Dave Wensley knew right away what was wrong when he came across a three-vehicle collision on 22nd Street Monday night.

His daughter hadn’t yet returned home from track practice. She hadn’t texted him. She hadn’t contacted her grandmother. No one was home at a close friend’s house.

“I was driving down 22nd and I came across the accident. I just knew, for some reason,” said Wensley, fighting back tears.

His daughter, Sarah Wensley, was killed in the crash.

A stolen pickup truck sped through the intersection of 22nd Street West and Avenue M Monday night and crashed into two other vehicles, according to police. One of them, a car, was pushed on its side and into the wall of a medical clinic.

Sarah, 17, was one of two teens in the car who was killed. The other was 17-year-old James Paul Haughey. Both were students at Bethlehem Catholic High School in Saskatoon.

A 16-year-old girl who was also in the car was taken to hospital with serious injuries.

The three were hit on their way to track and field practice.

“It wasn’t like her to be out. She’d be home on a school night. I knew something happened, then when I saw that accident, I knew what happened,” said Wensley.

The woman accused of driving the truck, Cheyann Chrystal Peeteetuce, 21, faces 14 charges including impaired driving causing death, impaired driving causing bodily harm, flight causing death, dangerous operation of a motor vehicle causing death, and criminal negligence causing death.

A 17-year-old girl who was also in the stolen pickup truck faces two charges of being a party to the offence of dangerously operating a motor vehicle while evading police causing death, two charges of being a party to criminal negligence causing death, one count of being a party to the offence of criminal negligence causing bodily harm and one count of being a party to the dangerous operation of a motor vehicle while evading police causing bodily harm.

She cannot be named under the Youth Criminal Justice Act.

Sarah’s older brother Brennan Rowland said he's only concerned about remembering his sister.

“It’s all about Sarah. It always will be."

Sarah was very outgoing and had several close friends, her family said. She was her dad’s best friend.

“We were so close. She was a gift to me,” said Wensley.

He recalled his last night with Sarah, smiling about how he and one of Sarah’s closest friends were teasing her.

“We started teasing Sarah about her boyfriend and stuff like that the last night we were together,” Wensley said. “I’m kind of glad because she kind of flustered. I said, ‘The only reason I’m like this is because I love you and I care about you so much.’ I got to at least tell her that the last night we were together.”

Sarah was an avid athlete, her father said. She was on the track and field team and played volleyball up until this year.

“She was driven. She wanted to have good marks this year, so she… sacrificed some things to improve her grades,” he said.

Wensley offered his support to James Paul Haughey’s family as well as the family of the third victim, who is still in hospital recovering.

“She’s going to have a rough road,” he said of the 16-year-old girl who was close friends with Sarah. “People have to support her. I’m going to support her.”

Haughey’s family did not wish to issue a statement to CTV but gave permission to publish his name and picture. They shared a YouTube video of Haughey singing.

“My condolences, definitely my prayers and my love, go out to all three families that are involved,” Wensley said.

Watch video below of James Paul Haughey singing: