EAST | |||||||||
(11) | Western | 78 | |||||||
(6) | U.P.E.I. | 74 | Western | 63 | |||||
(15) | Acadia | 86 | Acadia | 62 | Western | 67 | |||
(4) | York | 69 | |||||||
MIDEAST | Waterloo | 61 | |||||||
(8) | Winnipeg | 85 | |||||||
(7) | McGill | 75 | Winnipeg | 62 | Waterloo | 69 | |||
(3) | Waterloo | 81 | Waterloo | 63 | |||||
(14) | Calgary | 72 | |||||||
WEST | —–VICTORIA | ||||||||
(2) | Victoria | 80 | |||||||
(13) | St. F.X. | 72 | Victoria | 79 | |||||
(5) | Lethbridge | 77 | Lethbridge | 59 | Victoria | 78 | |||
(9) | Concordia | 58 | |||||||
MIDWEST | Victoria | 70 | |||||||
(1) | Manitoba | 84 | |||||||
(16) | Toronto | 83 | Manitoba | 59 | Saskatchewan | 70 | |||
(12) | Saskatchewan | 67 | Saskatchewan | 72 | |||||
(10) | Dalhousie | 64 |
In the western regional semis, held in Lethbridge, 2nd-ranked Victoria opened with an 80-72 win over 12th-ranked St. FX as Cord Clemens scored 22 and grabbed 12 boards. Dave Sheehan added 21, Vito Pasquale 12, Jamie Newman 9, Lloyd Scrubb 8, Shawn Kalinovich 4, Rob Kreke 2 and Randy Steele 2, while Graham Taylor, Geoff Mckay, Wade Loukes and Jerry Divocky were scoreless. The Vikings led 39-36 at the half and outrebounded the X-Men 40-27. Kyle Gayle paced St. FX with 23. Chris Ross added 19, Andy Ledoux 14, Monty Gallant 8, James Paulsen 6 and Roger Joli-Couer 2, while Rich Foshay, Bruce Mackenzie, Brent Baker, Wade Smith, David Napier and Tom Chadwick were scoreless. Vikings mananger Al Duddridge told the Victoria Times-Colonist that “in the second half, we came out and scored the first six points, stopping fouling and made a couple of defensive adjustments to help keep the lead as much as nine the rest of the way.” …………………………………………………… 5th-ranked Lethbridge clipped 9th-ranked Concordia 77-58 as Ken McMurray scored 23. The Pronghorns led 30-26 at the half. Craig Norman paced the Stingers with 28. …………………………………………………… In the bronze medal match, Concordia defeated St. FX 83-73.
In the West regional final, Cord Clemens scored 23 and grabbed nine rebounds as Victoria pummeled Lethbridge 79-59. Clemens dominated the paint. The Vikings broke open a 6-6 game with a 12-0 run. The Vikes led 43-32 at the half. Dave Sheehan added 20 for the Vikings, Shawn Kalinovich 10, Lloyd Scrubb 6, Vito Pasquale 4, Wade Loukes 4, Jerry Divocky 3, Randy Steel 3 and Graham Taylor 2, while Rob Kreke and Jamie Newman were scoreless. Brent Maxwell paced the Pronghorns with 14. Jerome Ell and Ryan Heggie each added 12, Ken McMurray 10, Darren Boras 3, Rob Layton 2, Jamie McLellan 2, Shawn Gilborn 2 and Dave Ross 2, while Curtis French and Dave Rasz were scoreless. “When they have Cord Clemens in the game, he’s such a factor,” said a Pronghorn coach Ken Olynyk. “He made us adjust so many things we do. We had to adjust our shots and it showed — we only shot 38 per cent.” Clemens said “we’ve always felt Lethbridge was one of the toughest teams in Canada. They’re not that big, but they’re scrappy and tough inside. We expected a tough game from the them and the boys were just ready to come out and play.” Clemens was chosen regional MVP. The region’s all-star squad featured Kyle Gayle (St. Francis Xavier); Craig Norman (Concordia); Dave Sheehan (Victoria); Ryan Heggie (Lethbridge); and Ken McMurray (Lethbridge).
In the Midwest regional semi, held in Saskatoon, Manitoba defeated Toronto 84-83 in its second straight thriller, having just come off of a tight GPAC final. Manitoba led 46-35 at the half but lost guard Terry Garrow near the end of the first half as he sprained an ankle in a collision with teammate Tony Kaufman. Toronto took a six-point lead with 3:20 to play but Manitoba rallied back. Joe Ogoms missed a baseline jumper and muscled in for the putback winner at the buzzer. Joe Ogoms finished with 30. Tony Kaufman added 23. Sam Hill led Toronto with 24. Mike Forestell added 16, along with 11 boards and Roger Rollocks 16, while Mark Harvey nabbed 13 boards. “I think we played a great game,” Blues coach Brian Heaney told the Varsity. “It was very disappointing that we lost by a point, but we gave our best shot. We knew we had to play the best team and we almost beat them.” Toronto had a 39-26 rebounding edge but committed 22 turnovers to Manitoba’s 11. …………………………………………………… In the other semi, the Saskatchewan Huskies edged the Dalhousie Tigers 67-64 as Byron Tokarchuk scored 17, Kirk Jones 12 and John Dewar 10. Dewar hit six free throws in the final 1:11 to rally Saskatchewan from a 63-61 deficit. Dalhousie’s Darrell Williams notched a free throw to cut the lead to one but Dalhousie’s Pat Colley tapped the second shot off the rim into the basket and was called for offensive goaltending. Dewar iced it with two free throws with three seconds on the clock. Dewar told the Saskatoon Star-Phoenix that “I was thinking of last year’s regionals. I hit 13 free throws in the second half and missed one. I’m not the kind of guy who usually wants the ball but tonight I did. It’s just a feeling you get inside.” Huskies coach Guy Vetrie said “first of all, they (Dalhousie) didn’t turn the game into a track meet. We controlled the tempo of the basketball game. They did do a lot of talking to God but we met their challenge and beat them at the summit. I think they felt this wouldn’t be much of a game. It annoyed me that they were coming into our gym with that kind of attitude, not showing any respect for us or for Byron.” The Huskies led 28-25 at the half. Dewar told The Sheaf “I don’t necessarily picture myself to be the guy shooting in that tough a situation, but tonight I had a good feeling running through me. I wanted the ball.” Pat Colley led the Tigers with 19. Darrell Williams added 12. …………………………………………………… In the bronze medal match, Toronto edged Dalhousie 79-76 despite trailing 40-39 at the half. Roger Rollocks led the Varsity Blues with 26. Sam Hill added 21. Mike Gillett led the Tigers with 16.
In the Midwest regional final, 12th-seeded Saskatchewan stunned top-seeded Manitoba 72-59. The score was knotted at 37 at the half but Saskatchewan held the Bisons to eight points in the first 14 minutes of the second half en route to their regional title. 6-9 centre Byron Tokarchuk scored 21, Greg Jockims 13, Sheldon Ryma 12 and Mark Peters 9 in the Huskies win. Peters told the Saskatoon Star-Phoenix that “I had trouble sleeping last night. But we knew we could beat Manitoba. We were confident.” The Huskies lost point guard John Cleland because of a fractured left foot in the first half but Greg Jockims rotated to the backcourt. Huskies coach Guy Vetrie said “we were quite concerned the whole first half. Greg isn’t the fastest guy in the world but he gives us good ball control … We gave up speed for ball control. … At half-time, we went over the little things. We talked about the work ethic on defence.” Huskies assistant coach Paul Humbert said “Pr-i-me Time. If you want a nickname for us, you can call us Prime Time.” Manitoba was unable to penetrate the Saskatchewan zone and the Huskies slowly built their lead to as many as 17. Joe Ogoms paced the Bisons with 20. Manitoba shot 22-71 from the field. “That’s two in a row like that,” said Manitoba coach Rick Suffield. “We’re showing a little character.” Huskie forward Sheldon Ryma told The Sheaf that “we knew if we played Manitoba again, we weren’t going to lose to them five times in one year.” Vetrie said seniors John Dewar and Mark Peters “both played extremely well. They’ll remember this weekend for a long time.” Peters said “all last night I had trouble sleeping, the adrenalin was pumping. We were confident. We knew we had the potential to play really well and it finally came together for us this weekend.” The Midwest regional all-star squad featured Tokarchuk; Ryma; Joe Ogoms, Sam Hill of Toronto and Bo Malott of Dalhousie.
In the Mideast regional semi, Winnipeg defeated McGill 85-75 on the strength of stellar defensive play by reserves Mark Johannson and Merv Voth. “We started very slowly and got down 12-4 right off the start,” said Winnipeg coach Bill Wedlake. “We were very tentative, maybe a little tight. We got a good performance from our bench in the first half from guys like Merv and Mark and the way those guys played spread to the other guys.” Wedlake told the Kitchener-Waterloo Record that “this is the sixth time this year Gord (Tucker) has had 30 points or more. He has the ability to come up big when we need it but I really thought we got clutch basketball in a lot of areas from six or seven people.” Winnipeg rallied to tie the game at 41. Gord Tucker led the Wesmen with 30, while nabbing 13 boards. Will Parker added 16, freshman point guard Joey Vickery 12 and Art Koop 11. Simon Onabowale led McGill with 19. Bernie Rosanelli added 17, Patrick Arsenault 15, Claude Briere 10 and Owen Roberts 4. Roberts said “I can’t believe we could come out and be so flat in the second half. It must be one of the worst halves we’ve played all season.” …………………………………………………… In the other semi, Waterloo overcame a three-point deficit to defeat Calgary 81-72 as Paul Boyce scored 20, Rob Froese 15, Randy Norris 13, Peter Savich 12, Vilhelm Boggild 10 and Tom Schneider 9. Warriors coach Don McCrae told the Kitchener-Waterloo Record praised the “great work we got from a lot of people tonight. I have no idea who scored for us, so it must have been balanced. … The guys were so geared up at the start of the night that I thought we almost self-destructed in the first half.” Calgary coach Gary Howard said “I though we did a good job defensively on Randy (Norris) but then (Paul) Boyce hurt us inside. Howard told the Imprint that “it wasn’t a nine-point game at all. It was more like three. I hope we didn’t leave your fans wanting their money back.” Kurt Kelly led the Dinosaurs with 20. John Vigna added 19 and Jeff Cahoon 14. Calgary led early and took it 38-34 at the half but Waterloo took command in the second. Five Warriors – Peter Savich, Rog Froese, Paul Boyce, Randy Norris and Vilhelm Boggild each scored in double figures. “You shot the ball tonight, you bugger!” Howard said to Boggild, who replied “I had to. I was open.” …………………………………………………… In the bronze medal match, McGill defeated Calgary 85-78 as Clint Hamilton scored 27. The Redmen (coached by Ken Schildroth) also included Claude Briere, Tommy Yee, Albert Israel, Bernie Rosanelli, Simon Onabowale, Owen Roberts, Patrick Arsenault, Ian Dakers, Bruce Silcoff, Jamie Alden and James Donoghue. The Dinos (coached by Gary Howard) included John Vigna, Preston Jickling, Jeff Dahoon, David Clutchey, Harlon McMaster, Rob Driscoll, Greg Maillett, Kurt Kelly, Donovan Lawrence, Rick Pease, Tim Sprung and Matt Smith.
In the Mideast regional final, the 3rd-ranked host Waterloo Warriors defeated the Winnipeg Wesmen 63-62 as Rob Froese hit two free throws with three seconds on the clock. “I knew I had to go up to the line and do what I did,” Froese said. “Sometimes they go down and sometimes they don’t. I know I’m a pretty good free throw shooter and I wanted to hit them and I got them down.” Winnipeg coach Bill Wedlake said his team had his chances. “It was an emotional situation at the end. You have to give a lot of credit to Rob Froese for making those free throws. That’s an emotionally tough situation.” Warrior coach Don McCrae said Froese hit two tough shots, given the delays Winnipeg sought, through a time out and a deliberate lane infringement. “Froese showed a lot of poise out there.” Winnipeg was leading 62-61 when Gord Tucker missed the front end of a one and one. Winnipeg was unable to get the final shot after Froese’s free throw. Peter Savich paced the Warriors with 28. Randy Norris added 9, while nabbing 11 boards, and Paul Boyce 8. The Warriors led 38-29 at the half. Regional tournament MVP Froese told the Kitchener-Waterloo Record that “when they did a job shutting down our big guys inside, Peter (Savich) really us in the game with clutch outside shooting.” Will Parker led Winnipeg with 16. Tucker added 13 and Joey Vickery 10. Peter Savich led Waterloo with 28, including 9-10 from the floor. “There have only been four Final Fours and now we made all of them,” Waterloo coach Don McCrae told the Montreal Gazette. “We’re proud of that fact, but this time we’d sure like to take something away from it.” The Warriors led 38-29 at the half. Winnipeg rallied to knot the score at 56 and then took slim leads. Winnipeg led 62-61 when all-Canadian forward Gord Tucker missed the front end of a bonus from the free throw line with 12 seconds left in the game and Winnipeg forward Murray Gehman committed his fifth foul of the game on Froese, who was driving in for a baseline layup with three ticks remaining on the clock. “Savich got us close when their 1-3-1 defence kept the ball out of our big man’s hands,” said McCrae. Savich hit six straight points as Waterloo kept pace with the surging Wesmen with just under nine minutes to play. “They tried to ice Froese on the foul line,” said McCrae, “because about a minute elapsed during the disqualification to Gehman before Rob went to the line for his first shot. After his first, they called a time-out, and another minute went by before his second shot. We saw who iced whom in the end.” Peter Savich told The Imprint that “we got character, we got guts and that’s what won it for us.” Bill Wedlake said “I have to be happy. We had a great year. It’s nice to play here too. There’s no place in the country like this. Plus, your sports coverage is better than ours; the last two issues of our paper were all about ‘Gays, Lesbians and Aspartame’.” Don McCrae noted that “we started dismally in the second half, we went to sleep.” The Wesmen (coached by Bill Wedlake) also included Terry Lamoureux, Dean Goodbrandson, Blaine Acton, Jason Chopp, David Filmon, Mark Johannson, Merv Voth and Art Koop. The all-tournament team featured Peter Savich (Waterloo); Will Parker (Winnipeg); Gord Tucker (Winnipeg); John Vigna (Calgary); and Patrick Arsenault (McGill).
In the East regional semis, held in Wolfville, the 11th-seeded University of Western Ontario Mustangs upset the 6th-seeded UPEI Panthers 78-74 in overtime. Craig Cavender hit a pair of free throws with 11 seconds to play to ice it for the Mustangs. …………………………………………………… In the other semi, the 15th-seeded Acadia Axemen stunned the 4th-seeded York Yeomen 86-69. Peter Morris paced the Axemen with 18. Stuart Levinsky and Louis Karkabasis has 14 each for the Yeomen. Yeoman coach Bob Bain told The Excalibur “we knew what they would do. We had a good scouting report on them and our plan was to force the wings to disrupt their flex offence. We really can’t fault our defence. I don’t know if we really had enough pressure on them but we were in position. Acadia just hit a lot of good shots and that built up their confidence.” …………………………………………………… In the bronze medal match, UPEI defeated York 73-60.
In the East regional final, the 11th-seeded Western Mustangs edged the host Acadia Axemen 63-62 as Chris Cavender scored 30. The Mustangs led 61-54 with six minutes to play. Acadia rallied within one and had a chance to take the lead with 17 seconds to play but Peter Morris missed a short jumper. Cavender corralled the rebound and the Axemen fouled, sending Cavender to the line. He hit both free throws. The Axemen notched a meaningless bucket to trim the margin to one. “It’s just an amazing feeling,” Cavender, who was named the tournament’s most valuable player, told Canadian Press.
In the national semis, held in Halifax, 3rd-ranked Waterloo nipped the 12th-ranked University of Western Ontario Mustangs 69-67. Waterloo led 34-31 at the half but Western rallied to a 60-53 lead with five minutes to play. Waterloo pulled ahead 68-67 on a jumper by Peter Savich with 15 seconds to go. The Mustangs Chris Cavender was called for travelling as Western tried for the last shot. Savich scored 19 for Waterloo, while 7-0 centre Randy Norris added 18, along with 15 boards, Rob Froese 11 and Paul Boyce 9. Warriors coach Don McCrae told the Kitchener-Waterloo Record that “we did not play well and we’re fortunate to be moving into the championship.” Peter Vandebovenkamp led Western scored with 21, including a one-handed jumper over Norris with 40 seconds to play to put Western in front 67-66. The Warriors scored just three points in final five minutes. Mustangs coach Doug Hayes said the call for travelling against Cavender wasn’t justified. “we all thought Chris was fouled in that jam up late in the game but I’m not blaming any officials for our loss. Give the credit to Peter (Savich). He gunned the shot home when he had to and we couldn’t get what we needed. I really thought we were on our way to a win when we went up seven but Waterloo took it away from us.” Peter Vandebovenkamp paced Western with 21. Jamie Zeigel added 15, Chris Cavender 9 and Terry Thomas 8.”
In the other semi, Victoria clipped Saskatchewan 78-70 as forward Shawn Kalinovitch, starting only as a replacement for Jamie Newman, who’d injured his back late in the year, scored 23 to help the Vikings avenge their defeat in the Canada West semis. Victoria had twice beaten Saskatchewan during the regular season. When the Huskies tried to keep 7-0 centre Cord Clemens under control, the rest of the Vikings picked up the slack. Eleven Vikings hit the scoring column, including Clemens, who scored 12. Lloyd Scrubb also scored 12, Dave Sheehan 9, Randy Steel 6, Rob Kreke 4, Graham Taylor 4, Jerry Divoky 2, Wade Loukes 2, Jamie Newman 2 and Vito Pasquale 2. “We’ve had a balanced attack for about 10 years, I don’t believe in one player dominating,” said Victoria coach Ken Shields. “Teams win championships, not individuals. … Their whole game plan was to keep the ball away from Cord, and Shawn’s very active. He reads holes and zones well. He’s just a natural scorer.” All-Canadian centre Byron Tokarchuk led the Huskies with 21, with most of those scored late in the game with the Victoria starters on the bench. Greg Jockims added 19, Kirk Jones 13, David Karwacki 8, John Dewar 6, Sheldon Ryma 2, Mark Peters 1, Dean Lavoie 0, Rob Cherneski 0, and Rob Regnier 0. Victoria led 38-27 at the half and was in control throughout the contest, leading by as many as 22 in the second half, with Tokarchuk scoring most of his points at garbage time. Shields substituted freely ten minutes into the game. Victoria led 38-27 at the half. Saskatchewan shot 28-81 (.333) from the floor and played without point guard John Cleland who had fractured his foot. Vikes guard Shaw Kalinovitch told the Saskatoon Star-Phoenix that “we were composed and really ready. Saskatchewan didn’t seem quite ready to play. I was more ready tonight than I’ve ever been. It was my first chance to start in a national championship game and I had everything organized in my mind.” Huskies coach Guy Vetrie said “they played a good game defensively. You always try to make the other team take shots they don’t want to take. They made us take the shots they wanted us to take. We didn’t do any of the things we normally do. That’s the understatement of the year. We didn’t give them the game we know we can give them. … We weren’t tight when the game started but we threw up a couple of airballs and everyone tightened up.” Huskie Byron Tokarchuk said ‘we just couldn’t get in a groove. We didn’t have a bad game physically. We just got into a hole and couldn’t get out.” Shields told The Sheaf that “I was tense the whole damn game. I wasn’t even comfortable when we were up by 20 because of the way they were playing. We weren’t playing with the same precision and execution.” Huskies forward Mark Peters said “we played terrible. I guess we just didn’t deserve to win.”
In the bronze medal final, the University of Western Mustangs defeated the Saskatchewan Huskies 78-71 as Jamie Ziegel scored 15. Saskatchewan led 10-3 early but the Mustangs rallied within 40-39 at the half. The Mustangs ripped off a 16-5 run to take a 69-64 lead with four minutes to play. Saskatchewan rallied within 74-71 on buckets by Mark Peters and Byron Tokarchuk but Western iced it at the line. Jamie Ziegel led the Mustangs with 18. John Mikhail added 12. Greg Jockims led the Huskies with 14. Mark Peters added 11 and John Dewar 6. With all AUAA teams out of it, the Halifax Metro Centre drew only 5,632 fans. The Huskies (coached by Guy Vetrie, assisted by Bob Weenk and Paul Humbert) included Byron Tokarchuk, Kirk Jones, Greg Jockims, Sheldon Ryma, David Karwacki, John Cleland, Ken Ostertag, Rob Regnier, Rob Cherneski, Tim Conlin and Dean Lavoie.
For the second consecutive year, the Victoria Vikings lost a Canada West playoff game but went on to win the national crown, their seventh straight as they defeated Waterloo 70-61 in a repeat of the 1985 final. It was the third time in four years that Victoria and Waterloo met for the national crown. Tournament MVP Cord Clemens scored 27. Clemens manhandled Waterloo centre Randy Norris in the first half, holding him to two free throws. Victoria led 42-28 at the half. But Clemens was forced to bench with three fouls and Norris and Waterloo took advantage of Viking turnovers and foul trouble to battle back to within 55-54 with five minutes to play. Clemens re-entered the game, hit seven free throws and pair of buckets to quell the threat. “We made a couple of errant passes at that time and didn’t look after the ball,” Victoria coach Ken Shields said. “But they never got ahead of us and we never got tired. When we needed a hoop, we got it.” In the first half, the teams kept it close until Victoria shifted into a full-court press with eight minutes to go that left the Warriors reeling in confusion. “They were a very tough and hungry team both in the lanes and under the backboards,” Warrior coach Don McCrae said. “They taught us a lesson in our 36th game. It’s a little late in the season to be taking lessons.” Lloyd Scrubb added 13 for the Vikings, while Vito Pasquale scored 12, Shawn Kalinovich 7, Jamie Newman 6, Randy Steel 4 and Wake Loukes 1, while Graham Taylor, Geoff McKay, Dave Sheehan, Rob Kreke and Jerry Divocky were scoreless. Paul Boyce led Waterloo with 18. Peter Savich added 14, Randy Norris 10, R Froese 10, J McNeill 7 and T Schneider 2, while J Nolfi, C Beda, M Naus, H Van Drunen, V Boggild and J Bilawey were scoreless. The Vikings finished (27-10) on the season. Rob Froese told the Imprint that “they really killed us on the boards. In the second half we got a lot more aggressive.” Don MacCrae said “we attacked professionally in the second half. But it was our third straight Friday evening – Saturday afternoon tournament and that’s an unacceptable process.” Shields said Waterloo “had a great effort, a great second half. It was an unbelievable job, and the toughest game down the stretch we’ve had.” McCrae said to beat Victoria “you have to have a good team. A hungry, physical team. It took us a whole half to understand that. It’s late to be learning. But we think we’ll have a good team next year; we have to find a big guy.” Randy Norris said after a year of intensive physiotherapy, “that’s enough basketball for me and my knees. … God owed us that one.” Cord Clemens told The Dalhousie Gazette that “this season we had a lot of pressure on us because we were carrying six other seasons with us. It gets harder each year. This year’s championship was probably the most exciting because of the score, if nothing else.” Shields told The Sheaf “we didn’t give them a sniff down the stretch. We prepare all year to play the last five minutes of the championship game and I was darn proud of the way we played it.” Waterloo coach Don McCrae said “if we were going to make a comeback, we had to get into the rebound wars and we did that. We got ourselves into a position to win it, but in the series of free throws at the end, we missed ours and they made theirs.” Shields said of the seventh consecutive title “each one is special, this to me was on the best. This championship was the most exciting because of the score, if nothing else. Waterloo showed a lot of character in the second half. They brought it to within one point and they made a hell of a basketball game out of it.” Cord Clemens said “our whole game plan is to wear down other teams. When you try to hang on, that’s when other teams come back and when they pulled within one, that jolted us, made us angry at ourselves, made us want to take it right at them, and that’s what we did down the stretch.” Shields told the Kitchener-Waterloo Record that “Cord (Clemons) hit six foul shots at money time and that’s the mark of a competitor.”
After the season, the CIAU suspended its regionals after Sport Canada reduced its budget by 10%.
The all-tourney team featured: MVP Cord Clemens (Victoria); Paul Boyce (Waterloo); Rob Froese (Waterloo); Lloyd Scrubb (Victoria); and Jamie Ziegel (Western Ontario)
The bronze medalist University of Western Ontario Mustangs: Chris Cavender; Peter VanDeBovenKamp; Jamie Ziegel; Pod Armstrong; Terry Thomson; Kevin Armstrong; John Mikhail; Mike Fedak; Jim Hurst; Al Campbell; Rick Duyzer; Jeff Petter; Greg Moore; coach Doug Hayes; assistant Craig Boydell; trainer Jane Boake; manager Cindy Lazenby; manager Chris Hackett
The silver medalist Waterloo Warriors: Peter Savich; Paul Boyce; Randy Norris; Craig Beda; Jerry Nolfi; Rob Froese; Marcel Naus; Harry Van Drunen; Vilhelm Boggild; Tom Schneider; John Bilawey; Jamie McNeill; Dave Moser; coach Don McCrae; assistant Mike Kilpatrick; athletic director Carl Totzke; SID Paul Condon
The champion University of Victoria Vikings: Dave Sheehan; Cord Clemens; Shawn Kalinovich; Rob Kreke; Lloyd Scrubb; Jamie Newman; Vito Pasquale; Randy Steel; Jerry Divoky; Graham Taylor; Geoff McKay; Wade Loukes; Brian Kruger; coach Ken Shields; assistant Joe Weisbrodt; assistant Quinn Groenhyde; trainer Monica Furdal; manager Al Duddridge; SID Barry Read