14-9 later Sunday, avenging its lone loss of the tournament.
Canada fell 18–12 to the Spaniards on Friday in its second game after running into foul trouble.
Canada is represented by Quebec City's Vincent Dallaire, Colin Higgins of Rothesay, N.B., Lee Melymick of Toronto and Garrett Ostepchuk of Regina.
"Super cool experience," said Higgins, who was named tournament MVP. "We knew Spain was going to be tough; they beat us in pool play, so we knew we didn't have much to lose. We came out, we hit a couple of shots and won the game.
"My teammates are awesome," he added. "They worked so hard, it's awesome to see them rewarded, hitting some buckets today and stealing us the victory."
The Canadians advanced to the gold-medal game earlier with their second close win over Austria at worlds, taking the semifinal 13-12. Canada opened the tournament with a 17–15 overtime win over the Austrians on Friday, with Higgins scoring the decisive points.
Canada, which went 6-1 in Sun City, edged Australia 12-9 in Saturday's quarterfinals.
WATCH l Full replay of Canada-Spain men's final:
Hosted by Wheelchair Basketball South Africa, the 2025 IWBF 3x3 Open World Championships celebrates the growth of 3x3 wheelchair basketball and offers smaller nations an opportunity to shine on the global stage.
This is the second 3x3 event for Canada's wheelchair basketball teams. The women won gold and the men took silver at the sport's debut at the 2022 Commonwealth Games in Birmingham, England.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


News24
8 minutes ago
- News24
Sundowns coach Cardoso reacts to MTN8 Pirates draw: May the best team win
Orlando Pirates and Mamelodi Sundowns headline the MTN8 semifinal draw. Sundowns thrashed Richards Bay 4-0 to reach the semis on Sunday, while Pirates beat Polokwane City 2-0 on Saturday. Sundowns coach Miguel Cardoso is chasing his first PSL knockout trophy. On paper, many would argue that the MTN8 semifinal between cup holders Orlando Pirates and Mamelodi Sundowns is a dress rehearsal for what could be yet another two-horse race for the premiership title. This is because the two teams have finished first and second, respectively, in the past three seasons, with no real sustained challenge from elsewhere. However, Sundowns coach Miguel Cardoso said, while he expected the two teams to push each other once again, he cautioned against looking too far ahead. May the best team win. This is how Mamelodi Sundowns coach Miguel Cardoso reacted after his team was drawn against cup holders Orlando Pirates in the MTN8 two-legged semifinals. Stellenbosch FC will play Sekhukhune United in the other semi. @City_Press — Tiisetso Malepa (@TiisetsoMalepa) August 4, 2025 'I think we should not emphasise it in that manner. But I believe that the two teams will give a lot throughout the season,' said Cardoso after the semifinal draw, which was conducted immediately after Sundowns smashed Richards Bay 4-0 in the last quarterfinal clash at the Lucas Moripe Stadium in Pretoria on Sunday. First-half goals from striker Iqraam Rayners and an own goal from Bay captain Simphiwe Mcineka gave Sundowns a 2-0 lead at the break. Rayners completed his brace 10 minutes into the second half. Substitute Siyabonga Mabena put the final nail in Bay's coffin with a goal in the 76th minute. Last year's losing finalists, Stellenbosch FC, will battle Sekhukhune United at home in the other semifinal. Sekhukhune are in their first-ever semifinal in this competition. The league is yet to confirm the dates and venues for the R10 million winner-takes-all Wafa Wafa tournament. Cardoso, who joined Sundowns last December and won his first premiership title in May, is on the hunt for his first PSL knockout trophy. The Portuguese lost to Kaizer Chiefs in the Nedbank Cup semifinals in April in his first participation in a cup competition. Sundowns were beaten by Stellenbosch in the MTN8 semifinals last year and lost against unfancied Magesi FC in the Carling Knockout Cup final in November. The two results, which occurred under Cardoso's predecessor, Manqoba Mngqithi, played a big role in the coaching change. Cardoso said he hoped his team would be firing on all cylinders during the semifinal clash against Pirates. I'm sure we and Pirates are in an emotionally uncomfortable position, but we always knew that the draw could go this way in the semifinals or the final. So, may the best team win. Miguel Cardoso He added: 'Obviously, there must be a result, and it will be interesting because the semifinals are played over two legs. 'Usually, the strongest team wins those big matches, and I think they will be two very tough matches. 'Hopefully, the two matches will come when we are in our two strongest moments, maybe in September.' Sundowns will get the defence of their premiership title under way away against Chippa United on Saturday.
Yahoo
34 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Summer McIntosh wins fourth gold of the World Aquatics Championships
Summer McIntosh won her fourth gold medal of the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore with a dominant performance in the 400-meter individual medley. The Canadian teenager finished in 4:25.78 to set a new championship record and cap off a near-perfect meet with five medals across her events. American superstar Katie Ledecky is the only other woman to win as many golds at a single World Championships, while only Sweden's Sarah Sjöström has matched McIntosh's tally of five medals. With her bronze medal in the 800-meter freestyle on Saturday, McIntosh fell just short of matching Michael Phelps' record of five gold medals at a single World Championships. 'Overall, I'm happy with this World Championships,' McIntosh told CBC News. 'I have to be, four golds is something that I've never achieved at the world stage before. 'I broke my kind of curse of three – everything comes in threes but now everything comes in fours, and hopefully, I can push for everything to come in fives.' In Sunday's 400-meter individual medley, the 18-year-old finished more than seven seconds clear of Australia's Jenna Forrester and Japan's Mio Narita, who tied for silver with a time of 4:33.26. China's 12-year-old Yu Zidi, who previously became the youngest medalist at the World Championships, was half a second outside the medals in fourth. McIntosh now has 13 medals from the World Championships, including eight golds. In Singapore, she also took victories in the 400m freestyle, the 200m butterfly, and the 200m medley. In the men's 400m medley, France's Léon Marchand won his second gold medal of the championships by completing a medley double. His winning time of 4:04.73 saw him finish ahead of Japan's Tomoyuki Matsushita and Russian Ilia Borodin in second and third respectively, claiming his seventh career gold at the World Championships.


New York Times
38 minutes ago
- New York Times
Naomi Osaka and the tennis version of soccer's ‘new manager bounce'
Welcome back to the Monday Tennis Briefing, where The Athletic will explain the stories behind the stories from the past week on court. This week, Naomi Osaka found some form in Montreal as a home favorite extended her remarkable 2025, while Ben Shelton and Flavio Cobolli had a testy exchange in matching outfits, because that's how tennis rolls. If you'd like to follow our fantastic tennis coverage, click here. Soccer has its 'new manager bounce.' Does tennis? Clubs sometimes play better and win a few matches after they sack one manager and bring in another. Naomi Osaka might be feeling that now. She showed a marked improvement last fall, when she swapped Wim Fissette, now with Iga Świątek, for Patrick Mouratoglou. Advertisement Then she went through a few injuries, which meant she got some practice but not many match reps; when she got to the match court, tight situations started slipping away from her. Heading into the Canadian Open in Montreal, six of her last eight defeats had come in three sets, with the decider either going 6-4 or 7-6 against her. One of the exceptions was a straight-sets defeat to Emma Raducanu in Washington D.C., which saw her split with Mouratoglou. In interviews and news conferences, both had given the impression that communication was at times complicated. Osaka found it difficult to share her feelings, he said; Mouratoglou might feel he was wasting his time with her, having coached someone on the level of Serena Williams, Osaka said. Świątek's former coach, Tomasz Wiktorowski, has joined Osaka for a trial period in Canada, and so far the bounce is bouncing. Osaka has reeled off four consecutive impressive wins in Canada, not necessarily in terms of who she is beating, but the manner in which she is doing it. Liudmila Samsonova and Jelena Ostapenko are good matchups for her, but she won a tight three-setter against Samsonova and dispatched Ostapenko by combining her always-prodigious ballstriking with improved defensive movement. She's won 8 of 9 sets, too, the latest two coming in just 49 minutes against Anastasija Sevastova, 6-1, 6-0. That win put Osaka into the quarterfinals of a WTA 1,000 event, the level below a Grand Slam, for the first time since she returned to tennis in January 2024, after giving birth to her first child. Bounce or not, she will take it. Ben Shelton is having a good year. He's 29-16 during the 2025 campaign. He lost in the semifinals of the Australian Open to Jannik Sinner, the round of 16 of the French Open to Carlos Alcaraz, and the quarterfinals of Wimbledon to Sinner once more. If those are the only two guys who can beat you in a Grand Slam then you're doing something right. Advertisement That record gets an odd boost from two players, though. Shelton is 6-0 this year against Lorenzo Sonego and Brandon Nakashima, beating them thrice apiece. A record of 23-16 against everyone not named Sonego or Nakashima is slightly less shiny, but it indicates another stage in Shelton's growth: he seems to have mastered beating a certain level of player, and he learns how to beat those that have scrambled his brain. Adrian Mannarino, the wily Frenchman, beat Shelton in the first week of the Australian Open in 2024. Shelton took care of him decisively during the Canadian Open last week. Sunday night in Toronto, he stormed back from 5-3 down in the third set to beat Flavio Cobolli, 6-4, 4-6, 7-6(1). The two had some extended words at the net, after Cobolli gestured in frustration at losing the first point of the deciding tiebreak and Shelton thought it was personal. It wasn't, and the drama didn't go beyond two young men having it out in exactly matching outfits. It's the upper-tier player that Shelton has trouble with, and while there's no shame in that, he is No. 7 in the live ATP Tour rankings now and a 3-6 record against top-10 players will make that his ceiling unless he starts to make inroads against them. Until then, Sonego and Nakashima could do without seeing him for a while. There's a long way to go before the U.S. legal system upends the rule prohibiting college players from collecting the prize money they earn at pro tournaments, but student-athletes got a step in that direction last week. A federal judge in North Carolina granted class action status in the litigation involving Reese Brantmeier, the University of North Carolina student who brought the lawsuit, and Maya Joint, the pro player who was a student at the University of Texas last year. Advertisement Both players had to leave tens of thousands of dollars on the table after participating in matches at pro tournaments and winning some, including at the U.S. Open. An American collegian can earn heaps of money — some NFL quarterbacks are collecting millions — for making brief appearances for sponsors, but they can't collect money they earn with their sweat, because that helps maintain their amateur status. Brantmeier filed a lawsuit about this last year. The first step was to turn it into a class action suit by proving to the judge, among other things, that individual cases would be too complicated and that all the people are affected by the rule in basically the same way. U.S. Chief District Judge Catherine Eagles ruled in favor of Brantmeier and Joint and cited two groups of potential plaintiffs. The first includes any player who has competed in Division I tennis since March 19, 2020, or who could not compete because of NCAA prize money restrictions. The court order stated that it could include as many as 12,000 players. Then there are players who gave up prize money during that period. This is all very welcome news for Joint and for someone like Oliver Tarvet, the Brit who attends Texas Christian University and who won more than $200,000 (£150,700) for reaching the second round at Wimbledon this year, but could only claim $10,000 (£7,300) before expenses. 🎾 ATP 📍Toronto: Canadian Open (1,000) featuring Ben Shelton, Taylor Fritz, Alexander Zverev, Alexei Popyrin. 📺 UK: Sky Sports; U.S.: Tennis Channel 💻 Tennis TV 🎾 WTA 📍Montreal, Canada: Canadian Open (1,000) featuring Victoria Mboko, Elena Rybakina, Elina Svitolina, Naomi Osaka. 📺 UK: Sky Sports; U.S.: Tennis Channel Tell us what you noticed this week in the comments below as the men's and women's tours continue.