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The Alberta Golden Bears and Pandas are the sports teams that represent the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Alberta athletics teams have won a total of 101 national championships, including 84 in U Sports sanctioned sports, making it one of the most successful programs in the country.
The 2024 U Sports Women's Final 8 Basketball Tournament was held March 7–10, 2024, in Edmonton, Alberta, to determine a national champion for the 2023–24 U Sports women's basketball season. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It was officially called the 2024 U SPORTS Women's Final 8 presented by The Westin Edmonton .
The Grads are playing tonight! : the story of the Edmonton Commercial Graduates Basketball Club (first ed.). Edmonton, Alberta: University of Alberta Press. ISBN 978-0-88864-602-6. Hall, M. Ann (2008). Immodest and Sensational: 150 years of Canadian women in sport. Toronto, Ontario: Lorimer. ISBN 978-1-55277-021-4. Hawthorne, Tom (January 30 ...
The 2023–24 Alabama Crimson Tide men's basketball team represented the University of Alabama during the 2023–24 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. The Crimson Tide was led by fifth-year head coach Nate Oats. They played their home games at Coleman Coliseum located in Tuscaloosa, Alabama as a member of the SEC.
The Edmonton Stingers are a Canadian professional basketball team based in Edmonton, Alberta. They compete in the Canadian Elite Basketball League (CEBL) and play their home games at the HIVE arena at the Edmonton Expo Centre. The Stingers' mascot is Buzz, a hornet, inspired by the CF-18 based in Cold Lake. The team logo has a CF-18 going ...
Purdue Boilermakers Camden Heide (23) waits on the courtside during the NCAA men’s basketball exhibition game against the Truman State Bulldogs, Wednesday, Nov. 2, 2022, at Mackey Arena in West ...
The Calgary Surge is a Canadian professional basketball team based in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, that competes in the Canadian Elite Basketball League since 2023. They relocated from Guelph, where they were known as the Guelph Nighthawks. They were renamed and rebranded as the Calgary Surge. [2]
On October 30, 2004 the Huskies beat the Okanagan Sun 24-7 to win the Canadian Bowl. The very next year, the Huskies went on to beat the South Fraser Rams and then the St. Leonard Cougars to again win the national championship. The Huskies are the pilot team for the Gender Based Violence Prevention Program (GBVPP) with the University of Alberta.