Final regular season standings:
East (11): Seneca (17-3); George Brown (16-4); Algonquin (16-4) Centennial (15-5); Loyalist (13-7); St. Lawrence-Kingston (11-9); La Cite (10-10); Durham (5-15); Georgian (4-16) Fleming-Peterborough (3-17); Cambrian (0-20)
West (11); Sheridan (18-2); Mohawk (16-4); Fanshawe (14-6); Humber (14-6); Niagara (13-7); Algoma (12-8); Redeemer (7-13); Sault (5-15); Lambton (5-15); St. Clair (5-15); Canadore (1-19)
Playoff non-qualifiers:
Cambrian: Braydon Ritchie, Chance Goulet, Syan Thompson, Jason McKeen, Ian Morse, Jesse Proctor, Derrick Rantala, Ryan Marcotte, Serge Kalisa, Byron Wabano, Adam D’Agostino, Tyler Cameron, coach Tony Sgueglia, assistant Pat Tallon
Canadore: Jevon Marshall, Brandon Farquharson, Santo Dak, Shayne Kux, Kerry Sullivan, Joshua Edwards, D’Arcy Marshall, Kory Benoit-James, Eric Plumley, Mark Hillock, Kyle Romaniuk, Jacob Austin-Edsall, Christian Casimier, Levi Lapierre, coach Leo Bechard, assistant Stacy Gallagher
Durham: Brandon Nickelchok, Christoff Pierre, Adrian Burton, Tristan Francisco, Ricardo London, Leke Bankole, Randy Osei, Zac Vaspori, Jeff Lyle, Curtis Johnson, Ali Sadaat, coach Desmond Rowley, assistant Curtis Celestine, assistant Matt Markovic, assistant Vasco Yarde
Fleming: Greg Allerston, Johnny Heaton, Shacqueal Blasgrove, Steven Waterson, Malcolm Jean Michel, Brandon Chambers, Spencer Brear, Kevin Wilson, Dan Williams, Ryan Lindsay-Murray, Joey Pelletier, Alex Holland, coach Paul Dunn, assistant Ryan Dufrane, assistant Andrew Margetts
Georgian: Ben Dance, Tevin Goodridge, Justin Mitchell, Glody Madymba, Alex Fields, Jevon Francis, Shane Teet-Corriveau, Brandon Seales, Nolan Knill, Ivan Ivic, Andrew Clark, Marlon Campbell, Stefan Rudic, Drew Whitfield, coach Matt Coulson, assistant Brad Taylor, assistant J.P. Amaral, assistant John Marley
La Cite: Elmi Warsama, Christophe Hadys, Terrance Dumel-Hobbs, Daniel Gracia, Jean-Marc Antoine, Vincent Beaulac-Dufresne, Blaise Mwenze, Andre-Nicolas Ntivumbura, Thierry Gasana, Justin Lahaie, Joseph Kapena Muteba, Hassan Maidal, coach Tom Hodge, assistant Davidson Senalus, assistant Jeremie St-Louis, assistant Alain Cadieux
Lambton: Gary Hill-Stone, Gael Katanga, Mike Girling, Shawn Hill, Robert Hardick, Marcus Hamilton, Justin Zonneville, Matt Koopman, Logan La Riviere, Zac Lippiatt, Russell Fox, Justin De Groot, Chris Hart, Mike Lucier, Andrew Timmermans, Chinedu Nwadiugwu, Kingsley Udofia, coach James Grant, assistant Patrick Wright, assistant Mike Hobbs
Redeemer: Chris McFadden-Martin, Paul Hart, Mike Duah, Ali Askarov, David Luth, Josh deSchiffert, Collin Haalboom, Kevin Maynard, Calvin Turnbull, Benn Ibrahim, coach Jamie Girolametto, assistant Sean Sabourin, assistant Cesare Piccini
Sault: Jason Ledgister, Ryan Rysdale, Sheldon Allen, Kevin Ramos, Akeem Prince Barnes, Shakeel Ellis, Javier Stephenson, Donte James, Danny Macdonald, Aaron Brown, Johann Jenkins, Bryan Jones, Kojo Afari, Hugh Taylor, coach Greg Mapp, assistant Nick Caron, assistant Aaron Zuccato
St. Clair: Lamar Milburn, Jacob Sauve, Xavier Jones, Mitch Girard, Dylan McTavish, Aaron Evans, Jason Gander, David Younan, Isiah McConney, Alex Temesy, Matei Nuna, Jamaal Thompson, coach Matt Devin, assistant David Korenic, assistant Ricardo Tate
In the crossover playoffs, the Centennial Colts (4th-East) nipped the Niagara Knights (5th-West) 76-70. Knight star Alex Campbell was sidelined by a concussion in the first quarter. “You take him out of our lineup and there goes 20 points and 10 or more rebounds,” said Knights coach Steve Atkin. Campbell, who was poked in the eye about two minutes before the game-ending injury, already had five points and two rebounds in the must-win game. “It was really tough to fight back with him out of the lineup,” Atkin said. Niagara led 18-12 after one quarter and 39-33 at the half. Centennial led 51-49 after three quarters. Justin Jarrett paced the Colts with 23. Jameel Williamson added 21, Tristen Stern 11, Liban Hassan 10, Natiel McKenzie 4, Alex Hagoriles 3, Terence Nelson 3 and Steven Downer 1, while Ron Dominique, Cedric Pelayo, Anthony Khan, Bill Bajikijaie and Alimany Kamara were scoreless. The Colts hit 28-77 (.364) from the floor, 5-20 from the arc and 15-29 (.517) from the line, while garnering 50 boards, including 22 on the offensive glass, 10 assists, 14 steals, 6 blocks, 12 turnovers and 22 fouls. Jimmy Bilenga paced the Knights with 20. Marako Lundy added 17, Darian Rowe 11, Anto Raic 7, Alex Campbell 5, Aidan Alize-Minty 5, Lawrence McNeil 3 and Ashton Stephenson 2, while Matt Poirier, Nathan Owusu-Agyeman, Darrington Clarke and Kahame Misiska were scoreless. The Knights (coached by Steve Atkin, assisted by Mike Beccaria and Mike Hurley) hit 23-68 (.338) from the floor, 9-23 (.391) from the arc and 15-25 (.600) from the line, while garnering 55 boards, including 22 on the offensive glass, 9 assists, 8 steals, 6 blocks, 19 turnovers and 22 fouls. …………………………………………………… The host Fanshawe Falcons (3rd-West) dusted the St. Lawrence-Kingston Vikings (6th-East) 77-56 with a dominant second half. Trailing 23-22 at the half, the Falcons took command quickly. “In the first half, we just shot the ball poorly. Our defence was great, but we weren’t moving the ball well,” Fanshawe coach Tony Marcotullio said. “In the third quarter, it just clicked. It was one of those things you knew was going to happen, but we had to make a couple of adjustments. They did a good job stalling our offence in the first half and in the past, when a team was able to stall our offence, we started going a lot of one-on-five. But this time, we addressed it and started moving the ball around.” Boyd Vassell paced the Falcons with 18. Chavaun Miller-Bennett added 14, Bryan McDonald 12, Gareth Edwards 8, John Brutto 8, Darcy Young 6, Aaron Ragobar 5, Ryan Pflanzner 4 and Andrew McIntosh 2, while Mike Dubreuil, Olaleye Ojo, David Sewell and Stefan Petsanidis were scoreless. The Falcons hit 28-66 (.424) from the floor, 4-11 (.364) from the arc and 17-27 (.630) from the line, while garnering 41 boards, including 18 on the offensive glass, 18 assists, 8 steals, 5 blocks, 22 turnovers and 17 fouls. Emmanuel Bolamba paced the Vikings with 12. Jermaine Edwards added 10, Tigh Chapman 10, Terence Thomas 10, Griffin Fernandes 6, Dylan George 4, Desmond Adams 3 and Johnathan Visentin 1, while Jahmal Edwards and Ryan Frazer were scoreless. The Vikings hit 23-57 (.404) from the floor, 5-15 from the arc and 5-11 (.455) from the line, while garnering 20 boards, including 5 on the offensive glass, 16 assists, 11 steals, 23 turnovers and 22 fouls. The Vikings (coached by Barry Smith, assisted by Kevin Smart and Brian McMillan) also included Nathanel McIntosh, Evan Bahan and Warsame Youssouf. …………………………………………………… The Algonquin Thunder (3rd-East) blitzed the Algoma Thunderbirds (6th-West) 69-52. The Thunderbirds led 19-13 after one quarter. The Thunder led 30-26 at the half and 45-36 after three quarters. Romaine Lawrence paced the Thunder with 22. Garnet Blais added 18, Nehemiah Campbell 11, Louis Boursiquot 6, Lansani Kone 4, Haidar El Badry 3, Courtney Dawkins 3 and Jordan Scott 2, while Mahamat-Ali Haggar, Dut Dut, Ryan Bradley, Kristopher Holford-Walker, Matthew Gillis and Amir Majidi were scoreless. The Thunder hit 26-48 (.542) from the floor, 6-8 from the arc and 11-13 (.846) from the line, while garnering 23 boards, including 7 on the offensive glass, 14 assists, 4 steals, 4 turnovers and 9 fouls. Mark Wortham, Odane Ferguson and Joseph Tubbs each scored 10 to pace the Thunderbirds. Desmond Lawrence added 7, Samy Mohamed 6, Aaron Jackson 4, Brett Zufelt 3 and Joey Puddister 2, while Tirus Muchin Mwangi, Jon Gordon, Ethan Campbell, Keith Golding and David Oduro were scoreless. The Thunderbirds hit 19-38 from the floor, 5-9 (.556) from the arc and 9-14 (.643) from the line, while garnering 23 boards, including 6 on the offensive glass, 6 assists, 2 steals, 5 turnovers and 14 fouls. The Thunderbirds (coached by Thomas Cory, assisted by Josh Pallot, Winston Ivey, Matt Oliveira, James Tusingwire and Garnet Cory) also included Chris Offspring, Reynaldo Carnarkie, Jamal Muckett-Sobers and Jovain Wilson. …………………………………………………… The Humber Hawks (4th-West) dumped the Loyalist Lancers (5th-East) 88-76. The Lancers led 17-11 after one quarter. The Hawks led 40-30 at the half and 59-53 after three quarters. Brandon Sam-Hinton paced the Hawks with 19. Ryan Ejim added 15, along with 12 boards, Ryan Cook 15, Tyrone Dickson 11, Jason David 8, Gibson Eduful 8, Matthew Marshall 8, Brett Neumann 2 and Ashly July 2, while Albert Daniels-Sey, Andrew Skiperis, Funsho Dimeji and Jamal Okunbor were scoreless. The Hawks hit 34-91 (.374) from the floor, 3-18 (.167) from the arc and 17-27 (.630) from the line, while garnering 71 boards, including 40 on the offensive glass, 32 assists, 8 steals, 9 blocks, 15 turnovers and 16 fouls. Brayden Gohn and Patrick Kalala paced the Lancers with 24 apiece. Damone Donaldson added 20, Jordan Marlowe 10, Steven Bailey 5 and Matthew Miller 3, while Curtis Onion and Cameron James-Hughes were scoreless. The Lancers hit 27-82 (.329) from the floor, 7-25 (.280) from the arc and 15-21 (.714) from the line, while garnering 44 boards, including 21 on the offensive glass, 25 assists, 12 steals, 1 block, 7 turnovers and 21 fouls. The Lancers (coached by interim coach Ryan Barbeau, assisted by Ryan Dickison) also included Carson Power, Adeel Sahibzada and Brandon White.
In the quarterfinals, the Seneca Sting (1st-East) dumped the Humber Hawks 89-77 after leading 22-15, 44-32 and 70-51 at the quarters. Felix Adjei paced the Sting with 23. Vadim Hamilov added 22, Jamal Boyce 16, Calmar Morgan 14, Devan Allen-Leslie 6, Kingsley Yeboah 4, Derek DeJesus 3 and Temark Wright-Boswell 1, while Javaugn Davis, Kevin Cornwall, Jav-El Davis, Ilia Jivotov, Steve Bifsha, John Moi, Miguel Khan and Charles Nwokolo were scoreless. The Sting hit 32-63 (.507) overall, 23-44 from the floor, 9-19 (.473) from the arc and 16-24 (.666) from the line, while garnering 42 boards, including 15 on the offensive glass, 18 fouls, 14 assists, 30 turnovers, 2 blocks and 6 steals. Tyrone Dickson paced the Hawks with 15. Gibson Eduful added 13, Ryan Cook 10, Ryan Ejim 10, Matthew Marshall 9, Ashly July 7, Brandon Sam-Hinton 7 and Jason David 6, while Albert Daniels-Sey, Brett Neumann, Andrew Skiperis, Funsho Dimeji and Jamal Okunbor were scoreless. The Hawks hit 29-73 (.397) overall, 20-45 from the floor, 9-28 (.321) from the arc and 10-24 (.416) from the line, while garnering 43 boards, including 24 on the offensive glass, 19 fouls, 10 assists, 15 turnovers, 1 block and 11 steals.
The Mohawk Mountaineers (2nd-West) clipped the Algonquin Thunder 69-62. The Mountaineers led 24-18 after one quarter. The Thunder led 41-36 at the half and 48-46 after three quarters. Manny Campbell paced the Mountaineers with 24. Andrew Cicuttini added 15, Xzennis Bereton 7, Alex Reis 7, Patrick Iavarone 7, Taylor Dowhaniuk 4, Jeff Hunt 4 and Richard Kyungu 1, while Abdullahi Abdi, Braedon Lenters, Nathan Samuel, Jermaine Barr and Henry Osborne were scoreless. Romaine Lawrence led the Thunder with 17. Garnet Blais added 16, along with 10 boards, Ryan Bradley 10, Courtney Dawkins 7, Nehemiah Campbell 6, Louis Boursiquot 3, Lansani Kone 2 and Dut Dut 1, while Haider El Badry, Mahamat-Ali Haggar, Kristopher Holford-Walker, Matthew Gillis, Jordan Scott and Amir Majidi were scoreless. The Thunder hit 26-86 (.302) overall, 18-56 from the floor, 8-30 (.266) from the arc and 2-8 from the line, while garnering 61 boards, including 28 on the offensive glass, 22 fouls, 15 assists, 21 turnovers, 5 blocks and 8 steals.
The Sheridan Bruins (1st-West) dispatched the Centennial Colts 73-59 after leading 17-16, 37-23 and 55-39 at the quarters. Rosheen Keen, Trevor Williams and Michael Selkridge each scored 14 to pace the Bruins. Jahmal McQueen added 13, Dylan Periana 7, Andrew Stephenson 5, Kadeem Hall 4 and Paul Williams 2, while Ashford Arthur, Natiel McKenzie, Anthony Loungs, Robert Hanson and Andrew Thompson were scoreless. The Bruins hit 30-70 (.428) overall, 28-56 from the floor, 2-14 (.142) from the arc and 11-12 (.916) from the line, while garnering 43 boards, including 15 on the offensive glass, 15 fouls, 10 assists, 21 turnovers, 5 blocks and 15 steals. Tristan Stern and Jameel Williamson each scored 17 to pace the Colts. Justin Jarrett added 16, Terence Nelson 3, along with 10 boards, Alex Hagoriles 3 and Natiel NcKenzie 3, while Ron Dominique, Cedric Pelayo, Anthony Khan, Bill Bajikijaie, Alimamy Kamara, Steven Downer and Liban Hassan were scoreless. The Colts hit 21-72 (.291) overall, 13-49 from the floor, 8-23 (.347) from the arc and 9-14 (.642) from the line, while garnering 48 boards, including 23 on the offensive glass, 16 fouls, 9 assists, 28 turnovers, 1 block and 10 steals.
In the last quarterfinal, the Fanshawe Falcons stunned the George Brown Huskies (2nd-East) 77-49 after leading 21-14, 36-26 and 57-31 at the quarters. Bryan McDonald paced the Falcons with 22. Gareth Edwards added 14, along with 12 boards, Chavaun Miller-Bennet 12, Ryan Pflanzer 8, John Brutto 8, Boyd Vassel 4, Mike Dubreuli 3, Aaron Ragobar 2, David Sewell 2 and Darcy Young 2, while Olaleye Ojo, Aaron Joseph, Andrew McIntosh, Stefan Petsanidis, Troy Barnes and Johnathan Leonard were scoreless. The Falcons hit 28-76 (.368) overall, 20-53 from the floor, 8-24 (.333) from the arc and 13-19 (.684) from the line, while garnering 60 boards, including 24 on the offensive glass, 16 fouls, 15 assists, 24 turnovers, 3 blocks and 4 steals. Dejazmatch James and Bruno Silvestin each scored 10 to pace the Huskies. Salissou Abdoulkader added 8, Ted Johnson 7, Dwayne Harrison 5, Frankie Gyamfi 4, Akai Nettey 2, Levon Dabbaghian 2 and Terril Murray 1, while Natheniel Elliot, Ricardo Brown and Fidel Benjamin were scoreless. The Huskies hit 16-67 (.238) overall, 11-43 from the floor, 5-24 (.208) from the arc and 12-18 from the line, while garnering 44 boards, including 18 on the offensive glass, 17 fouls, 7 assists, 20 turnovers, 5 blocks and 10 steals.
In the bronze quarterfinals, the George Brown Huskies dumped the Centennial Colts 76-56 after leading 15-5, 32-22 and 45-36 at the quarters. Bruno Silvestin paced the Huskies with 22 points and 10 boards. Salissou Abdoulkader added 12, Ricardo Brown 12, Dejazmatch James 8, Dwayne Harrison 8, Levon Dabbaghian 3, Natheniel Elliot 3, Frankie Gyamfi 2, Ted Johnson 2, Terril Murray 2 and Fidel Benjamin 2, while Akai Nettey was scoreless. The Huskies hit 31-61 (.508) overall, 26-42 from the floor, 5-19 (.263) from the arc and 9-18 from the line, while garnering 46 boards, including 16 on the offensive glass, 21 fouls, 17 assists, 21 turnovers, 4 blocks and 10 seals. Tristan Stern paced the Colts with 18. Justin Jarrett added 9, Cedric Pelayo 9, Jameel Williamson 7, Natiel McKenzie 7, Terence Nelson 4, Steven Downer 1 and Anthony Khan 1, while Ron Dominique, Alex Hagoriles, Bill Bajikijaie, Alimanny Kamara and Liban Hassan were scoreless. The Colts hit 19-66 (.287) overall, 14-44 from the floor, 5-22 (.227) from the arc and 13-24 (.541) from the line, while garnering 35 boards, including 19 on the offensive glass, 20 fouls, 7 assists, 26 turnovers and 7 steals. The Colts (coached by Jim Barclay, assisted by David Joseph, Craig Andrews and Kirk Salesman) also included Tisaine Brown.
In the other bronze quarterfinal, the Algonquin Thunder dispatched the Humber Hawks 76-65. The Thunder led 16-13 after one quarter. The Hawks led 31-30 at the half. The Thunder led 56-46 after three quarters. Romaine Lawrence paced the Thunder with 18. Garnet Blais added 14, along with 16 boards, Jordan Scott 11, Nehemiah Campbell 10, Lansani Kone 10, Dut Dut 8, Louis Boursiquot 3, Ryan Bradley 2 and Mahamat-Ali Haggar 1, while Haider El Badry, Courtney Dawkins, Kristopher Holford-Walker, Matthew Gillis and Amir Majidi were scoreless. The Thunder hit 31-81 (.382) overall, 24-58 from the floor, 7-23 (.304) from the arc and 7-15 (.466) from the line, while garnering 58 boards, including 24 on the offensive glass, 19 fouls, 14 assists, 23 turnovers, 4 blocks and 11 steals. Matthew Marshall paced the Hawks with 15. Ashly July added 14, Tyrone Dickson 13, Ryan Ejim 8, Gibson Eduful 5, Brett Neumann 3, Ryan Cook 3, Jason David 2 and Andrew Skiperis 2, while Albert Daniels-Sey, Brandon Sam-Hinton, Funsho Dimeji and Jamal Okunbor were scoreless. The Hawks (coached by Shawn Collins, assisted by Patrick Au, Mike Dvorak and Ben Sanders) hit 22-71 (.309) overall, 19-49 from the floor, 3-22 (.136) from the arc and 18-29 (.620) from the line, while garnering 48 boards, including 19 on the offensive glass, 4 assists, 23 turnovers, 3 blocks and 8 steals.
In the semis, the Mohawk Mountaineers stunned the Seneca Sting 87-78 after leading 22-12, 45-25 and 67-48 at the quarters. Manny Campbell paced the Mountaineers with 25 on 7-12 from the floor, 1-2 from the arc, 8-14 from the line, 10 boards, 4 assists and 4 steals. Alex Reis added 20 on 6-14 from the floor, 1-3 from the arc, 5-6 from the line, 3 boards, 4 assists and 3 steals. Andrew Cicuttini added 15 on 5-10 from the floor, 0-1 from the arc, 5-9 from the line, 11 boards and 4 assists. Taylor Dowhaniuk notched 10 on 5-9 from the floor and 8 boards. Jeff Hunt added 8 on 2-4 from the floor, 1-4 from the arc, 1-3 from the line and 4 boards. Patrick Iavarone added 6 and Xzennis Bereton 3, while Richard Kyungu, Abdullahi Abdi, Braedon Lenters, Nathan Samuel, Jermaine Barr and Henry Osborne were scoreless. The Mountaineers hit 31-71 (.436) overall, 26-55 from the floor, 5-16 (.312) from the arc and 20-36 (.555) from the line, while garnering 60 boards, including 22 on the offensive glass, 8 fouls, 13 assists, 21 turnovers, 4 blocks and 8 steals. Calmar Morgan paced the Sting with 23 on 9-23 on 6-10 from the floor, 3-13 from the arc and 2-2 from the line, 2 boards and 3 steals. Felix Adjei added 14 on 4-11 from the floor, 2-6 from the arc, 5 boards and 3 steals. Charles Nwokolo notched 13 on 6-9 from the floor, 1-1 from the line and 8 boards. Jamal Boyce added 12 on 3-9 from the floor, 2-8 from the arc and 2 steals. Vadim Hamilov added 9 on 2-7 from the floor, 1-10 from the arc, 2-3 from the line and 4 boards. Kevin Cornwall added 4, along with 2 boards, and Kingsley Yeboah 3, along with 2 steals, while Javaugn Davis, Jav-El Davis, Derek Djesus, Ilia Jivotov, Steve Bifsha, John Moi, Temark Wright-Boswell, Devan Allen-Leslie and Miguel Khan were scoreless. The Sting hit 32-93 (.344) overall, 24-55 from the floor, 8-38 (.210) from the arc and 6-8 (.750) from the floor, while garnering 48 boards, including 23 on the offensive glass, 27 fouls, 11 assists, 16 turnovers, 5 blocks and 12 steals.
In the other semi, the Sheridan Bruins whipped the Fanshawe Falcons 77-61. The Falcons led 20-17 after one quarter and 39-38 at the half. The Bruins led 61-53 after three quarters. Paul Williams paced the Bruins with 15 on 5-8 from the floor, 5-11 from the line, 13 boards, 3 assists and 3 seals. Dylan Periana added 15 on 2-3 from the floor, 3-5 from the arc, 2-5 from the line, 2 boards and 3 steals. Trevor Williams notched 9 on 4-8 from the floor, 0-2 from the arc and 1-4 from the line. Michael Selkridge added 9 on 4-13 from the floor, 0-1 from the arc, 1-2 from the line and 2 boards. Andrew Stephenson added 7, along with 3 boards, Robert Hanson 7, along with 2 boards, Rosheen Keen 6, along with 2 boards, Kadeem Hall 5, along with 3 boards and Jahmal McQueen 4, along with 10 boards, and 2 assists, while Ashford Arthur, Natiel McKenzie, Anthony Loungs and Andrew Thompson were scoreless. The Bruins hit 27-74 (.364) overall, 20-49 from the floor, 7-25 (.280) from the arc and 16-32 from the line, while garnering 61 boards, including 32 on the offensive glass, 18 fouls, 8 assists, 15 turnovers, 1 block and 11 steals. Chavaun Miller-Bennett paced the Falcons with 17 on 5-10 from the floor, 2-5 from the arc, 1-2 from the line and 2 assists. Bryan McDonald added 14 on 4-7 from the floor and 2-11 from the arc. John Brutto added 10 on 5-8 from the floor and 8 boards. Ryan Pflanzer added 9 on 2-4 from the floor, 1-8 from the arc, 2-2 from the line and 2 assists. Mike Dubreuli added 6, along with 6 boards, Darcy Young 2, along with 6 boards, Aaron Ragobar 2 and Gareth Edwards 1, along with 8 boards, while Boyd Vassel, Olaleye Ojo, Aaron Joseph, David Sewell, Andrew McIntosh, Stefan Petsanidis, Troy Barnes and Johnathan Leonard were scoreless. The Falcons hit 24-72 (.335) overall, 18-39 from the floor, 6-33 (.181) from the arc and 7-9 (.777) from the line, while garnering 46 boards, including 21 on the offensive glass, 21 fouls, 11 assists, 25 turnovers and 3 steals.
In the bronze semis, the Seneca Sting stung the George Brown Huskies 84-66 after leading 18-6, 35-18 and 61-37 at the quarters. Calmar Morgan paced the Sting with 26, Jamal Boyce 15, Felix Adjei, Charles Nwokolo 11, along with 10 boards, Kevin Cornwall 7, Vadim Hamilov 7, Kingsley Yeboah 2 and Devan Allen-Leslie 1, while Javaugn David, Jav-El Davis, Derek DJesus, Ilia Jivotov, Steve Bifsha, John Moi, Temark Wright-Boswell and Miguel Khan were scoreless. The Sting hit 25-82 (.304) overall, 18-57 from the floor, 7-25 (.280) from the arc and 27-32 (.843) from the line, while garnering 65 boards, including 26 on the offensive glass, 18 fouls, 11 assists, 19 turnovers, 4 blocks and 5 steals. Frank Gyamfi paced the Huskies with 12. Dwayne Harrison added 10, Salissou Abdoulkader 9, Terril Murray 8, Bruno Silvestin 8, Fidel Benjamin 7, Levon Dabbaghian 5, Natheniel Elliot and Akai Nettey 3, while Ted Johnson, Dejazmatch James and Ricardo Brown were scoreless. The Huskies hit 25-84 (.297) overall, 20-52 from the floor, 5-32 (.156) from the arc and 11-19 (.578) from the arc, while garnering 58 boards, including 24 on the offensive glass, 24 fouls, 11 assists, 18 turnovers, 3 blocks and 7 steals. The Huskies (coached by Jonathan Smith, assisted by Borko Brusin, Mohit Dayaram, Keaton Cole and Norman Hamilton) also included Fidel Benjamin.
In the other bronze semi, the Algonquin Thunder edged the Fanshawe Falcons 80-76. The score was knotted at 21 after one quarter. The Falcons led 41-38 at the half. The Thunder led 59-52 after three quarters. Romaine Lawrence paced the Thunder with 32. Garnet Blais added 24, Nehemiah Campbell 11, Lansani Kone 7, Mahamat-Ali Haggar 2, Ryan Bradley 2 and Louis Boursiquot 2, while Haider El Badry, Courtney Dawkins, Dut Dut, Kristopher Holford-Walker, Matthew Gillis, Jordan Scott and Amir Majidi were scoreless. The Thunder hit 30-63 (.476) overall, 22-43 (.400) from the floor, 8-20 (.400) from the arc and 12-21 (.571) from the line, while garnering 37 boards, including 12 on the offensive glass, 15 fouls, 12 assists, 19 turnovers, 1 block and 6 steals. Chavaun Miller-Bennet paced the Falcons with 17. Gareth Edwards added 15, along with 12 boards, Bryan McDonald 13, John Brutto 12, Ryan Pflanzer 10, Mike Dubreuil 7 and Aaron Ragobar 2, while Boyd Vassel, Olaleye Ojo, Aaron Joseph, David Sewell, Andrew McIntosh, Stefan Petsanidis, Troy Barnes, Darcy Young and Johnathan Leonard. The Falcons (coached by Tony Marcotullio, assisted by Roger Robbins, Bryan Kamerman, Jeff Flesher and Dean Nagerowski) hit 28-74 (.378) overall, 16-46 from the floor, 12-28 (.428) from the arc and 8-13 (.615) from the line, while garnering 47 boards, including 23 on the offensive glass, 19 fouls, 11 assists, 19 turnovers, 1 block and 6 steals.
In the bronze medal match, the Algonquin Thunder clocked the Seneca Sting 77-61. The Knights led 20-8 after one quarter and 35-29 at the half. The Thunder led 53-49 after three quarters. Romaine Lawrence paced the Thunder with 20 on 2-8 from the floor, 5-11 from the arc, 1-1 from the line, 2 boards and 3 assists. Garnet Blais added 14 on 5-8 from the floor, 1-6 from the arc, 1-1 from the line, 13 boards and 2 assists. Nehemiah Campbell added 13 on 6-12 from the floor, 0-1 from the arc, 1-3 from the line and 5 assists. Amir Majidi added 11 on 2-3 from the floor, 2-4 from the arc, 1-2 from the line and 6 boards. Jordan Scott added 8, along with 7 boards, Louis Boursiquot 5, along with 4 boards, Courtney Dawkins 2, Mahamat-Ali Haggar 2, along with 4 boards, and Dut Dut 2, while Haider El Badry, Ryan Bradley, Kristopher Holford-Walker, Matthew Gillis and Lansani Kone were scoreless. Gillis nabbed 4 boards. The Thunder hit 30-79 (.379) overall, 22-51 from the floor, 8-28 (.285) from the arc and 9-17 (.529) from the line, while garnering 59 boards, including 20 on the offensive glass, 17 fouls, 14 assists, 21 turnovers, 2 blocks and 4 steals. Jamal Boyce paced the Sting with 17 on 5-16 from the floor, 1-2 from the arc, 4-6 from the line, 5 boards and 4 assists. Calmar Morgan added 14 on 3-7 from the floor, 2-10 from the arc, 2-2 from the line and 8 boards. Vadim Hamilov notched 14 on 7-19 from the floor, 0-6 from the arc, 7 boards, 4 assists and 4 steals. Kevin Cornwall added 8 on 4-7 from the floor, 0-3 from the arc and 5 boards. Felix Adjei added 4, along with 4 boards, 2 assists and 2 steals, Devan Allen-Leslie 2, along with 3 boards, and Charles Nwokolo 2, along with 10 boards, while Javaugn Davis, Jav-El Davis, Derek DJesus, Ilia Jivotov, Steve Bifsha, John Moi, Kingsley Yeboah, Temark Wright-Boswell and Miguel Khan were scoreless. The Sting (coached by Bill Crowdis, assisted by Trevor Challenger, Mohamed Hassan and Adam Zhoni) hit 26-89 (.292) overall, 23-67 from the floor, 3-22 (.136) from the arc and 6-19 (.315) from the line, while garnering 64 boards, including 30 on the offensive glass, 21 fouls, 13 assists, 19 turnovers and 10 steals.
In the final, the Sheridan Bruins crushed the Mohawk Mountaineers 88-70. The Mountaineers led 21-10 after one quarter and 39-33 at the half. The Bruins led 65-57 after three quarters. Trevor Williams paced the Bruins with 35 on 5-13 from the floor, 5-15 from the arc, 10-11 from the line, 7 boards and 7 assists. Michael Selkridge added 15 on 7-16 from the floor, 1-4 from the line and 4 boards. Andrew Stephenson notched 9 on 0-1 from the floor, 3-5 from the arc and 2 boards. Jahmal McQueen scored 8 on 3-9 from the floor, 2-2 from the line and 7 boards. Robert Hanson added 7 on 2-3 from the floor and 1-4 from the arc. Rosheen Keen added 6 on 2-5 from the floor, 2-4 from the line, 4 boards and 2 steals. Dylan Periana added 4, along with 5 boards, and Paul Williams 4, along with 11 boards, while Kadeem Hall, Ashford Arthur, Natiel Mckenzie, Anthony Loungs and Andrew Thompson were scoreless. Hall nabbed 2 boards. The Bruins hit 32-87 (.367) overall, 23-57 from the floor, 9-30 (.300) from the arc and 15-26 (.576) from the line, while garnering 64 boards, including 31 on the offensive glass, 19 fouls, 13 assists, 14 turnovers, 4 blocks and 6 steals. Taylor Dowhaniuk paced the Mountaineers with 16 on 5-14 from the floor, 6-7 from the line, 10 boards and 2 blocks. Alex Reis added 14 on 4-12 from the floor, 2-5 from the arc, 8 boards, 3 assists and 2 steals. Manny Campbell added 11 on 5-6 from the floor, 0-7 from the arc, 1-2 from the line, 7 boards and 5 assists. Jeff Hunt notched 10 on 3-4 from the floor, 1-5 from the arc and 1-2 from the line. Andrew Cicuttini added 8 on 2-14 from the floor, 4-6 from the line and 10 boards. Xzennis Bereton notched 7 on 1-8 from the floor, 1-5 from the arc, 2-4 from the line and 2 boards. Patrick Iavarone added 4, along with 4 boards, while Richard Kyungu, Abdullahi Abdi, Braedon Lenters, Nathan Samuel, Jermaine Barr and Henry Osborne were scoreless. The Mountaineers hit 26-87 (.298) overall, 22-61 from the floor, 4-26 (.153) from the arc and 14-21 from the line, while garnering 60 boards, including 31 on the offensive glass, 17 fouls, 12 assists, 13 turnovers, 4 blocks and 4 steals. Mountaineers coach Brian Jonker told the Hamilton Spectator that “we were beaten by a better team. … It’s always tough to lose but we had great effort in trying to defend our title.”
The bronze medalist Algonquin Thunder: Nehemiah Campbell, Haidar El Badry, Courtney Dawkins, Romaine Lawrence, Mahamat-Ali Haggar, Dut Dut, Ryan Bradley, Kristopher Holford-Walker, Matthew Gillis, Garnet Blais, Louis Boursiquot, Jordan Scott, Lansani Kone, Amir Majidi, Malcolm Brown, Girum Musema, Tyrell Johnson, Etienne Mpana, Kevin Levy, coach Trevor Costello, assistant Jim Langis, assistant Achuil Lual, manager Brandon Young
The silver medalist Mohawk Mountaineers: Manny Campbell, Xzennis Brereton, Alex Reis, Andrew Cicuttini, Richard Kyungu, Abdullahi Abdi, Patrick Iavarone, Braedon Lenters, Taylor Dowhaniuk, Jeff Hunt, Jermaine Barr, Shakele Henry Osborne, coach Brian Jonker, assistant Mike Woodburn, assistant Mac Akrong, assistant Colin Bayley, therapist Sarah Ellis, trainer Stefani Smith, manager Adam Njauw
The gold medalist Sheridan Bruins: Roshean Keen, Kadeem Hall, Ashford Arthur, Andrew Stephenson, Dylan Periana, Jahmal McQueen, Anthony Loungs, Trevor Williams, Robert Hanson, Michael Selkridge, Andrew Thompson, Paul Williams, coach Jim Flack, assistant Leroy Cassanova, assistant Nick Davis, assistant Dave Ferencina, therapist Jessica Mitro, general manager Wayne Allison, coordinator Tahir Khan