In the opening round, held in Toronto: …………………………………………………… The 8th-seeded Toronto Oakwood Barons clubbed the 14th-seeded St. Catharines Denis Morris Redmen 61-43 after leading 16-8, 31-16 and 53-33 at the quarters. Kenneth Buchanan paced the Barons with 18. Nicholas Flynn led the Redmen with 13. Didi Mukendi added 11. …………………………………………………… The 4th-seeded London H.B. Beal Raiders stomped the 15th-seeded Barrie Bear Creek Kodiaks after leading 22-16 at the half. Enrico DiLoreto and Arnold Mayorga had 12 points apiece. “A couple of our drivers got lost and we started the game with only six players,” Marcotullio said, jokingly, of the sluggish start. “Really, it was just nerves. We missed a lot of shots, but then the guys came to play in the second half. But they weren’t a bad team — they knew more about us than we did about them.” …………………………………………………… The 5th-seeded Mississauga Father Michael Goetz Gators edged the 17th-seeded Kitchener Forest Heights Trojans 57-51 after leading 18-16, 30-28 and 45-36 at the quarters. Andrew Nicholson led the Gators with 22. Jeffrey Hutchinson added 8. Mark Peterson led the Trojans with 19. Will Bradbury added 7. …………………………………………………… The 6th-seeded Scarborough Blessed Mother Teresa Titans dusted the 16th-seeded Toronto St. Michael’s Kerry Blues 76-40 after leading 17-9, 37-19 and 58-30 at the quarters. Romaine Lawrence led the Titans with 14. Ancil Martin added 9. Nathan Pelech paced St. Michael’s with 19. …………………………………………………… The 10th-seeded Belle River St. Anne Catholic Saints clipped the 9th-seeded Brampton St. Edmund Campion Bears 56-46 after leading 13-5 after one quarter and 40-21 after three quarters. Jon Wilson led the Saints with 13. Jay McDonald led the Bears with 12. …………………………………………………… The 7th-seeded Hamilton Cathedral Gaels defeated the 13th-seeded Guelph Centennial Spartans 58-52, despite trailing 12-8 after one quarter and 32-30 at the half before leading 42-41 after three quarters. Tyron Watson led the Gaels with 18. Army N’Kindu added 15, including two key free throws with 1:40 remaining in the final frame to give the Gaels a nine-point bulge. Matt Cupido was the only Gael to sink a three-point shot. The team was 1 for 8. They weren’t much better from the floor and were 9 for 24 from the foul line. “We were terrible today, I don’t know what else to say. We were brutal. It was horrible,” Gaels coach Mark Daly told the Hamilton Spectator. “We missed eight easy layups in the first quarter and 6 of 8 free throws in the first half. We took way too many threes in the first quarter and were 0 for 7. … It was a stinker, but we won. I’d take five really ugly bad wins this week and go home happy. One good thing is we don’t play two bad games in a row.” Mike Bratusa led the Spartans with 13. Robert House added 8. ………………………………………………… The top-seeded Ajax Pickering Trojans whipped the 12th-seeded Newmarket Sacred Heart Crusaders 94-48 after leading 34-11, 54-24 and 76-33 at the quarters. Devoe Joseph paced the Trojans with 27. Scott Laws led Sacred Heart with 12. …………………………………………………… The 3rd-seeded Rexdale Father Henry Carr Crusaders stuffed the 18th-seeded Ottawa Colonel By Cougars 83-45 after leading 21-11, 39-22 and 58-31 at the quarters. Rodel Grenaway led the Crusaders with 15. Tramar Sutherland added 13. Chris Stinson paced the Cougars with 14. Nick Nishikawa added 4. Cougar’s coach Phil Roberts said his troops suffered a serious case of the jitters in their first match and had trouble adjusting to a more physical style of play. …………………………………………………… The 2nd-seeded Toronto Eastern Commerce Saints whipped the 11th-seeded Pickering Pine Ridge Pumas 74-54. Pine Ridge’s Kurt Alexander torched Eastern Commerce for 13 points in the first quarter but was held to zero points thereafter. “I gave my guys a good tongue-lashing after that first quarter,” Eastern Commerce coach Kevin Jeffers said. “He’s a great player who can shoot really well, and our guys weren’t doing the things they were asked of.” What the Saints players had been asked of was to trap Alexander and force the guard, who has scored 25-plus points seven times this season, to work for his shots. Eastern Commerce threw two — sometimes three — defenders to attack and kept Alexander running around, not allowing him to settle for easy jumpers. “He was just forced to work really hard, dribbling hard to get around the defence,” said Cameron Nekkers, a coach at Pine Ridge. “By the time he’s getting his shot, his legs aren’t there. He got really tired.” With Alexander thrown off, Pine Ridge’s offence simply wasn’t there. Their guards were smothered on the perimeter by the Saints’ Keaton Cole and Tyler Murray, and any time the Pumas did manage to squeak through to the lane, they were met by the 7-foot-plus wingspan of Eastern Commerce’s Jean Paul Kambola. Kambola, a 6-foot-9 load inside, smothered as many Pine Ridge shots as he altered and deflected. “He’s our big man, no doubt,” Jeffers said of the 16-year-old. “When he gets going, there’s not much you can do against him.” Pine Ridge still managed to chip Eastern Commerce’s lead down to six going into the fourth thanks to a 10-point third quarter from Isiah Swaby, who finished with 13. But that’s when the Saints shifted into another gear. They found a rhythm — a sweet tune to the Saints — in their half-court sets, sparking a 21-4 run by spreading the floor and finding open buckets inside. “Any one of our guys can create off the dribble, so we’re not going to crowd our players,” Jeffers said. “That way they can utilize the whole floor.” The Saints’ Alex Hill led all scorers with 22 points, including four three-pointers. Hill, a 6-foot-4 lefty who’s like Mike Miller with a slash-and-kick game, has played on both the under-15 and under-17 provincial teams. Cole added 17 points and Murray 14 for the Saints. The Pumas led 20-16 after one quarter. The Saints led 41-29 at the half and 53-47 after three quarters. Kurt Alexander paced Pine Ridge with 15. Isiah Swaby added 13.

In the elimination second round: …………………………………………………… The 18th-seeded Ottawa Colonel By Cougars stomped the Toronto St. Michael’s College Blue Raiders 71-57 after leading 17-10, 29-28 and 50-41 at the quarters. “We were able to get our low post game going and we hit a lot of our free throws,” said Cougars coach Phil Roberts. Chris Stinson led the Cougars with 27. Nick Nishikawa added 20. Nathan Pelech led the Blues with 19. The Blues (coached by Jeff Zownir, assisted by Nunzio Corrente, Emile John, Stan Kuliavas and Daniel Lumsden) also included Justin Leung, Neil Mathieson, Matt Taylor, Jesse Clarke, Gabriel King, Chase Campbell, Vernon Carbonell, Michael Chua, Michael Jaglowitz, Mark Krisztofer, Tariq Stanley, Andrew Semeniuk, Andrew Dawson and Jon Roth. …………………………………………………… The 15th-seeded Barrie Bear Creek Kodiaks nipped the 17th-seeded Kitchener Forest Heights Trojans 74-71 in overtime, after leading 17-8, 33-24 and 48-35 at the quarters. The score was knotted at 61 after regulation play. Jordan Widdicks paced the Kodiaks with 18. Mark Peterson led the Trojans with 21. The Kodiaks (coached by Cameron Thomas, assisted by Rob Cordell, Mike Reinsoo and Nick Biffis) also included Jonathan Anglin, Will Bradbury, Dahlin Brooks, Darnell Garrick, Connor McAndrew, Taylor McNaughton, Nikola Saric, James Schumacher, Andrew Taylor and Kyle Voisin.

       In the third round: …………………………………………………… The 4th-seeded London H.B. Beal Raiders edged the 13th-seeded Guelph Centennial Spartans 50-48. Beal led Centennial 17-6 after one quarter and 39-28 after three. Beal was up 16 with about two minutes left before Centennial mounted a furious rally. “They made some threes and we missed some foul shots. We missed a lot of layups, honestly, 15 to 20 layups,” said head coach Tony Marcotullio. “We haven’t gelled yet, but once we get our groove on, we’ll be OK. But we’d better get our groove on tomorrow or we’ll be coming home early.” Enrico DiLoreto led the Raiders with 17 points. Arnold Mayorga added 12, Evans Otchere 11 and Adam Jespersen 10. The Spartans (coached by Rob Conroy, assisted by John Mitchell and Kris Kenny) included Edward Doney, Danny McCarthy, Evan Schwantz, Brian Sinclair, Mike Bratusa, Shawn Mason, Travin Cain, Dan Nasso, Robert House, Adrian Varilla, Jay Francis and Adrian Achonwa. …………………………………………………… The 3rd-seeded Rexdale Father Henry Carr Crusaders clipped the 14th-seeded St. Catharines Denis Morris Redmen 59-43 after leading 21-11, 35-20 and 53-36 at the quarters. Tramar Sutherland led the Crusaders with 28. Didi Mukendi led the Redmen with 31. The Redmen (coached by Michael Pullar, assisted by Jeff MacDonald, Matt Vinc and Dan Boileau) also included Brandon Cecchini, Jermaine Edwards, Nicholas Flynn, Majdi Hareri, Chris Kupka, Patrick Lyons, Ken McLauchlin, Youri Mutamba, Aggrey Semi and Connor Smith. …………………………………………………… The 6th-seeded Scarborough Blessed Mother Teresa Titans stomped the 12th-seeded Newmarket Sacred Heart Crusaders 74-58 after leading 24-14, 38-24 and 53-36 at the quarters. Ashton Khan led the Titans with 18. Scott Laws led the Crusaders with 18. The Crusaders (coached by Patrick Au, assisted by Kevin Mitchell) also included Peter Galka, Lucas Rooney, Matthew West, Chris Bergin, Ben Garvin, Evan Clavir, Ryan Sellan, Leo Fasan, Dylan Moonsie and Patrick Dooc). …………………………………………………… The 5th-seeded Mississauga Father Goetz Gators crushed the 11th-seeded Pickering Pine Ridge Pumas 84-62 after leading 48-30 at the half. David Tyndale paced the Gators with 23. Kurt Alexander led the Pumas with 23. The Pumas (coached by Cameron Nekkers, assisted by Jason McKenzie, Brian Natola, Craig Andrews and Clayton Conway) also included Devan Allen-Leslie, Daniel Coelho, Kevin Coutu, Jermaine Duke, Isiah Swaby, Cee-Jay Williams, Janoi Wright, Shane Henry, William Haywood, Jamika Bailey and Matt Halket). …………………………………………………… The 8th-seeded Toronto Oakwood Barons clocked the 10th-seeded Belle River St. Anne Catholic Saints 48-24 after leading 9-2, 27-6 and 41-18 at the quarters. Michael Ranger and Kenneth Buchanan each scored 10 to pace the Barons. Mustafa Helal led the Saints with 8. The Saints (coached by Larry Loebach, assisted by Rick St. Pierre, Dan Devin and Roger Mousseau) also included Jordan Brescacin, Mackenzie Devin, Josh Vincent, Travis Turnbull, Jon Wilson, Andrew Loebach, Blake Mikhail, Sam Bhatia, Nevin Macleod, Matt McNaughton, Jordan Caron, Anthony Bekasiak, Jimmy Hanna and Peter Comisso. …………………………………………………… The 9th-seeded Brampton St. Edmund Campion Bears upset the 7th-seeded Hamilton Cathedral Gaels 63-51. The Gaels led 16-9 after one quarter, while the Bears led 31-23 at the half and 46-35 after three quarters. Jayden McDonald led the Bears with 26. Tyron Watson led the Gaels with 13. The Gaels (coached by Mark Daly and Brian Daly) also included Ekow Fynn, Matthew Cupida, Kedine King, Arny N’Kindu, Alex Reis, Jordan Bailey, Dhonn Ronquillo, Matthew O’Grady, Zachary Hornby, Dwayne Harvey and Jamar Coke. …………………………………………………… The top-seeded Ajax Pickering Trojans stomped the 18th-seeded Ottawa Colonel By Cougars 83-40 after leading 26-10, 44-17 and 67-28 at the quarters. Devoe Joseph led the Trojans with 27. Chris Stinson led the Cougars with 18. Cougars coach Phil Roberts told the Orleans Weekly Journal that his troops couldn’t match the physicality of the Trojans. “It’s a very different kind of basketball down there. It’s a lot more physical play down there compared to Ottawa. It’s tough to play 40 games one way and go down there. It was hard. We struggled. … It was a tough game. We beat them twice this year and to beat a team three times is very hard. It was a disappointing loss. We didn’t play our best basketball, which was crummy. But overall it was a great season, going to OFSAA and the finals. I’m very pleased with our performance in the last two games of OFSAA, winning one.” The Cougars (coached by Phil Roberts, assisted by Jason Thompson and Josh Meredith) also included Cainan Querido, Greg Wright, Jamil Abiad, James Fenton, Nima Ashouri, Paul Tessier, Brendon Campbell, Chris Nicholson, Fraser Scott and Nick Nishikawa. …………………………………………………… The 2nd-seeded Toronto Eastern Commerce Saints clubbed the 15th-seeded Barrie Bear Creek Kodiaks 65-46. The Saints led 49-30 after three quarters. The Kodiaks (coached by Matt Dawson, assisted by Paul Hopper) included Willem Steyn, Chris Currie, Kyle Graves, Jordan Vig, Jordan James, Nolan Knill, Cody Hache, Jordan Widdicks, Caleb Brown and Brandon Vig.

       In the quarterfinals, the 6th-seeded Scarborough Blessed Mother Teresa Titans dumped the 2rd-seeded Rexdale Father Henry Carr Crusaders 66-43. The Crusaders led 15-14 after one quarter. The score was knotted at 26 at the half. The Titans led 42-34 after three quarters. Romain Lawrence led the Titans with 24. Tramar Sutherland paced the Crusaders with 15. “It was a great game for us, exquisitely played and a huge victory over a rival,” said Titans head coach Richard Gallacher, who was given a technical foul with 3:08 remaining before the half. “My kids stepped it up after (the foul), we were outstanding in the final half and finally got over the hump of losing seven in a row to them, including three straight finals. But I am surprised that (Carr) didn’t play better.” Tied 26-26 at half, Mother Teresa took control in the third with a 16-6 run, with most of the scoring coming from Romaine Lawrence. “This is the one that counted,” said Lawrence, who scored 24. “We were ready, focused and our defensive pressure gave them fits.” Poor shooting, numerous turnovers and an overall lack of hustle proved to be the undoing of Carr’s run. Mother Teresa outscored them 24-9 in the final quarter. It was an uncharacteristic performance for Carr, who had won 46 of 50 games heading into the playoff. “Lack of discipline; the game plan was set for them and they wouldn’t execute it,” said Crusaders head coach Paul Melnik. “It’s also very difficult to beat a team like (Mother Teresa) four times a year. They were ready for us, played a heck of a game and deserved to win.” Crusaders star forward Tramar Sutherland, who finished with only 15 points (11 in the first half), said the loss was embarrassing. “You don’t like to end your high school basketball career like this – and especially losing to (Mother Teresa),” said Sutherland. “It’s not what I like, but sometimes you have games like this. It happens and it hurts when it comes in such an important game.” The Crusaders (coached by John Petrushchak, assisted by Mike Falloon and Devon Thompson) also included Josh Ogden, Daniel Falloon, Justin Bakuteka, Marlon Redley-Smith, Sean Giscombe, Jeffery Donaldson, Rodel Grenaway, Antwon Allwood, Jahmal Grennan, Tristan Watson, Dean Douglas, Chris Muir, Mark Gibson and Nathaniel Elliott.

       The 4th-seeded London H.B. Beal Raiders dusted the 5th-seeded Mississauga Father Goetz Gators 60-43 after leading 15-6 after one quarter and 24-18 at the half. Enrico DiLoreto led the Raiders with 17, with John Woldu adding 16 (including 14 of 16 from the free-throw line), Adam Jespersen 13 and Arnold Mayorga 13. Michael Murray led the Gators with 12. The Gators (coached by Ray Kulig, assisted by Amir Morgan) also included Allan Anderson, Zachary Brooks, Cory Collingwood, Cory Cooper, Akeam Craig, Robert Hanson, Jeffrey Hutchinson, Karim Khalil, Ulysses Mendoza, Andrew Nicholson, Joseph Tubbs, Joshua Tubbs and David Tyndale. Raiders coach Tony Marcotullio was deservedly revelling in what he considered Beal’s biggest basketball win. “This was a great, great team win,” he said. “Our perimeter defence was very good and John (Woldu) didn’t turn the ball over all game. He was just stellar. I’m so happy for my kids and I’m so happy for London because a lot of people out there said a London school can’t get to the final four. You’ve got 18 teams here that are incredible. You’re looking at the best of the best and I’ve just got to pinch myself. These guys are going to remember this game for the rest of their lives.”

       The 2nd-seeded Toronto Eastern Commerce Saints dumped the 9th-seeded Brampton St. Edmund Campion Bears 65-56 after leading 13-11, 30-22 and 49-44 at the quarters. Alex Hill paced Commerce with 17. Kareem Malcolm led the Bears with 14. The Bears (coached by Greg Spagnoli, assisted by Danney Hamilton) also included Lawrence Adjei-Okyere, Jordan Clennon, Ante Cosic, Brandon Ennis, Shane Felix Julien, Jeffrey Kwakye, Jayden McDonald, Tychon Carter-Newman and Byron Trench.

       In the last quarterfinal, the top-seeded Ajax Pickering Trojans dumped the 8th-seeded Toronto Oakwood Barons 59-47 after leading 12-11, 26-15 and 42-30 at the quarters. Devoe Joseph led the Trojans with 18. Bruno Silvestrin led the Barons with 11. The Barons (coached by Anthony Miller) also included Daniel Allan, Kenneth Buchanan, Jamie Asefa, Jonathan Reynolds, Evon Dore-Jones, Julian Clarke, Michael Ranger, Jermaine Bernard, Tevin Manherz-Dennis, Kevin Achamapaong, Hakim Shak-Adan, Shavaugh James, Dwayne Dobson and Jamal Mucket-Sobers.

       In the semis, the 2nd-seeded Toronto Eastern Commerce Saints crushed the 6th-seeded Scarborough Blessed Mother Teresa Titans 62-46. The Titans led 17-15 after one quarter. The Saints led 31-25 at the half and 53-38 after three quarters. Marvin Binney led the Saints with 15. Romaine Lawrence led the Titans with 21.

       In the other semi, the top-seeded Ajax Pickering Trojans dusted the 4th-seeded London H.B. Beal Raiders 66-44 after leading 17-10, 32-21 and 50-36 at the quarters. Devoe Joseph led the Trojans with 23. Evans Otchere paced the Raiders with 12. Beal coach Tony Marcotullio said Pickering “shot the lights out. We broke down in a couple of areas, but when you play against the No. 1-ranked team in Ontario, that’s going to happen,” he said. “You have to have the best game in your life to beat them and they’re going to have to have the worst. I told the kids, if you play them 10 times, they’re going to beat you 11. They just have so many different ways of beating you.”

       In the bronze medal match, the 4th-seeded London H.B. Beal Raiders nipped the 6th-seeded Scarborough Blessed Mother Teresa Titans 49-48. The Titans led 14-11 after one quarter. The Raider sled 28-22 at the half and 41-34 after three quarters. Arnold Mayorga paced the Raiders with 18. Maurice Walker led the Titans with 22. “We really wanted a medal,” Raiders coach Tony Marcotullio said. “We were disappointed we lost to Pickering but we had to refocus to win a medal. I really wanted this medal for the kids.” It’s the first time a London team had made the final four since 1986 when the Raiders, coached by Dan Colfax, made the semis in London. Marcotullio was a key member of that team. “I’m absolutely happy with how this team has responded,” Marcotullio said. “We’ve done really well. When you play at this level, it’s a different planet. I know we are one of the top four teams in Ontario. I know that.” The Titans (coached by Richard Gallacher and R. Gonsalves) also included Ashton Khan, Romaine Lawrence, Akeem Isaac-Phillips, Norbert Torres, Ryan Augustine, Ancil Martin, Kadeem Knott, Onnex Blackwood, Jermaine Lightbody, Matthew Augustine, Ritchie Kanza, Dwayne Dawes, Jonathan Alexander and Adika Peters-McNeilly.

       In the final, the top-seeded Ajax Pickering Trojans repeated as champs by edging the 2nd-seeded Toronto Eastern Commerce Saints 47-46. Pickering got off to a slow start as Devoe Joseph struggled in the first half to find his shot. Eastern Commerce led 16-9 after a quarter but the Trojans made a comeback early in the second. With just 2:30 to go before halftime the game was tied 23-23. Pickering pulled ahead to lead 26-25 but Eastern’s Alex Hill hit a deep 3 pointer that banked-in off the backboard just before the buzzer sounded. Commerce led 28-26 at the half. The Trojans pulled ahead in the third as Devoe Joseph hit a runner in the lane bringing the score to 37-35. At the end of the third, Pickering led 39-35. The teams traded baskets in the final 8 minutes of the fourth quarter. With 3.5 minutes to go, the Trojans led 43-40. With about 30 seconds to go, Pickering was ahead 45-44, but Eastern Commerce hit a wide-open dunk to give the Saints a 46-45 lead. The Trojans ran down the clock in their final possession with Devoe Joseph hitting the game winning basket with 3.1 seconds remaining on the clock and the Pickering defence stood tall for the final possession by Eastern Commerce. Devoe Joseph led the Trojans with 20. Tyler Murray led the Saints with 14. After a thundering Jean Paul Kambola dunk with 20 seconds remaining on the clock gave the Saints a 46-45 lead, the Trojans took possession and Devoe Joseph was the man in charge. With the ball in his hands and provincial title hanging in the balance, Joseph drove to the hoop and pulled up to hit a long jumper over the outstretched hand of the Eastern defender with 3.1 remaining in regulation. Then after swatting away the Saints’ inbound attempt on the next play, Pickering launched into celebration mode having captured their second consecutive championship. For Joseph, who was playing in his final game for the Trojans before heading off to the University of Minnesota on a scholarship, it all played out as planned. “I wanted the ball in my hands. (In the huddle) I told them give me the ball,” recalls the star guard, who posted a game-high 20 points for Pickering. “I said: ‘we’ve got this guys, we worked too hard to lose this’.” Lose they nearly did, however. In the opening quarter, the Trojans, who had defeated H.B. Beal 66-44 in the semifinal earlier in the day to punch their ticket to the final, struggled to find their shot which resulted in a 16-9 Saints lead after the opening eight minutes. Brothers Joseph — Devoe and Cory — then led their team back with help courtesy a Dwayne Smith dunk, a couple of Juevol Myles free throws and a Jonathan Tull three pointer, which turned a seven-point deficit into a 26-25 lead with time winding down in the half. Seconds later, however, it looked as though the momentum might take a swing back in the other direction. Just before time expired, Eastern’s Alex Hill launched a deep three-point shot that banked off the glass and in to give the Saints a 28-26 halftime lead. That was when Pickering coach Jim Barclay stepped in with a little halftime speech. “I told the guys that we were going to win the second half,” he says, noting his team played far from their best game of the year with everything on the line. “We’re a good enough team, and though we didn’t play the greatest, I knew we were going to get it together. I don’t think it was the best game we ever played, but it was maybe the most exciting.” As he continued, Barclay, who took over for longtime coach Ron Parfitt when the latter retired following last year’s championship, the emotions of the moment nearly took over. “You coach your whole life in Ontario hoping to get a chance to win this thing,” he said, with his voice beginning to crack up. “The guys came through. After all we’ve been through this year, our goal was to win this and I am just relieved that we did. For a minute there it didn’t look like we would.” While the coach kept his emotions in check, it wasn’t so easy for some of the players, including forward Justin Wiltshire. “This is the best feeling ever,” he said. “Honestly, I even shed a couple of tears there at the end. Playing with these guys, these coaches, has been a privilege. It’s such an honour to have a home school like Pickering.”

       The bronze medalist London H.B. Beal Raiders: Adam Jesperson; Arnold Mayorga; John Woldu; Bryce Chandler; Enrico Di Loreto; Nathan Di Loreto; Mike Dubreuil; Trent Roberts; Evans Otchere; Fasal Hussain; Elmer Perdomo; Alex McConnell; Chavan Miller-Bennett; Trey Langford; coach Tony Marcotullio; assistant Jeff Flecher; assistant Ian McConnell; assistant Collin Robbins; assistant Matt Davis

       The silver medalist Toronto Eastern Commerce Saints: Tyler Murray; Alwayne Bigby; Brandon Sam-Hinton; Alex Hill; Jake Hill; Jean Paul Kambola; Marvin Binney; Keaton Cole; Wayne Bridge; Kmar Kelly; Tristan Lew-Vu; Matthieu Johnson; Kevin Kamba; coach Kevin Jeffers; assistant Trevor Bullen; assistant Loui Sialtsis; assistant Sheldon Benoit

       The gold medalist Ajax Pickering Trojans: Devoe Joseph; Jamal Bucknor; Ricardo Chung; Liban Hassan; Cory Joseph; Natiel McKenzie; Jhedon McPherson; Juevol Myles; Ken Nkrumah; Dwayne Smith; Delroy Thomas; Jonathan Tull; Jameel Williamson; Justin Wiltshire; coach Jim Barclay; assistant David Joseph; assistant Mike Gordensky; assistant Nikosi Addams; assistant Ron Parfitt; assistant Kerry Ashley; assistant Cyril Sahadath