In the opening round, held in North Bay: …………………………………………………… The top-seeded Cambridge St. Benedict Saints dumped the 11th-seeded Ottawa St. Patrick’s Fighting Irish 65-41 after leading 21-8, 31-18 and 51-31 at the quarters. Zubair Seyed paced the Saints with 25. Evan Rodenburg added 18, Justin Malnerich 11, Alex Douglas 5, Devante Douse 4 and Carter Johnson 2. Eugene Kanku paced the Fighting Irish with 15. Alston Harris added 13, Joel Amisi 4, Kwadwo Danso-Manu 2, Javon Anderson 2, Sam St. Val 2, Albert Opena 2 and Amie Ben-Nassar 1. …………………………………………………… The 6th-seeded Toronto Oakwood Barons crushed the 16th-seeded North Bay St. Joseph-Scollard Hall Bears 74-23 as Jacob Masters scored 15, Tyrell O’Brien 12, Nathaniel Nelson 8, Julius Laurinavicius 8, Joshua Primo 7, Tevin Simpson 6, Derrick Roberts 6, Georgi Nedyalkov 3, Shaquan Cadougan 3, Jhamar O’Brian 3, Alamor Keane 2 and Tyler Jean 1. Keats Vanderlee led the Bears with 8. Christopher Sweeney added 7, Matteo Pavone 3, Nathan Desrosiers 3 and Levi Udeschini 2. …………………………………………………… The 3rd-seeded Pickering Pine Ridge Pumas clocked the 9th-seeded Scarborough Pope John Paul II Panthers 73-57 as Shakael Pryce scored 21, Yanick Hannibal 17, Jordan Henry 15, Jordan McGranachan 9, Matteus Case 5, Seth White 4 and Miles Hall 2. Darren Danquah paced the Panthers with 24. Andre Neagle added 12, Zachary John 10, Levi Ogbonna 8, Vadim St. Cyr 3 and Kemani Arca-Stewart 1. …………………………………………………… The 8th-seeded Stoney Creek Saltfleet District Storm rolled the 14th-seeded Kingston Holy Cross Crusaders 64-41 as Cameron McVeety scored 18, Andrew Bartlett 11, Rickey Morrison 9, James Agyapong 9, Jamahl Burke 5, Terry Hill 4, Daniel Di Sabatino 2, Malcolm Douglas 2, Filip Trifunovic 2 and Olivier Muembi 2. Luciano Troiani paced the Crusaders with 11. Samuel Pierson added 10, Tanner Hawley 9, Tommy Pendergast 5, Jared Griffith 4, Griffin Chenier 1 and Brandon Robbins 1. …………………………………………………… The 2nd-seeded Toronto St. Michael’s College Blue Raiders clubbed the 12th-seeded Collingwood Owls 80-42 as Kobey Ketavong scored 21, Sam Rautins 16, Danilo Djuricic 11, Inaki Alvarez Fernandez 11, Josua Asamoah 6, Chimelie Chibututu 5, Jack Foran 3, Ben Stonkus 3, Graham Treffrey 3 and Atik Gilao 1. Lyle Porter paced the Owls with 10. Spencer Strandholt added 9, Jalen Singh 8, Cameron Penner 8, Luke Enright 3, Ayden Finbow 3 and Carson Schleimer 1. …………………………………………………… The 5th-seeded Sarnia Northern CI &VS Vikings smacked the 15th-seeded Peterborough Thomas A. Stewart Griffins 61-34 as Sam Fairbairn scored 19, Jaden Ogorek 12, Noah Labelle-Voisey 10, Zachary Doxilly 8, Luke Daichendt 4, Steven Smith 4, Nate Smith 2 and Blake Butler 2. Ryan Simmons paced the Griffins with 8. Michael Parajka added 5, Issac Bork 4, Matt Wierdsma 3, Dawson Deck 3, Keegan Whitney 3, Brayden Little 3, Liam McRae 2, Zack Hunter 2 and Diego Alves 1. …………………………………………………… The 4th-seeded Stoney Creek Cardinal Newman Cardinals clipped the 10th-seeded Thornhill Vaughan Voyageurs 64-52 as Goran Veselinovic scored 21, Tyrell Hebert 17, Kuzari Reid 12, Maleik Gordon 9, Nick Rakas 3 and Tyler Bridgman 2. Freddy Martello paced the Voyageurs with 16. Kevin Evbagharu added 12, Nick Kwawukumey 11, Brian Antoine 7, Keon Davis 4 and Quincy Akposi 2. …………………………………………………… The 7th-seeded Mississauga St. Marcellinus Spirit crushed the 13th-seeded London Sir Wilfrid Laurier Rams 67-29 as Jaden Lewin scored 12, Latrelle Gonzales 11, Dejaunte Mclaughlin 11, Jervon Davis 9, Vladimir Lukomski 8, Charles Bediako 6, Jesean Wilson 5, Samuel Parris 3 and Sidney Okeke 2. Reuban Hasebenenbi paced the Rams with 10. Aldin Malkic added 9, Kuek Duol 4, Nathaniel Greaves 2, Sam Chams 2 and Joshua Greaves 2.
In the second, elimination round: …………………………………………………… The top-seeded Cambridge St. Benedict Saints stuffed the 16th-seeded North Bay St. Joseph-Scollard Hall Bears 69-24 as Zubair Sayed scored 20, Devante Douse 10, Evan Rodenburg 9, Alex Douglas 6, Carter Johnson 6, Sebastian Llorin 5, Justin Ching 4, Nick Jack 4, Andrew Horscroft 3 and Jake Polski 2. Keats Vanderlee scored 6 to pace the Bears (coached by Rick Vanderlee, assisted by Josée Omiccioli). Nathan Dufresne added 5, Matteo Pavone 4, Levi Udeschini 3, Christopher Sweeney 3, Stephen Crea 2 and Nathan Desrosiers 1, while Noah Conrad, Evan Desrosier, Conrad Smith and Kyle Koostachin were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 8th-seeded Stoney Creek Saltfleet District Storm clipped the 9th-seeded Scarborough Pope John Paul II Panthers 80-71 as Terry Hill scored 28, Andrew Bartlett 25, James Agyapong 11, Cameron McVeety 6, Rickey Morrison 3, Malcolm Douglas 2, Olivier Muembi 2 and Daniel Di Sabatino 1. “We got a lot of different guys playing well; it’s been a team effort so far,” Storm coach David Ormerod told the Stoney Creek News. “I couldn’t have scripted it any better. We got a crack at the No. 1 team in this tournament, but if we play well, I think we can beat them.” Zachary John scored 19 to lead the Panthers (coached by Donald Lindo, assisted by Jill Forester, Tamark Wright-Boswell and Sean Eddy). Darren Danquah added 17, Andre Neagle 9, Kemani Arca-Stewart 7, Nicholas De Vera 6, Vadime St Cyr 5, Levi Ogbonna 4, Ornel Alfonso 2 and Taijon Eccleston-Graham 2, while Takym Martin-McIntosh, Tristan De Vera and Shamar Lawrence were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 12th-seeded Collingwood Owls stunned the 5th-seeded Sarnia Northern CI &VS Vikings 51-38 as Lyle Porter scored 18, Spencer Strandholt 15, Cameron Penner 7, Luke Enright 6 and Jalen Singh 5. Samuel Fairbairn scored 13 to pace the Vikings (coached by Chris Jones, assisted by Matt Cook, Ryan Hanly and Josh Singh). Luke Daischendt added 11, Jaden Ogorek 6, Zachary Doxilly 5, Greg Bressette 2 and Noah Labelle-Voisey 1, while Aden Al-Kinani, Olufemi Obiri, Eric Zhou, Nate Smith, Blake Butler, Caleb Schiestel, Nathan Mackie, Tristan Haagsma and Steven Smith were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 4th-seeded Stoney Creek Cardinal Newman Cardinals dispatched the 13th-seeded London Sir Wilfrid Laurier Rams 56-40 as Goran Veselinovic scored 17, Tyrell Hebert 12, Maleik Gordon 11, Nick Rakas 6, Kuzari Reid 3, Tyler Bridgman 3, Dejuan Southe 2 and Frank Stipanic 3. Kuek Duol scored 15 to pace the Rams (coached by Dave Hocking, assisted by Bill Thomson and Richard Cooper). Kyle Estaris added 8, Reuban Hasebenebi 8, Aldin Malkic 7 and Eyad Mohammed 2, while Mohammed Osman, Venroy Bartley, C.J. Clarke, Nathaniel Greaves, Tyler Davidson, Rowan McLachlan, Sam Chams, Gionanni Henriques, Usman Khan, Joshua Greaves and Spencer Kantors were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 6th-seeded Toronto Oakwood Barons nipped the 11th-seeded Ottawa St. Patrick’s Fighting Irish 63-61 as Nathaniel Nelson scored 24, Georgi Nedyalkov 10, Tyrell Obrien 9, Shaquan Cadougan 9, Derrick Roberts 4, Alamor Keane 4 and Julius Laurinavicius 3. Eugene Kanku scored 18 to pace the Fighting Irish (coached by Matt Koeslag, assisted by Vikta Paulo and Ed McPherson). Alston Harris added 17, Sam St. Val 13, Kwadwo Danso-Manu 9, Armand Malumalu 2 and Javon Anderson 2, while Jawad Chareuf, Amiy Ben-Nassar, Joel Amisi and Albert Opena were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 3rd-seeded Pickering Pine Ridge Pumas whipped the 14th-seeded Kingston Holy Cross Crusaders 65-42 as Yannick Hannibal scored 15, Jordan McGranachan 13, Matteus Case 10, Shakael Pryce 10, Jordan Henry 6, Tyreek Brown 5, Darnelle Peddie 3, Miles Hall 2 and Craig Strangeways 1. Tanner Hawley and Samuel Pierson each scored 10 to pace the Crusaders (coached by Canlor Card, assisted by Steve Garant, Robin Dzierniejko, Alfie De Melo and Rick Caverley). Luciano Troiani added 8, Roddy Kimmerer 4, Jesse Soroka 2, Jared Griffith 2, Griffin Chenier 2, Tristan O’Brien 2 and Brandon Robbins 2, while Chase Badalato, Peter Iliescu, Mitchell Beaubien and Tommy Pendergast were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 2nd-seeded Toronto St. Michael’s College Blue Raiders crushed the 15th-seeded Peterborough Thomas A. Stewart Griffins 76-24 as Sam Rautins scored 15, Inaki Alvarez Fernandez 10, Danilo Djuricic 10, Chimelie Chibututu 8, Kyle Duke-Simpson 6, Kobey Ketavong 6, Josue Asamoah 6, Jack Foran 5, Nana Boateng 5, Ben Stonkus 3 and Graham Treffrey 2. Dawson Deck scored 7 to pace the Griffins (coached by Craig Muir, assisted by Dave Donald and Jacob Zelsman). Diego Alves added 6, Ryan Simmons 4, Issac Bork 4, Matt Wierdsma 2 and Jon Schultz 1, while Adam Patterson, Chase Fairbarn, Keegan Whitney, Brayden Little, Michael Parajka, Liam McRae and Zack Hunter were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The 7th-seeded Mississauga St. Marcellinus Spirit dispatched the 10th-seeded Thornhill Vaughan Voyageurs 61-54 as Jaden Lewin scored 23, Sidney Okeke 12, Samuel Parris 7, Vladimir Lukomski 6, Dejaunte McLaughlin 5, Charles Bediako 4, Jervon Davis 2 and Latrelle Gonzales 2. Nick Kwawukumey scored 25 to pace the Voyageurs (coached by Tony Brnadic and Joshua Lipsey). Jason Diaz added 9, Kevin Evbagharu 6, Brian Antoine 4, Keon Davis 4, Freddy Martello 2, Matteo Mongroo 2 and Quincy Akposi 2, while Jaidon Martin, Nickeal Clarke, Jalen Levene, Cameron Brown, Tyriq Knight, Jean Raseen and Jahleel Jno-baptiste-stewart were scoreless.
In the quarterfinals, the top-seeded Cambridge St. Benedict Saints defeated the 8th-seeded Stoney Creek Saltfleet District Storm 59-45 after leading 13-12, 28-21 and 42-32 at the quarters. “We had a lot of open looks and did everything we were supposed to do. The ball just wouldn’t go in,” Storm coach David Ormerod told the Stoney Creek News. The Storm (coached by Dave Ormerod) included Terry Hill, Jamahl Burke, Brandon Singh, Cameron McVeety, James Agyapong, Paul Chohan, Daniel Di Sabatino, Gabriel Lioris, Mobean Bilal, Malcolm Douglas, Rickey Morrison, Andrew Bartlett, Harraj Singh, Filip Trifunovic and Olivier Muembi.
The 4th-seeded Stoney Creek Cardinal Newman Cardinals edged the 12th-seeded Collingwood Owls 47-42 in overtime. The Owls led 12-8 after one quarter and 17-14 at the half. The score was knotted 26 after three quarters and at 38 after regulation. The Cardinals had a three-point lead with under a minute to go when Collingwood forward Lyle Porter drilled a trey to force overtime. The Cardinals embedded the dagger on a pair of Nick Rakas free throws in the final minute of the extra session. The Owls (coach Darryl Sproule, assistant John McDonald, manager Mike Farkas) included Ryan Havens, Mitch McFarlane, Spencer Strandholt, Jalen Singh, Ryan McMullin, Trevor Langford, Luke Enright, Aydan Finbow, Lyle Porter, Carson Schleimer, Cam Penner, Taran Singh and Owen Porter.
The 3rd-seeded Pickering Pine Ridge Pumas clocked the 6th-seeded Toronto Oakwood Barons 67-51. The Barons led 12-11 after one quarter. The Pumas led 34-25 at the half and 47-36 after three quarters. The Barons (coached by Anthony Miller, assisted by Oniel Kamaka, Dave MacDonald and Andy Nguyen) included Nathaniel Nelson, Julius Laurinavicius, Joshua Primo, Jacob Masters, Georgi Nedyalkov, Tevin Simpson, Tyrell Obrien, Shaquan Cadougan, Tyler Jean, Derrick Roberts, Jhamar O’Brian and Alamor Keane.
In the last quarterfinal, the 2nd-seeded Toronto St. Michael’s College Blue Raiders whipped the 7th-seeded Mississauga St. Marcellinus Spirit 54-33 after lead 20-11, 27-14 and 44-22 at the quarters. The Spirit (coached by Amir Morgan, assisted by Cory Cooper and David Tyndale) included Jervon Davis, Latrelle Gonzales, Sidney Okeke, Rodrigo Quinsay, Vladimir Lukomski, Charles Bediako, Jesean Wilson, Jaden Lewin, Coffie Ansong, Samuel Parris, Tyrell McLean and Dejaunte McLaughlin.
In the semis, the top-seeded Cambridge St. Benedict Saints nipped the 4th-seeded Stoney Creek Cardinal Newman Cardinals 42-39. The Cardinals led 9-7, 21-17 and 33-24 at the quarters. The Saints erased an 11-point fourth quarter deficit to pull out the win. Cardinals assistant coach Andrew Sergi told the Stoney Creek News that it was a “heartbreaking” loss. “It’s going to be tough for the entire team to regroup, but that’s what you have to do,” he said, adding the game against the Saints was a heart-fought match that came down to one extra play. “We got to go play another game, do what we can and hopefully, we’ll end our season with a win. We can use our past experiences at OFSAA winning the bronze to call on, to give us a chance to do that. It’s going to be tough for the entire team to regroup, but that’s what you have to do.” Zubair Seyed paced the Saints with 17 on 2-5 from the floor, 3-6 from the arc and 4-6 from the line. Evan Rodenburg added 10 on 5-11 from the floor. Devante Douse notched 8 on 4-9 from the floor and 0-1 from the arc. Alex Douglas added 3 on 0-1 from the floor and 1-3 from the arc. Justin Malnerich scored 2 on 1-4 from the floor and 0-4 from the arc. Carter Johnson added 2. The Saints hit 17-47 (.362) overall, 13-33 (.394) from the floor, 4-14 (.286) from the arc and 4-8 from the line, while garnering 9 fouls. Goran Veselinovic paced the Cardinals with 12 on 3-4 from the floor, 1-5 from the arc and 3-3 from the line. Tyrell Hebert added 8 on 4-6 from the floor and 0-1 from the line. Tyler Bridgman scored 5 on 1-1 from the floor and 1-2 from the arc. Maleik Gordon added 5 on 2-3 from the floor, 0-3 from the arc and 1-5 from the line. Nick Rakas added 5 on 1-2 from the floor and 1-5 from the arc. Dejuan Southe scored 2 on 1-1 from the floor and 0-3 from the arc. Two points were unallocated. The Cardinals hit 16-36 (.444) overall, 13-18 (.722) from the line, 3-18 (.167) from the arc and 4-9 (.444) from the line, while garnering 12 fouls.
In the other semi, the 2nd-seeded Toronto St. Michael’s College Blue Raiders dusted the 3rd-seeded Pickering Pine Ridge Pumas 63-45 after leading 25-8, 33-19 and 53-31 at the quarters. Sam Rautins paced the Raiders with 17 on 2-4 from the floor, 4-7 from the arc and 0-3 from the line. Kobey Ketavong added 13 on 2-4 from the floor and 3-6 from the arc. Inaki Alvarez Fernandez added 8 on 3-8 from the floor, 0-1 from the arc and 2-2 from the line. Atik Gilao scored 7 on 2-3 from the floor and 3-4 from the line. Danilo Djuricic added 6 on 3-7 from the floor and 0-3 from the arc. Chimeli Chibututu added 6 on 0-1 from the floor and 2-3 from the arc. Kyle Duke-Simpson notched 3 on 0-1 from the floor and 1-2 from the arc. Josua Asmoah scored 2 on 1-2 from the floor and 0-1 from the line, while the team as allocated 1. The Blue Raiders hit 23-55 (.418) overall, 13-32 (.406) from the floor, 10-23 (.435) from the arc and 7-11 (.636) from the line, while garnering 14 fouls. Shakael Pryce paced the Pumas with 13 on 6-10 from the floor, 0-1 from the arc and 1-2 from the line. Ten points were unallocated. Matteus Case scored 6 on 1-7 from the floor, 1-1 from the arc and 1-2 from the line, Jordan Henry scored 6 on 3-5 from the floor and 0-3 from the arc. Tristian Berry added 4 on 2-3 from the floor. Darnelle Peddie scored 3 on 0-7 from the floor, 0-1 from the arc and 3-6 from the line. Yanick Hannibal notched 3 on 1-3 from the floor and 1-2 from the line. The Pumas hit 16-47 (.340) overall, 14-37 (.378) from the floor, 2-10 from the arc and 11-17 (.647) from the line, while garnering 12 fouls.
In the bronze medal match, the 3rd-seeded Pickering Pine Ridge Pumas edged the 4th-seeded Stoney Creek Cardinal Newman Cardinals 53-52 in overtime. The Cardinals led 17-11, 26-24 and 40-34 at the quarters. The score was knotted at 45 after regulation. The tournament ended an emotional season for the Pumas, who welcomed back star player Jordan Henry from a prep school for the second semester, but lost former teammate Darius Thorne to a shooting incident in Oshawa. Henry wore Thorne’s No. 4 to honour his memory. Cardinals assistant coach Andrew Sergi told the Stoney Creek News that “to end with back-to-back losses on the final day is obviously something we didn’t want to do, but we gave our best effort and lost by a total of four points. it’s frustrating, but it’s also positive because you realize that all the work that we did throughout the year, it did mean something, because we were that close.” Sergi said the Pumas hit a trey with 2 seconds to play to force overtime. The Pumas hit the winner with 7 seconds to play. “We came down, didn’t even get a shot off and that was it, we lost the game,” Sergi said, adding Cardinal Newman was still suffering the effects of a “bitter defeat” at the hands of St. Benedict in the semifinal, which came down to one play at the final buzzer. “We just didn’t have the same energy and intensity you need in a game. The players hadn’t recovered from the loss that happened earlier that day, that was still fresh in their minds.” Jordan Henry paced the Pumas with 17 on 5-7 from the floor, 1-2 from the arc and 4-7 from the line. Shakael Pryce added 12 on 3-9 from the floor and 2-4 from the arc. Yanick Hannibal notched 10 on 3-9 from the floor and 4-6 from the line. Matteus Case scored 8 on 1-5 from the floor, 2-5 from the arc and 0-2 from the line. Darnelle Peddie added 6 on 2-5 from the floor, 0-1 from the arc and 2-5 from the line. Miles Hall added 1 on 0-1 from the floor and 1-2 from the line. The Pumas hit 19-51 (.373) overall, 14-39 (.359) from the floor, 5-12 (.417) from the arc and 11-22 from the line, while garnering 13 fouls. Maleik Gordon paced the Cardinals with 15 on 4-11 from the floor, 1-3 from the arc and 4-8 from the line. Nick Rakas added 11 on 2-4 from the floor, 2-5 from the arc and 1-2 from the line. Goran Veselinovic added 11 on 3-10 from the floor, 1-4 from the arc, 2-6 from the line and 10 boards. Tyrell Hebert notched 10 on 5-7 from the floor and 6 boards. Dejaun Southe added 2, Frank Stipancic 2 and Kuzari Reid 1, while Tyler Bridgman, Ayrton Luciani, Tobias Moquette, Filip Gagacev, Flamur Pilana, Vince Coccaro and Ben Zwolak were scoreless. The Cardinals (coached by Victor Raso, assisted by Jeff Joseph, John Nardini, Jeff Zwolak and Andrew Sergi, and managed by Jodi Pomerleau) hit 20-48 (.417) overall, 16-36 (.444) from the floor, 4-12 from the arc and 8-18 (.444) from the line, while garnering 18 fouls.
In the final, the 2nd-seeded Toronto St. Michael’s College Blue Raiders edged the top-seeded Cambridge St. Benedict Saints 71-70. The Blue Raiders led 15-13, 30-20 and 53-34 at the quarters. Zubair Sayed scored 30 of his 52 points in the fourth quarter to rally the Saints from a 19-point deficit. He drained seven treys in the quarter to give the Saints a 68-67 lead with 39 seconds to play. With the game tied with 15 seconds to play, Seyed dropped a clutch free throw to give the Saints a 70-69 lead. But he was whistled for a foul with 2 seconds to play, sending Atik Gilao to the line, where he hit both free throws to pull out the win for the Blue Raiders. The Saints finished 49-5 on the season. The Cambridge Times reported that the foul call was controversial. “With one last scoring attempt by St. Mike’s, Seyed and Atik Gilao fought for a loose ball, taking Seyed to the floor. Gilao went for a fade away jump shot that missed, and he landed on Seyed before falling backward.” Yet the foul was called on Seyed. “We had a great season; a very memorable season. These guys are my brothers, I love them to death. I’d go to war with these guys any day,” said Seyed. “Those refs weren’t the greatest, but you can’t blame the game on the refs. They’re in pressure situations and they’re in the moment, just like us. It was obviously a really bad call. … We were a little lackadaisical as a team the first half, but I just kept preaching to my guys that we have to keep going as it was our last game together. I guess the guys believe in me and they gave me the ball in my spots, and I just did whatever I could to try and help my team.” Saints coach John Malnerich said his troops were resilient down the stretch. “It wasn’t one of our best game in the first half. I didn’t think we had much pep and zip. Then it got down to crunch time and at a certain point in the game you have to start being a little bit more aggressive, and we switched our defences up. We got some steals, (Alex) Douglas got his hand on a couple balls, Lucas Cardoso was key at the top of the press, then we got on a couple runs with Seyed, the threes he hit, he was on fire.” Seyed said of his fourth-quarter performance: “It was a surreal feeling; it was hard to explain. It was like an out of body experience. I give credit to my teammates, of course, they gave me the ball where I wanted. The coaching staff really showed love for me and put me in the right spots to help me score. … “It was great to be in that situation and perform for our fans who came all the way from Cambridge, driving four hours. It was a great experience.” Seyed told the Kitchener-Waterloo Record that “it was a horrible call by the ref but you can’t do anything about it. That’s life, that’s reality, that’s what God wanted and that’s what happened. I love my teammates to death. I did everything I could but the outcome was obviously not what I wanted.” Raiders coach Jeff Zownir said “that was as exciting as it gets, especially in the gold-medal match. We all thought it was out of reach, he got hot and what a finish. (Seyed) had one helluva game. That was unbelievable to watch him make some of those shots. All credit to him.” Saints assistant coach Hugh Meyer added another medal to his already massive collection. A longtime coach at Timmins High and Vocational School, he led the Blues to five OFSAA golds, four silvers and five bronzes during a 29-year career. Kobey Ketavong paced the Blue Raiders with 17 on 2-3 from the floor, 4-5 from the arc and 1-1 from the line. Atik Gilao added 16 on 7-8 from the floor and 2-2 from the line. Danilo Djuricic added 15 on 3-3 from the floor, 1-3 from the arc and 6-6 from the line. Inaki Alvarez Fernandes added 9 on 1-3 from the floor, 2-4 from the arc and 1-2 from the line. Chimelie Chibututu scored 9 on 3-4 from the arc. Kyle Duke-Simpson added 3 on 1-1 from the arc. Sam Rautins scored 2 on 1-2 from the floor and 0-1 from the arc. The Blue Raiders hit 25-37 (.676) overall, 14-19 (.737) from the floor, 11-18 (.611) from the arc and 10-11 (.909) from the line, while garnering 13 fouls. Zubair Seyed paced the Saints with 52 on 11-18 from the floor, 7-10 from the arc, 9-11 from the line and 6 boards. Justin Malnerich added 5 on 1-4 from the floor and 1-3 from the arc. Jake Polski scored 4 on 2-2 from the floor and 0-2 from the line. Evan Rodenburg added 4 on 2-2 from the floor. Alex Douglas notched 3 on 0-2 from the floor, 1-1 from the arc and 0-1 from the line. Devante Douse scored 2 on 1-1 from the floor. The Saints hit 26-44 (.591) overall, 17-29 (.586) from the floor, 9-15 (.600) from the arc and 9-14 (.643) from the line, while garnering 10 fouls.
The bronze medalist Pickering Pine Ridge Pumas: Tyreek Brown; Nathaniel Joseph-Parker; Matteus Case; Jordan Henry; Jordan McGranachan; Jayden Grange; Shakael Pryce; Miles Hall; Tristian Berry; Darnelle Peddie; Yanick Hannibal; Massi Mirzada; Craig Strangeways; Seth White; coach Cam Nekkers; assistant Trish Biffin; assistant Cedric Carter; assistant Gina Sotiriou
The silver medalist Cambridge St. Benedict Saints: Zubair Seyed; Andrew Horscroft; Lucas Cardoso; Sebastian Llorin; Alex Douglas; Justin Malnerich; Justin Ching; Carter Johnson; Devante Douse; Jake Polski; Jeremiah Sackey; Nick Jack; Evan Rodenburg; coach John Malnerich; assistant Hugh Meyer; assistant Ron Martinello; assistant Gerard Magennis; assistant Tianze Chai
The gold medalist Toronto St. Michael’s College Blue Raiders: Inaki Alvarez Fernandez; Traynor Alec; Chimelie Chibututu; Kyle Duke-Simpson; Kobey Ketavong; Sam Rautins; Jack Foran; Danilo Djuricic; Ben Stonkus; Josua Asamoah; Graham Treffrey; Atik Gilao; Nana Boateng; coach Jeff Zownir; assistant Nunzio Corrente; assistant Daniel Lumsden; assistant Branko Samsa