Final regular season standings:

East (11): Algonquin (18-2); St. Lawrence-Kingston (16-4); Durham (16-4); Sir Sandford Fleming-Peterborough (15-5); Cambrian (13-7); George Brown (10-10); Seneca (8-12); Centennial (5-15); Georgian (4-16); Loyalist (4-16); La Cite (1-19)

West (10): Humber (16-2); Fanshawe (14-4); Niagara (14-4); Sheridan (12-6); Algoma (9-9); St. Clair (9-9); Lambton (9-9); Mohawk (5-13); Redeemer (2-16); Sault (0-18)

        Playoff non-qualifiers:

        Centennial Colts: Roderick Robinson, Marlon McLean, Daniel Fuller, Mike Zanidean, Dale James, Atill Williams, Shea Betton, Theo Vigod, Tommy Murphy, Zacharie Sutton, Malcolm Duncan, Kurtis Jeffers, Raymond Broomes, Andre Salicksinga and Jelton Anton Jesudasan.

        Georgian Grizzlies: J.P. Amaral, Steve McLean, Joe Kelman, Andrew Macintosh, Kevin Graf, Ryan Carr, Andre Thibault, Mychal Gillies, Rick Lister, Tony Choi and Shawn Berkeley.

        La Cite Coyotes: Emerick Ravier, Denis Ashley Fleury, Moctar N’Dioye, Blaise Mwenze, Warsama Elmi, Godmir Vladek Boursiquot, Gregory Garcia, Eric Poulin, Jims Basquin Vante, Thierry Gasana, Jordan Going, J’Mie St-Louis, Joey Dubeau, Robert Joseph, Justin Clement, Pierre-Charles Etienne, Vanja Altarac, Sala Kinfuita and Rodney Elivert.

        Lambton Lions: David Akelatis, Rob Pierce, Mohamed Farah, Steve Pallin, Jared Turcotte, Brandon Olver, Navado Hamilton, Randy Minielly, Nebojsa Stokic, Anthony Grasso, Kaelyn Barnes, John Whitney, Alex Maxwell and Justin Teves.

        Loyalist Lancers: Jeffrey Kwakye, Patrick Kalala, Trevor Mayer, Jordan Perry, Bryan Thomas, Oniel Lawrence, Jarin Fischl, Chris Francis, Brennen Eberwein, Nick Imrie, Joe Chapman, Robert Barber, A.J. Miziolek and Scott Maycock.

        Mohawk Mountaineers: Jerome Smith, Ricky Heath, Ryan Carrafiello, Alen Beader, Michael Soluk, Dwayne Secord, Greg Boccaccio, Kyle Bissonette, Tyler Kam, Patt Powless, Kenold Knight, Lionel Patrick, Cort Hodges, Dustin Patrick, Dejan Katanic and Ahmed Bin Othman.

        Redeemer Royals: Jordan Deweger, Adam Deweger, Ian Klingenberg, Justin Corvers, Mike Hutten, Rob Vandenende, Nathan Ayer, James Cuthbert, Lenhard Vanoord, Michael Duah, Lance Haverkamp, Ben Higgs and Nathan Vanderween.

        Sault Cougars: Christian Johnson, Shane Watson, Jonathon Price, Aaron Richards, Anthony Martella, Jake Doan, Brett Davey, Alex Semeniuk, Jordan Murtonen, Jonathon Day, Josh Carlson, Mohammed Lalva, Travis Zorzit and Jeff Dewar.

        Seneca Sting: Vadim Halimov, Norm Hamilton, Simo Grunberg, Trystan Charles, Gregory Charles, Adeysmi Adegboruwa, Emmanuel Obuobi, Patrick Arthur, Chao Chang, Kevin Kras, Chris Alicpapal and Andrew Lagbeneku-Essien.

In the crossover opening round, the Niagara Knights defeated the George Brown Huskies 73-62 as Jeremi Settimi scored 14, Arny N’Kindu 13, Chris Karkoulas 12, Nick Fadayel 11, Vaughan Williams 8, Lamar Grant 7, James Gordon 5 and Chris Bauslaugh 3, while Cosmos Smith, B.J. Michiels, Lincoln Cole, Jake Stika and Ryan Wheeler were scoreless. Collin Whitely led the Huskies with 26. Sola Kolawole added 13, Kedar Harriott 10, Raymond Bynoe 4, Nathan Thompson 4, Ricardo Brown 2, Billy Kabongo 1 and Richard Campbell 1, while Pedro Antunes and Joseph Tomlinson were scoreless. The Huskies also included Spencer Brown, Eduardo Sanchez, Akeem Craig, Austin Marshall, Markus Reeve and Scott Dwyer. …………………………………………………… The Sir Sandford Fleming–Peterborough Knights defeated the St. Clair Saints 108-78. The Saints could not overcome the scoring power of Fleming and after a broken nose was suffered by reserve guard Andrew Scott their spirits dropped. Jovail Wilson paced Fleming with 30. Neil O’Sullivan added 23, Tony Duran 19, Brett Neumann 11, Zeljko Vinkovich 6, Devan Allen 3 and Jeremy St. Clair 2, while Nathan Benjamin, Shams Yar-Adua and Jermaine Duke were scoreless. Nolan Gooding led the Saints with 18. David Korenic added 17, Chris Scott 12, Bilal El-Haghassan 10, Bai Sesay 7, Kyron Patrick 5, Bradley Small 5, Scott Currie 3 and Noah Van Den Driessche 1, while Jamie Hamilton and Andrew Scott were scoreless. The Saints also included Isaiah Harris and Tyral Elliott. …………………………………………………… The Algoma Thunderbirds upset the Durham Lords 91-87 in overtime after leading 43-36 at the half. The Lords jumped out of the gate taking a 21-point lead early before the Thunderbirds clawed their way back, closing the gap to seven at the half. With a back and forth second half, Durham’s Evan Browne missed a last second shot sending the game into overtime. Ryan Vetrie paced Algoma with 21. Vyron Phillips added 20, Patrick Murray 19, O’Brian Wallace 17, Dele Oworu 10 and Igor Vuclovic 4, while Dean Haidar, Gordon Roedger, Chris Casagrande, Morgan Brown, Michael Phillips Andy Haidar and Rob Clark were scoreless. Eric Smith paced the Lords with 25. Anthony Batchelor added 18, Nicholas Brown 12, Dave Parks 12, Courtney Small 7, Tyler Pelley 6, Evan Browne 5 and Vick Warya 2, while Calvin Nwke, Tyler Wolff and Shane Emmanuel were scoreless. The Lords also included Gabriel Ogunsakin, Chris Crowder, Sayed Sadaat, Kevin Theriault, Adam Shutt and Jamyka Bailey. …………………………………………………… The Sheridan Bruins crushed the Cambrian Golden Shield 108-82. “We played well and it was a nice performance in the playoffs. I would’ve liked to have seen us come out of the gate a little stronger than that but other than that it was good,” coach Jim Flack said. “The scoring was spread around, the defence was spread around. Cambrian is a great team but I thought our depth got to them. All in all, it was good afternoon for Sheridan basketball.” It was a less than stellar start for the home side, failing to match the intensity of their opponents and falling to a quick 11-3 deficit. After an early timeout that seemingly calmed them, the Bruins responded with 10-3 run to knot the game at 13. A 12-5 run comprised entirely of three-pointers propelled the Double Blue to a 32-23 edge en route to a 44-39 lead at the half. In the second half, the Bruins weathered runs that brought Cambrian with within three, two and three points respectively, before a 19-6 Sheridan run gave the home side a double-digit advantage they wouldn’t relinquish. Cory Cooper, who provided a spark off the bench connecting for six treys, said the best thing the team can do now is put this game behind them and look towards Algonquin. “We just need to think positive. We’ll forget about this game, work hard in practice and then we should be good.” Cory Cooper led Sheridan with 24. Tab Donaldson added 20, Jelani Matthews 18, Matt Cosby 13, Nebosjo Bratic 20, Richardo Dunkley 8, Fabian Webb 6, Kareem Malcolm 5 and Sheldon Sinclair 4, while Chris Lewis was scoreless. Brady Bolan led the Golden Shield with 29. Trevor Chalifoux added 12, Jerome Bailey 12, Riley Fortier 8, Lucas Wiebenga 8, John Mikus 6, Joey Pelletier 5 and Ryan Dewey 2. The Golden Shield also included Paul Mendonca, Riley Fortier, Kevin McEachern, Dylan Jarvis, Chad Langevin, Justin Robbins, Cole Payette, Theo Plumstead, Nick Liard and Dylan Lynds.

        In the quarterfinals, held at Algonquin College in Ottawa, the Humber Hawks dumped the Sir Sandford Fleming-Peterborough Knights 96-88. The win was the sixteenth in a row, as they have not been beaten since early November. Humber poured in a season high 55 points to take a 55-45 lead into the dressing room. Fleming came back from the 10-point lead at times in the second half, but could only get as close as four points, late in the game. The defence of captain Jadwey Hemmings turned out to be the difference. Daviau Rodney led Humber with 18. Akeem Sween added 18, Michael Acheampong 13, Lynden Dayton Barrow 10, Mike Cruickshank 10, Jadwey Hemmings 9, Jeremy Alleyne 7, Mike Dvorak 7, Raymond Munier 2 and Craig Nelson 2, while Ron Gabay, Theron Williamson, Ryan States, Antonio Blass and Andre Blake were scoreless. Jovain Wilson led Fleming with 32. Tony Duran added 20, Neil O’Sullivan 19, Zeljko Vinkovich 5, Shams Yar-Adua 4, Jeremie Kayeye 4 and Brett Neumann 4, while Jermaine Duke, Nathan Benjamin, Devan Allen and Jeremy St. Clair were scoreless. The Knights also included James Bloomfield and Troy Dennie.

        The Niagara Knights upset the host St. Lawrence-Kingston Vikings 57-56. With less than a minute remaining in the game and the Knights down by one, Nick Fadayel stole the ball and was fouled on a lay-up attempt. Fadayel hit both free throws to give the Knights a one-point lead. The Vikings had led by five with less than four minutes left, but couldn’t hold on. Knights guard Nick Fadayel stepped in front of a Duane Howard pass and raced the length of the floor before getting fouled and nailing the two free throws to put his team up by one with 43 seconds left. Still, St. Lawrence turned out to have three more offensive possessions. On the first, Remy Simpson was called for an offensive foul. On the second, after a Niagara turnover on a well-executed St. Lawrence press, Clarke just missed on a drive, but Mathieu Riendeau grabbed an offensive rebound with nine seconds left to give the Vikings one more chance. At the buzzer, though, high-hopping rookie Ajahmo Clarke missed again. “If ball goes in, we’re all jumping around like a bunch of four-year-old girls,” Vikings coach Barry Smith said. “If it doesn’t go in, we’re talking about next year.” Fadayel led the Knights with 22, Arny N’Kindu 12, Jeremy Settimi 9, Chris Bauslaugh 7, Rauhn Williams 4 and Lamar Grant 4, while B.J. Michiels, Lincoln Cole, James Gordon, Jake Stika and Ryan Wheeler were scoreless. Mathieu Riendeau led the Vikings with 19. Remy Simpson added 10, David George 8, Ajahmo Clarke 8, Duane Howard 5, Salym Cadogan 3 and Bryan McMillan 3, while Phillip McPherson, Terry Nam and Ross Carter were scoreless. The Vikings also included David Dehoop, Chris Francis and Nerome Hemmings.

        The Algonquin Thunder nipped the Sheridan Bruins 72-71. The Bruins trailed by double digits with 10 to play but rallied within one down the stretch. With Algonquin in front 70-69, a Sheridan foul put Algonquin at the free throw for a one and one with 37.3 seconds left. On the front end of the effort, the ball hit back rim and bounced against the backboard before finally settling into the hands of an Algonquin forward who banked it off the glass from close range to extend the lead to 72-69. Following a scoreless possession and a foul, the Bruins were staring defeat straight in the eye but were given new life after a pair of missed free throws kept them within three with only 12 seconds remaining. Tab Donaldson pushed the ball up left side of the floor and found Sheldon Sinclair in the corner in front of the Bruins bench. Sinclair’s three-point attempt sailed long hitting the back rim and eventually finding Jelani Matthew, who also missed. In the scramble to gain control of the rebound Matt Cosby tipped the ball into Algonquin’s net to pull within one, but only 0.3 seconds remained on the clock. “It was impressive the way we fought back; I’m proud of them for that completely, but I just think that if we were going to actually win this game – to use the Tiger Woods vernacular – we needed to bring our ‘A’ game, we couldn’t come with even a B-plus,” Sheridan coach Jim Flack said. “I think I would probably give us a B to a B-minus on the way we played tonight. No matter how long you’re in this business, the losing doesn’t get any easier. It’s never easy. I may not look it right now, but I’m pretty devastated because I was confident that we could get this win and quite confident that we could make a run deep into Ontario and at nationals and now that comes to a crashing halt. We came within a possession of continuing that run, so it’s a hurtful thing. But like I said to the guys afterwards, in terms of pursuing an Ontario championship, next Friday night there’s going to be two pretty disconsolate teams and next Saturday night there’s going to be a disconsolate team. And then whoever goes to nationals it’s the same thing all over again, there’ll be seven disconsolate teams and one that’s happy. That’s the very nature of the game. It’s a very cruel game, but it can also be very rewarding. It’s a high-risk, high-reward thing we’re into.” Charly Spurr led Algonquin with 23. Jordan Rose added 15, Davidson Sanelus 12, Anthony Hinds 11, Denis Dervisevic 7 and Luc Minani 4, while Abdul Kosar, Marlon Campbell and Eddie Alculumbre were scoreless. Jelani Matthews led Sheridan with 22. Tab Donaldson added 12, Matt Cosby 10, Sheldon Sinclair 9, Nebosjo Bratic 6 and Fabian Webb 4, while Cory Cooper, Chris Lewis, Richardo Dunkley, Kareem Malcolm, Phil Ramirez and Anthony Thomas were scoreless. The Bruins also included Shavon Cornelius.

        In the last quarterfinal, the Algoma Thunderbirds stunned the Fanshawe Falcons 69-92 after leading 34-23 at the half. O’Brian Wallace led Algoma with 19. Patrick Murray added 17, Dele Oworu 14, Vyron Phillips 10, Ryan Vetrie 6 and Igor Vuckovic 3, while Morgan Brown, Dean Haider, Gordon Roedger, Michael Phillips, Andy Haider, Chris Casagrande and Rob Clarke were scoreless. Jordan Dixon paced Fanshawe with 19. Matt Fennell added 12, Jabari Cooper 7, Phil Ferreira 5, Bryan Kamerman 5, Gareth Edwards 4, Pat Wright 4, Manny Campbell 3 and Mike King 2, while Ruston Anary, Nathaniel Spence, Andrew Smith, Andro McKenzie and Andrew McIntosh were scoreless. The Falcons also included Adam Colorado and Kevin Weaver.

        In the semis, the Humber Hawks dumped the Niagara Knights 75-62 after leading 41-28 at the half. While the Knights trailed Humber by only four points at halftime and narrowed that gap to 45-43 early in the second half, the Hawks answered every run with one of their own. “They’re on a 17-game winning streak for a reason — they’re pretty good,” Niagara coach Mike Beccaria said. “We didn’t quit and we certainly played hard enough to win, but Humber played hard, too. They just kept getting better as the game progressed.” The absence of suspended 6-foot-9 centre Chris Karkoulas from the Niagara lineup wasn’t a factor in the loss, as far as the team’s second-year coach was concerned. “They don’t have a big guy, so we matched up well,” Beccaria said. “They’re small and athletic, just like we were, but in the end, they were more athletic. We ran out of gas. We knew coming in that they would be a confident bunch. Seventeen wins will do that.” Daviau Rodney paced Humber with 6-13 from the floor, 1-3 from the arc, 9-13 from the line and 8 boards. Michael Acheampong added 21 on 9-11 from the floor, 1-2 from the arc and 2-2 from the line. Craig Nelson scored 9 on 3-5 from the arc. Mike Dvorak added 8 on 2-2 from the floor, 1-1 from the arc and 3-4 from the line. Jeremy Alleyne notched 6 on 2-2 from the floor and 2-3 from the line. Jadwey Hemmings added 4 on 1-5 from the floor and 6 boards. Akeem Sweem added 4 on 2-3 from the floor and 5 boards. Mike Cruickshank scored 4 and Lynden Drayton Barrow 1, while Ron Gabay, Theron Williamson, Ryan States, Antonio Blass, Andre Blake and Raymond Munier were scoreless. The Hawks hit 26-50 (.520) from the floor, 6-14 (.429) from the arc and 21-31 (.677) from the line, while garnering 37 boards, including 16 on the offensive glass, 20 fouls, 4 assists, 9 turnovers and 8 steals. Jeremy Settimi paced Niagara with 15 on 5-15 from the floor, 1-3 from the arc, 4-9 from the line and 3 boards. Vaughn Williams added 12 on 5-9 from the floor, 2-2 from the line, 4 boards and 3 assists. Arny N’Kindu added 10 on 5-10 from the floor and 5 boards. Nick Fadayel notched 9 on 3-6 from the floor, 3-4 from the line and 6 boards. Chris Bauslaugh scored 9 on 3-5 from the arc. Lamar Grant added 7 on 3-5 from the floor, while B.J. Michiels, Lincoln Cole, James Gordon, Mike Gartner, Chris Karloulas, Jake Stika, Ryan Wheeler and Cosmos Smith were scoreless. The Knights hit 24-54 (.444) from the floor, 5-14 (.357) from the arc and 9-18 from the line, while garnering 30 boards, including 14 on the offensive glass, 26 fouls, 5 assists, 12 turnovers and 6 steals.

        In the other semi, the Algonquin Thunder crushed the Algoma Thunderbirds 79-64 after leading 43-31 at the half. Charly Spurr led Algonquin with 36 on 13-18 from the floor, 5-9 from the arc, 5-5 from the line, 4 boards and 2 steals. Anthony Hinds added 15 on 5-6 from the floor, 3-4 from the arc, 2-3 from the line and 2 steals. Jordan Rose scored 12 on 5-13 from the floor, 1-4 from the arc, 1-3 from the line and 4 assists. Denis Dervisevic added 6 on 2-6 from the floor and 6 boards. Luc Minani added 4, Marlon Campbell 2, Davidson Sanelus 2 and Abdul Kosar 2, while Njuguna Waiganjo, Christian Kanku, Michael Savage, Tim Folusewych, Patrick Lumumba and Eddie Alculumbre wee scoreless. The Thunder hit 30-56 (.536) from the floor, 9-19 (.474) from the arc and 10-13 (.769) from the line, while garnering 28 boards, including 6 on the offensive glass, 19 fouls, 9 assists, 9 turnovers and 6 steals. Ryan Vetrie led Algoma with 15 on 4-10 from the floor, 7-7 from the line, 10 boards and 2 steals. Vyron Phillips added 13 on 4-9 from the floor and 5-6 from the line. O’Brian Wallace notched 11 on 4-10 from the floor, 2-4 from the arc and 1-2 from the line. Dele Oworu added 10 on 4-7 from the floor, 2-2 from the line and 9 boards. Patrick Murray scored 9 on 4-11 from the floor, 1-2 from the line and 5 boards. Igor Vuckovic added 5 on 2-4 from the floor, 2-2 from the line and 5 boards, while Dean Haidar, Morgan Brown, Chris Casagrande, Rushane Webb, Michael Phillips, Gordon Roedger, Andy Haidar and Rob Clark were scoreless. The Thunderbirds hit 22-52 (.423) from the floor, 2-13 (.154) from the arc and 18-21 (.857) from the line, while garnering 34 boards, including 11 on the offensive glass, 15 fouls, 3 assists, 14 turnovers and 5 steals.

        In the bronze medal match, the Niagara Knights clipped the Algoma Thunderbirds 76-62 after leading 40-26 at the half. Niagara coach Mike Beccaria praised the players for picking themselves up after a heartbreaking 79-62 loss to Humber in the semi. “This was a character win, because the game was a tough one to play — for both teams. We had huge expectations coming into the Final Four, so anything less than taking gold would be disappointing. I think it’s something all of us can be proud of and something we can use to take the program to the next level.” Nick Fadayel led Niagara with 19 on 8-11 from the floor, 3-4 from the line and 7 boards. Jerremy Settimi added 16 on 7-12 from the floor, 2-3 from the arc and 7 boards. Arny N’Kindu scored 10 on 5-8 from the floor and 8 boards. Chris Bauslaugh added 9 on 4-13 from the floor, 1-4 from the arc and 3 boards. Vaughn Williams scored 6, James Gordon 4, Lamar Grant 4, Chris Karloulas 4, Jake Stika 2 and Cosmos Smith 2, while B.J. Michiels, Lincoln Cole, Mike Gartner and Ryan Wheeler were scoreless. The Knights hit 33-63 (.524) from the floor, 3-8 (.375) from the arc and 7-11 (.636) from the line, while garnering 39 boards, including 16 on the offensive glass, 18 fouls, 10 assists, 19 turnovers and 9 steals. Vyron Phillips paced the Thunderbirds (coached by Thomas Cory, assisted by Winston Ivey, Josh Pallot, Garnet Cory and Tylor Hynd) with 15 on 6-16 from the floor, 3-6 from the arc and 2 steals. Patrick Murray added 11 on 5-11 from the floor and 1-3 from the arc. Dele Oworu notched 11 on 3-9 from the floor, 5-6 from the line and 16 boards. Ryan Vetrie added 9 on 3-10 from the floor, 1-2 from the arc, 2-2 from the line, 3 boards and 4 steals. O’Brian Wallace notched 7 on 3-6 from the floor and 1-2 from the arc. Andy Haidar added 6 on 2-3 from the arc. Igor Vuclovic scored 3, while Dean Haidar, Morgan Brown, Chris Casagrande, Rushane Webb, Michael Phillips, Gordon Roedger and Rob Clark were scoreless. Algoma hit 23-59 (.390) from the floor, 5-11 (.455) from the arc and 11-16 (.688) from the line, while garnering 30 boards, including 14 on the offensive glass, 13 fouls, 7 assists, 15 turnovers and 7 steals. The Thunderbirds also included Andrew Turgeon, Dele Oworu, Zach Wright and Rushane Webb.

        In the final, the Humber Hawks defeated the Algonquin Thunder 85-78 despite trailing 43-36 at the half. Daviau Rodney paced Humber with 29 on 11-20 from the floor, 7-11 from the arc and 8 boards. Michael Acheampong added 21 on 9-10 from the floor, 1-1 from the arc, 2-3 from the line and 3 boards. Akeem Sween added 14 on 6-12 from the floor, 2-4 from the line and 7 boards. Mike Dvorak scored 8 on 3-7 from the floor and 2-5 from the arc. Jadwey Hemmings added 6 on 3-4 from the floor and 5 boards. Jeremy Alleyne added 3, Lynden Drayton Barrow 2 and Mike Cruickshank 2, while Craig Nelson, Ron Gabay, Ryan States, Theron Williamson, Antonio Blass, Andre Blake and Raymond Munier were scoreless. The Hawks hit 34-61 (.557) from the floor, 10-18 (.556) from the arc and 7-15 (.467) from the line, while garnering 37 boards, including 11 on the offensive glass, 12 fouls 5 assists, 18 turnovers and 4 steals. Charly Spurr paced Algonquin with 24 on 7-14 from the floor, 3-8 from the arc and 7-7 from the line. Jordan Rose added 16 on 7-14 from the floor, 2-5 from the arc, 8 boards and 7 assists. Davidson Sanelus added 12 on 5-8 from the floor and 2-2 from the line. Abdul Kosar notched 10 on 4-8 from the floor and 2-3 from the arc. Anthony Hinds notched 7 on 3-12 from the floor, 1-2 from the line and 3 boards. Denis Dervisevic added 5 on 2-2 from the floor, 1-1 from the line and 7 boards. Luc Minani scored 4, while Njuguna Waiganjo, Christian Kanku, Marlon Campbell, Michael Savage, Tim Foluseych, Patrick Lumumba and Eddie Alculumbre were scoreless. The Thunder hit 30-60 from the floor, 8-19 (.421) from the arc and 10-11 (.909) from the line, while garnering 25 boards, including 5 on the offensive glass, 16 fouls, 11 assists, 7 turnovers and 8 steals.

        The bronze medalist Niagara Knights: Nick Fadayel; Jeremy Settimi; Arny N’Kindu; Chris Bauslaugh; Vaughn Williams; James Gordon; Lamar Grant; Chris Karkoulas; Jake Stika; Cosmos Smith; B.J. Michiels; Lincoln Cole; Mike Gartner; Ryan Wheeler; Demaine Nelson; Anderson St. Valle; Anthony Douglas; coach Mike Beccaria; assistant Steve Atkin; assistant Randy Conlon; assistant Mike Hurley; strength coach Anthony Ferrussi; manager C.J. Smith; athletic director Ray Sarkis

The silver medalist Algonquin Thunder: Charly Spurr; Anthony Hinds; Abdul Kosar; Jordan Rose; Davidson Sanelus; Luc Minani; Denis Dervisevic; Eddie Alculumbre; Patrick Lumumba; Njuguna Waiganio; Marlon Campbell; Michael Savage; Christian Kanku; Tim Folusewych; Girum Museuma; Brandon Brown; Jeremy Wapachee; coach Trevor Costello; assistant Jimmy Langis; assistant Ceasar Lukwago; varsity co-ordinator Mike Ciolfi; athletic director Ron Port

The gold medalist Humber Hawks: Daviau Rodney; Michael Acheampong; Mike Dvorak; Jadwey Hemmings; Jeremy Alleyne; Lynden Drayton Barrow; Mike Cruickshank; Craig Nelson; Ron Gabay; Ryan States; Theron Williamson; Antonio Blass; Andre Blake; Raymond Munier; Akeem Sween; Milton Holness; Jessie Simmons; Marvin White; coach Darrell Glenn; assistant A.J. Sharma; assistant Shawn Collins; manager James DePoe; manager Mark Dennis; student therapist Saul Behrman; athletic director Doug Fox