West Coast Senior Lacrosse Association

West Coast Senior Lacrosse Association
SportBox Lacrosse
Founded1968
CommissionerErnie Truant
No. of teams6
CountryCanada
Most recent
champion
Ladner Pioneers (2025)
Most titlesLadner Pioneers & Coquitlam Bandits (12)
Official websiteWCLSA.ca

The West Coast Senior Lacrosse Association is a Senior B Canadian box lacrosse league. The teams are located in southwest British Columbia. Champions of the league move on to compete for the Presidents Cup, the Canadian National Senior B championship. Teams from the WSCLA have won the Presidents Cup 9 times, most recently the Ladner Pioneer's three peat in 2022, 2023 and 2024.

The league consists of 6 teams, 4 of which are located in the Lower Mainland, and two on Vancouver Island. In recent years, it has been dominated by two teams, the Ladner Pioneers and the Coquitlam (formerly Tri-City) Bandits, who between them have won 17 out of the 23 titles since 2000.

History

The origins of the WCSLA date back to 1934, when the Inter-City Lacrosse League was founded. Box lacrosse had been adopted by Canada two years prior. This was the league that would go onto to spawn the Western Lacrosse Association, but for the first thirty years, the future Senior A and Senior B teams played in the same competition. That would change in 1968, when 4 of the more prominent clubs, the Salmonbellies, Burrards, Shamrocks and Adanacs, split to join the new professional National Lacrosse Association. When the NLA collapsed after two years, the four western teams returned to amateur status, creating the WLA. The teams who didn't go pro retained the Inter-City Lacrosse League name.

In 1968, the league consisted of 6 teams: the Surrey Riders, New West Blues, Vancouver Killarney, Chilliwack, North Shore Indians and Burnaby. 1970 saw the league officially change status to Senior B. In 1972 Harry George Woolley took over as commissioner, helping the Senior B league take giant strides toward respectability after years of having a reputation for being a men's recreational league. Woolley took drastic measures in changing the structure of the organization by implementing a league agreement, producing league perpetual trophies and crafting a new overall image. Attendance grew from only a half dozen people to several hundred fans during the playoffs. Out of the changes came the newly formed West Coast Senior Lacrosse Association (WCSLA) in 1973.

The President's Cup was held in BC for the first time in 1974. Hosted at Queen's Park Arena, the New West Blues and Prince George represented BC. Prince George would go on to win the Cup.[1]

In 1978, the league's tenth anniversary season saw the following clubs compete: New West Whalers, North Shore Indians, Burnaby Klippers, Vancouver Blue Angels, Abbotsford Braves and White Rock Titans.[2]

In 1991, the Langley Knights traveled to Czechoslovakia to represent BC and Canada in an international tournament.[3]

In 2001, the league had grown to 8 teams. The Abbotsford Bandits, Ladner Pioneers, Langley Knights, North Shore Indians, Nanaimo Timbermen, Port Coquitlam Eagles, Surrey Rebels and Vancouver Burrards.[4]

Over its history, the league has been very volatile, with a plethora of defunct teams. Only three of the current teams have remained in the same location their entire existence. The North Shore Indians were founded in 1968, and have gone through a few name changes, as well as multiple seasons where they had to suspend the teams operations. The Indians have won 3 Presidents Cups, in 1985, 1993 and 2001. The Ladner Pioneers and Nanaimo Timbermen have existed in their original locations since the 1980s. Ladner is the most successful team in the league, having won the tied most league titles, and 5 Presidents Cups, in 1998, 2004 and three from 2022-2024. Nanaimo has won 0 national championships.

Coquitlam originated as the Burnaby Lakers in 1987, playing there until 1999, when they moved to Abbotsford and changed their mascot to the Bandits. Their stay in the Fraser Valley was short, moving back to Burnaby in 2002 for one year before heading to Port Coquitlam and being renamed the Tri-City Bandits. As Tri-City, they experienced a golden age, winning 9 league titles in 10 years, although they did not have the same level of success on the national stage. The team moved once again in 2015, to Coquitlam, and changed their name again to the Adanacs, to match the cities Senior A team. The Senior B Adanacs played for 4 years, until Covid-19 forced the league to cancel the 2020 and 2021 seasons. When the league restarted, the team played as the Port Coquitlam Saints, adopting the name of that cities Junior A team. The Saints only lasted one year, before the franchise had to suspend operations. After a hiatus, they rejoined in 2025 as the Coquitlam Bandits. The Bandits won 1 Presidents Cup, in 1999 in their last year in Burnaby.

Victoria entered the league in 2016 as the Wolves. After the covid break, they were renamed to the Shamrocks, the same as the Senior A team. Unlike the Senior A Salmonbellies, New Westminster's Senior B team has had a history of moving and renaming. Beginning their history as the Langley Knights in 1989, they won the league title in their first year. The Knights would remain in Langley until 2006, winning a second league title in 2000. 2007 saw them move to New West, keeping the Knights moniker for one year before becoming the Royal City Capitals. Like most other teams, Covid-19 saw the Capitals undergo a change in name, to the recognizable Salmonbellies. Unfortunately the name change has not heralded a era of success, with the Bellies having only won 4 games total since the 2022 season. [5]

Teams

Team City Founded Presidents Cups
Ladner Pioneers Delta, British Columbia 1981 5
New Westminster Salmonbellies New Westminster, British Columbia 1989 (as Langley Knights) 0
North Shore Indians North Vancouver, British Columbia 1968 3
Victoria Shamrocks Victoria, British Columbia 2016 (as Victoria Wolves) 0
Nanaimo Timbermen Nanaimo, British Columbia 1987 0
Coquitlam Bandits Coquitlam, British Columbia 1987 (as Burnaby Lakers) 1

Past teams

  • Abbotsford Extra Old Stockers (1980-81), formerly Abbotsford Braves (1978-79)
  • Abbotsford Totems (1974), formerly Abbotsford MSA (1972-73)
  • Burnaby Burrards (2008-10), formerly Vancouver Burrards (1992, 1999-2007), Vancouver Vipers (1994-98), Vancouver-Killarney Vipers (1993), Vancouver Sr. B (1989-91)
  • Burnaby Kirby's Klippers (1976-81), formerly Burnaby Firefighters (1975), Burnaby Columbians (1973-74), Burnaby Kokanees (1971-72), Burnaby Lougheeds (1969-70), Burnaby Villa Motor Inn (1968)
  • Chilliwack Mustangs (2009-11)
  • East Vancouver Bluebirds (1984-86), formerly Vancouver Disco Sports Blue Angels (1978-83)
  • Langley Warriors (2009-19)
  • Nanaimo Labatts (1972-74)
  • New Westminster Whalers (1979-80), formerly New Westminster Mr. Sport Hotel (1975-78), New Westminster Rebels (1974), New Westminster Blues (1970-73), New Westminster Labatt Blues (1969), Coquitlam Molsons (1968)
  • Port Coquitlam A's (1971)
  • Port Coquitlam Saints (1st Ed. 1990-2001), formerly Port Coquitlam Eagles (1988-89), Port Coquitlam Kirby's Klippers (1986-87), Port Coquitlam Whalers (1983-85)
  • Port Coquitlam Saints (2nd Ed. 2022), formerly Coquitlam Adanacs (2016-20), Tri-City Bandits (2003-15), Burnaby Bandits (2002), Abbotsford Bandits (2000-01), Burnaby Bandits (1999), Burnaby Lakers (1992-98), Burnaby Cablevision (1989-91), Burnaby Lakers (1987-88)
  • Port Moody Thunder (2012-15)
  • Surrey Turf Hotel Ryders (1969), formerly Surrey Dells (1968)
  • Valley Rebels (2005-19), formerly Surrey Rebels (1983-2004)
  • Vancouver Totems (1973), formerly Vancouver Killarney Sr. B (1969-72)
  • White Rock Hawks (1979), formerly White Rock Titans (1978)

Champions

Season Winner Runner-up Presidents Cup result
1968 Coquitlam Molsons Nanaimo O'Keefes - Silver
1969 New Westminster Labatt Blues Nanaimo Luckies - Gold
1970 New Westminster Blues Silver
1971 Burnaby Kokanees Silver
1972 New Westminster Blues Silver
1973 New Westminster Labatt Blues
1974 New Westminster Rebels Bronze
1975 Port Coquitlam Chiefs
1976 Burnaby Kirby’s Klippers New Westminster Mr. Sport Hotel
1977 Burnaby Kirby's Klippers
1978 Burnaby Kirby's Klippers
1979 North Shore Indians Burnaby Kirby's Klippers
1980 North Shore Indians
1981 North Shore Indians Bronze
1982 Vancouver Disco Sports Angels Nanaimo City - Bronze
1983 Vancouver Disco Sports Angels
1984 Port Coquitlam Whalers
1985 North Shore Indians Gold
1986 Surrey Rebels Port Coquitlam Kirby's Klippers Bronze
1987 Surrey Rebels Ladner Pioneers
1988 Surrey Rebels Ladner Pioneers Silver
1989 Langley Knights Nanaimo Timbermen (host) - Silver
1990 Ladner Pioneers
1991 Ladner Pioneers Nanaimo Timbermen
1992 Nanaimo Timberman Burnaby Lakers Silver
1993 North Shore Indians Burnaby Lakers Gold
1994 Burnaby Lakers Ladner Pioneers Silver
1995 Burnaby Lakers Ladner Pioneers Silver
1996 Burnaby Lakers Ladner Pioneers
1997 Ladner Pioneers Burnaby Lakers Bronze
1998 Ladner Pioneers Nanaimo Timbermen Gold
1999 North Shore Indians Ladner Pioneers Burnaby Bandits (host) - Gold, North Shore - Silver
2000 Langley Knights Abbotsford Bandits
2001 North Shore Indians Abbotsford Bandits North Shore - Gold, Abbotsford - Silver
2002 Nanaimo Timbermen North Shore Indians Bronze
2003 Nanaimo Timbermen Tri-City Bandits
2004 Ladner Pioneers Tri-City Bandits Ladner - Gold; Langley Knights (host) - Bronze
2005 Tri-City Bandits Valley Rebels Silver
2006 Tri-City Bandits Ladner Pioneers Ladner (host) - Bronze
2007 Ladner Pioneers Tri-City Bandits
2008 Tri-City Bandits Ladner Pioneers
2009 Tri-City Bandits Ladner Pioneers Silver
2010 Tri-City Bandits Nanaimo Timbermen
2011 Tri-City Bandits Ladner Pioneers
2012 Tri-City Bandits[6] Valley Rebels
2013 Tri-City Bandits[7] Ladner Pioneers
2014 Tri-City Bandits[8] Nanaimo Timbermen
2015 Nanaimo Timbermen[9] Ladner Pioneers
2016 Langley Warriors[10] Nanaimo Timbermen
2017 Ladner Pioneers[11] Royal City Capitals
2018 Nanaimo Timbermen[12] Ladner Pioneers Silver
2019 Ladner Pioneers[13] Nanaimo Timbermen
2022 Ladner Pioneers[14] North Shore Indians Gold
2023 Ladner Pioneers[15] Victoria Shamrocks Gold
2024 Ladner Pioneers[16] Victoria Shamrocks Gold
2025 Ladner Pioneers[17] Victoria Shamrocks TBD

References

  1. ^ "1970's - West Coast Senior Lacrosse Association". www.wcsla.ca. Retrieved 2026-03-09.
  2. ^ "1970's - West Coast Senior Lacrosse Association". www.wcsla.ca. Retrieved 2026-03-09.
  3. ^ "1990's - West Coast Senior Lacrosse Association". www.wcsla.ca. Retrieved 2026-03-09.
  4. ^ "2000's - West Coast Senior Lacrosse Association". www.wcsla.ca. Retrieved 2026-03-09.
  5. ^ Stewart-Candy, Hutch | Dave; Features, New (2025-01-01). "Canadian Lacrosse Almanac 2025". laxhall.com. Retrieved 2026-01-30.
  6. ^ "Sr. B Bandits back to President's Cup for fifth straight year". Tri-City News. 14 August 2012.
  7. ^ "Tri-City tops in BC". Coquitlam Now. 16 August 2013.
  8. ^ "Bandits in seventh heaven". Tri-Cities Now. 14 August 2014.
  9. ^ "Senior B Timbermen win B.C. championship". Nanaimo News Bulletin. 8 August 2015.
  10. ^ "Warriors chop down Timbermen, claim first provincial banner". Langley Times. 12 August 2016.
  11. ^ "Ladner Pioneers win first provincial title in 10 years". Delta Optimist. 18 August 2017.
  12. ^ "Nanaimo outscores Ladner to win senior B lacrosse championship". Nanaimo News Bulletin. 14 August 2018.
  13. ^ "Series sweep sends Pioneers to nationals". Delta Optimist. August 12, 2019.
  14. ^ "News: Pioneers Sweep Final - West Coast Senior Lacrosse Association". www.wcsla.ca. 2022-08-07. Retrieved 2025-08-09.
  15. ^ "News: Ladner Pioneers Repeat as Provincial Champions - West Coast Senior Lacrosse Association". www.wcsla.ca. 2023-07-31. Retrieved 2025-08-09.
  16. ^ "News: Pioneers 2024 League and Provincial Champions - West Coast Senior Lacrosse Association". www.wcsla.ca. 2024-08-12. Retrieved 2025-08-09.
  17. ^ "News: Pioneers Champions Again - West Coast Senior Lacrosse Association". www.wcsla.ca. 2025-08-10. Retrieved 2025-08-12.