Final regular season standings:

East (6): Humber (15-1); Seneca (13-3); Algonquin (9-7); Durham (9-7); Centennial (7-9); George Brown 3-13)

West (6): Canadore (12-4); Sheridan (10-6); Mohawk (8-8); Conestoga (4-12); Fanshawe (4-12); St. Clair (2-14)

       Playoff non-qualifiers:

       Centennial Colts: Steven Nelson, Adonis Palomino, Ian McGowan, Pete Deveaux, Prince Earl Green, Shaun Wilson, Jeff Foster, Greg Tennant, Warren Farrell, Hugh Davidson, Michael Mitchell, Ian Europe, Melvin Simon, Michael Kerr, Ronald Smith, David Silva, Lloyd Wilson, Andy Shaw, Mark Grant, Willoughby Sackey and Sheldon Smith.

       Conestoga Condors: Darren Richmond, Wayne Johnson, Justin Faubert, Ishmael Lewis, Brad Osbourne, Chuck Chappus, Jim Harley, Bob York, Todd Schlacter, Jason Dinga, James Kenny, Cresh Marschall, Junior Riggen, Jamie Abthorpe, Kirk Rainford, Dennis Herakovic, coach Dave Lack, coach Marty King.

       Durham Lords: Andy Van Heuvelan, Leroy Brown, Chris Ford, Leslie Charles, Lucas MacEwan, Cory Langdon, Greg Jamieson, Jeff Allen, Jim Faragher, Jason Cuthbert, Jason Link, Jason Watkins, Raymond Reid, Curtis Houlden, coach Jim Barclay

       Fanshawe Falcons: Doug Payne, John Beunen, Andrew Lynch, Roy Carvalho, John Cordeiro, Jason Warren, Mike Acton, Graham Stewart, Chris Helkaa, Paul Wharton, Steve Hale, Rob O’Neill, Tim Van Horne, Terry Colizzi, Bruno Romano, Jeff Morgan, Lee Geiffi, Brian Jarvis and Alphonso Morgan.

       George Brown Huskies: Kevin Taylor, Ainsley Beckford, Andrew Wilson, Dale Holder, Horace Jones, Rod Zylstra, Andrei Lofters, Scott Hawes, Dave Downes, Cecil Warner, Anthony Radcliffe, David Mohamed, Michael Richards, Frank Bettencourt, Conrad Hamilton, Jawara Gairey, Neil Dillon and Dylan Reynolds.

       St. Clair Saints: Jazz Dhaliwal, Jeff Coles, George Chaker, Al Poisson, Rami Chatley, Greg Walls, Frank Graziano, Mike MacIsaac, Ty Trainor, Steve Smith, Jeff Tremblay, John Jones, Charles Vachon, Cameron Shreve, Tim Krushelniski, Kathy Corchis, Dan Battagello and Vinny Hayes.

       In the postseason quarterfinals, the Sheridan Bruins thrashed the Algonquin Thunder 93-65. The Thunder included Pat Serediuk, Brad Peak, Cam Haszcyn, Jay Peak, Ken Williams, Robert Dawson, Trevor Costello, Ryan Rashford, Tony Wesley, Chris Lynn, Bill Leron, Victor Giacomelli, Bryan Eburne and Jeff Hall.

In the other quarterfinal, the Seneca Braves stomped the Mohawk Mountaineers 101-70. The Mountaineers included Brian Johker, Vern Catania, Jeremy Dinning, Derek Sharpe, Dave Griffin, Lange Whittaker, Christopher Popadiuk, Gregory Evans, Jeff Waite, Daniel Vandenburg, Leo Laforme, Brian Rowe, Owen Gibbons, Doug Dunham, Eddison Balfour, David Szwec, William Broderick Dave Leger, Rob O’Neil, Fred Doolittle and Derek Bonn.

       In the semis, the Canadore Panthers dumped the Seneca Braves 83-77 as Rohan Hamilton scored 21, Fred Grannum 12, Eric Johns 10, Frederick Wood 10, Brian Loates 10, Mark Yates 4, Ian London 4 and Joseph Basawa 2. The Braves fell behind by as much as 25 points in the first half and got as close as five points in the third quarter. Mark Raphael paced Seneca with 29. Raymond Peddie added 15, Cedric Agard 10, Dwight Richards 10, Wayne Gibson 8, Wayne Parris 2, Dean Kavanagh 2 and Hewitt Jones 1.

In the other semi, the Humber Hawks walloped the Sheridan Bruins 106-70 as Patrick Rhodd scored 21, Larry McNeil 18, Fitzroy Lightbody 17, Craig Wyles 11, Wayne Roomes 8, Everton Webb 7, Roberto Feig 6, Gareth Broad 5, Lewis O’Neil 4, Richard Saunders 3 and Ray Currie 1. Nigel Williams led the Bruins with 16. Bryan Rennie added 10, Sean Henry 9, Clayton Manhertz 9, Chris Watson 7, Chris Miller 6, Francis Tyrell 6, Bertrand Boatswain 4, Ed Robinson 3 and Abdi Araleh 1.

       In the bronze medal match, the Seneca Braves defeated the Sheridan Bruins 80-77 as Wayne Lalor scored 20, Cedric Agard 17, Wayne Gibson 12, Mark Raphael 12, Dan Kavanagh 10, Wayne Paris 9, Paul Evans 8, Raymond Peddie 6 and Dwight Richards 4. Nigel Williams paced the Bruins with 16. Clayton Manhertz added 15, Sean Henry 12, Bertrand Boatswain 10, Francis Tyrell 9, Chris Watson 8, Bryane Rennie 6 and Abdi Araleh 1. The Bruins also included Chris Miller, Jay Lucyk, Steve Tubic, Rick Bolt, Ed Robinson, Lloyd Newman and Peter St. Kitts.

       In the final, the Humber Hawks defeated the Canadore Panthers 63-59. Humber and Canadore went into the final minute tied 59-59 but the Hawks pumped the ball inside to Roberto Fleig and Hugh Riley to pull out the iwn. Larry McNeil paced the Hawks with 18. Roberto Feig added 15, Patrick Rhodd, the tournament’s MVP, 14, Fitzroy Lightbody 10, Hugh Riley 4 and Everton Webb 2. Hawks coach Mike Katz told the Hamilton Spectator that “a good friend of mine said to me there will come a time when you have to win a playoff game in the sixties. We scored 106 points Friday. To drop off 43 points and still win is a testament to our ability to play different types of games.” Rohan Hamilton led the Panthers with 23. Fred Grannum added 17, Ian London 6, Mark Yates 4, Hugh Fraser 4, Eric Jones 3 and Frederick Wood 2.

       The bronze medalist Seneca Braves: Cedric Agard; Wayne Gibson; Raymond Peddie; Dean Kavanagh; Dwight Dewitt; Paul Evans; Mark Raphael; Dale George; Wayne Parris; Hewitt Jones; Wayne Lalor; Mike Kerr; Conrad Gairy; Irwin Duncan; coach Ernie Armstrong

       The silver medalist Canadore Panthers: Rohan Hamilton; Fred Grannum; Hugh Fraser; Brian Loates; Eric Johns; Frederick Wood; Ian London; James Kowal; Gord Lannin; Mark Yates; Kevin Benson; Corey Andryechen; Joseph Basawa; Deryk Ryan; Matt Mossman; Grant McLeod;

       The gold medalist Humber Hawks: Patrick Rhodd; Larry McNeil; Fitzroy Lightbody; O’Neil Lewis; Ray Currie; Everton Webb; David Adams; Hugh Riley; Craig Wyles; Wayne Roomes; Roberto Feig; Gareth Broad; Richard Saunders; Gareth Broad; coach Mike Katz; assistant Rick Dilena; therapist Gerry Townsend