
Kay MacBeth, the last surviving member of the Edmonton Grads, dies at 96
TORONTO — They were basketball’s version of “A League of Their Own,” only better, a group of trailblazing women who utterly dominated their sport for a quarter of a century.
And on Saturday, Kay MacBeth, the last surviving member of the famous Edmonton Graduates basketball team, died at the age of 96.
“It’s really an end of an era,” her granddaughter Christin Carmichael Greb said. “It was like the movie, it was the same sort of thing for basketball, there were these women who were amazing athletes that we don’t always hear about.”
MacBeth (nee MacRitchie) joined the Grads — whom Dr. James Naismith, the Canadian inventor of basketball, once referred to as “the finest basketball team that ever stepped out on a floor” — in 1939 when she was just 17, and played in the team’s final two seasons. Known as Canada’s most successful team in history, they won 17 world titles and went 502-20 from their founding in 1915 to 1940, when they folded due to demands of the war and falling attendance.