In the Toronto Metro regional quarterfinals, the Lester B. Pearson Bengals edged the St. Michael’s Blue Raiders 50-47 in overtime. Roger Rollocks paced the Bengals (coached by George Cervoir) with 15. Terry Victor added 13. Kirt Charter led the Blue Raiders with 15. Ernie Pietrobon added 14 and Greg Hook 12. The Blue Raiders (coached by Dan Pendergast, trained by Tony O’Cana and managed by Paul Fournasier) also included Clorindo Grilli, Louie Meneses, Peter Balaban, Ed Tomes, Gino Saccone, John Kelly, Ed Greczuk, Mike Van Leeuwen, Mark Traynor, Mark Kraczynski and Mirus Rupnik. …………………………………………………… The Oakwood Barons stomped the York Mills Titans 88-57. …………………………………………………… The Runnymede Redmen edged the North York George S. Henry Lions 67-2 as Mitch Zuk scored 20. Tony Sterling led the Lions with 21. …………………………………………………… In the last quarterfinal, the Eastern Commerce Saints nipped the East York Goliaths 72-70 as John Kavaratsis scored 28. Jeff McKibbon led the Goliaths with 25. …………………………………………………… In the semis, the Runnymede Redmen defeated the Eastern Commerce Saints 69-65 as Earl Roberts scored 18, including two free throws in the final seconds to seal the win. Ralph Salvino led the Redmen with 20. Mitch Zuk added 19. Andre Bodkyn and John Kavaratzis each scored 16 to pace the Saints. Rawle Cottle added 14. The Saints also included Owen Officer. …………………………………………………… In the other semi, the Oakwood Barons crushed the Lester B. Pearson Royals 89-54 after leading 18-10, 46-28 and 74-36 at the quarters. John Kordich paced the Barons with 21. Mark Jones added 21. Roger Rollocks led the Royals with 32. The Royals (coached by George Cervoni) also included Terry Victor. …………………………………………………… In the regional final, the Oakwood Barons defeated the Runnymede Redmen 86-80 as Norman Clarke scored 24, T.J. Alleyne 18, John Kordich 13, Mark Jones 12 and Courtney Betty 11. Earl Roberts led the Redmen with 17. Mitch Zuk added 17, Ralph Salvino 17 and Jim Poutsoungas 14. “We had to stay sharp throughout the game to beat then,” Barons coach Terry Thompson told the Toronto Star. “I was worried and concerned at times because we didn’t play well and it almost cost us the title.” Redmen coach John Petruschak said “to beat Oakwood, you have to combine a perfect game with one of their off nights. Our guys played a helluva game and they seemed to be worried. If we had clicked on our foul shooting, there would have been a new city champion.” Baron guard Mark Jones said “that’s the first time I’ve fouled out and it was the worst time it could have happened. We were sluggish as a team and it almost cost us.”

In the South regional playoffs: …………………………………………………… In the quarterfinals, the Hamilton Southmont Royals dumped the Welland Notre Dame Fighting Irish 71-55 as Steve Gill scored 20, Cheddi Warner 14, Mike Knezevic 12 and Dan Pankerichan 10. The score was knotted at 14 after one quarter. The Royals led 32-31 at the half and 58-46 after three quarters. Jim Zareski led the Fighting Irish with 16. Tony Dimanuele added 13, Mike Zareski 12 and Dave Boc 10. …………………………………………………… The Oakville T.A. Blakelock Tabbies stomped the Niagara Falls Collegiate Red Raiders 72-33 as Fred Murrell scored 26, Slavko Duric 14 (also reported as 13) and Chris Sainsbury 11 (also reported as 13), Rohan McLean 9 and Scott Gould 7. The Tabbies led 19-7, 35-16 and 48-28 at the quarters. Tabbies coach Vern Lucyk told the Niagara Falls Review that “we peaked.” Alex Petcovitch led the Red Raiders with 11. Doug Aitchison added 7 and Brian Calbury 7. Red Raiders guard Dave Snyder said “we really got down once we got behind so early in the game.” The Red Raiders (coach George Lalicich) also included Pete Tirabasso, Wayne Lew, Doug Aitchison, Jerry House, Brian Morin, Dom Caruso, Kevin Garrett, Gary Newlands, Nick Villela and Roland Pratt. …………………………………………………… The Hamilton St. Jean de Brebeuf Braves clipped the St. Catharines Denis Morris Redmen 69-59 as Serino Genovese scored 35, Rick Muschi 16, Dale Boyd 8 and Paul Rowe 8. Dan Meagher paced the Redmen with 18. Kris Moore added 16, John Lorito 10 and Skeeter Mower 9. The score was knotted at 55 when the Redmen began committing a host of sloppy turnovers. The Redmen (coach Maurice Prindiville, manager Louis Fratangelo) also included Jim Syrotiuk, Parri Ceci, Tim Sheehan, Quait, Paul Pollock, Chris Cincio, Steve Ferracutti, Frank Cappaletti, Chuck Palmer and Digioacchino.  …………………………………………………… In the last quarterfinal, the Bramalea Broncos dumped the St. Catharines Lakeport Lakers 63-51 as Bill Young scored 26, Rick Briscoe 18 and Donovan Thomas 11. The Lakers led 32-24 at the half. The Broncos led 44-42 after three quarters. Scott Madole paced the Lakers with 17. Rick Lianga added 12 and John Kilkenny 10. The Lakers (coach Bob Mandzuk) also included Tom Epp, Charlie Bufalino, Tony Goertzen, Bylhouer, Calder, Kalea and Satler. …………………………………………………… In the semis, the Hamilton Southmont Royals edged the Oakville T.A. Blakelock Tabbies 75-72 (also reported as 76-74) as Steve Gill scored 31, Ken Capponi 17 and Cheddi Warner 14. The Royals led 20-12, 42-31 and 57-52 at the quarters (also reported as 20-14, 42-29 and 57-50. Fred Murrall rallied the Tabbies down the stretch but was called for a double-dribble on a drive with two seconds to play. Cheddi Warner told the Hamilton Spectator that “we knew he (Murrall) was a good player and we knew we had to stop him.” Steve Gill said “our team is well-balanced and everyone contributed to the win. Man-for-man, we have one of the best teams in the province.” Fred Murrell scored 20, while Rolan McLean added 15 for the Tabbies and Slavko Duric 10. The Tabbies (coach Vern Lucyk) also included Chris Sainsbury, Scott Gould. …………………………………………………… In the other semi, the Hamilton St. Jean de Brebeuf Braves dumped the Bramalea Broncos 60-47 as Sarino Genovese scored 34 and Rick Muschi 20 (also reported as Sanno Genovese 14, or 16, Rick Muschi 13, Paul Manning 11 and Bill Henneberry 8). The Braves dominated the third quarter by a 21-10 count. Braves coach Paul Keat told the Hamilton Spectator that “nobody expected us to go as far as we have this year.” Rick Briscoe led the Broncos with 16. Bill Young added 15 and Donovan Thomas 10. …………………………………………………… In the regional final, the Hamilton Southmont Royals nipped the Hamilton St. Jean de Brebeuf Braves 69-67 as Steve Gill scored 28 (also reported as 21) and Cheddi Warner 21 and Don McGratton 11.. Rick Muschi led the Braves with 21 (also reported as 22). Sarino Genovese added 17 (also reported as 16) and Paul Manning 11. Brave guard John Coons knotted the score at 67. But Steve Gill hi two free throws in the final minute and then stopped Rick Muschi from getting off a shot in the final 10 seconds.

In the four-team East regional semis, the Nepean Bell Bruins nipped the Ajax Pickering Trojans 76-75 as Chris Jonsson hit five free throws down the stretch to rally Bell from a 13-point deficit, and then dribbled out the final 14 seconds to ice the win. John Barrington led the Bruins with 22. Vilhelm Boggild added 21 and Chris Jonsson 19. John Christenson led the Trojans with 27. Tim Ryder added 23. …………………………………………………… In the other semi, the Ottawa St. Pius X-Men thrashed the Cornwall Collegiate & Vocational Raiders 45-19 as Willie Hinz scored 19. The Raiders included Rob Taylor, Lumley, Don Baker, Andy Kinstler, Grede. …………………………………………………… In the regional final, the Nepean Bell Bruins nipped the St. Pius X-Men 64-61 to avenge a loss in the best-of-three city of Ottawa title series. Vilhelm Boggild led the Bruins with 22. John Barrington added 15 and Chris Jonsson 12. Jonsson hit four critical free throws in the final minute to ice the win. “Chris played very well,” Bell coach Don Greenham told the Ottawa Journal. “They cut him off, scoring-wise but he controlled the ball and force them to take fouls in the last two minutes. John Barrington played very well too. He controlled the rebounds better than we have recently. … This sort of makes up for the loss in the (city) championship game. We were cooler under pressure than we have been. Our strategy was to give Willie (Hinz) his points but shut the rest of them down and we did that.” Willie Hinz led the X-Men with 34. Bill Gladu added 8. X-Men coach Mike Baine said “it’s too had anybody had to lose. They’re two really great teams.” The X-Men also included Peter Corr, Tom Timlin, Gary Sullivan.

In the West regionals: …………………………………………………… In the quarterfinals, the Windsor Assumption Purple Raiders dusted the Guelph John F. Ross Royals 74-56 as Rob Biasutto scored 23, while nabbing 12 boards and blocking 10 shots, Vince Burgess 20, Hunt Hool 13, Guy Boniferro 10, along with 15 boards, David Binder 6, and Coughlin 1, while Lucier, Haggerty and Hogan were scoreless. Les Sulzer, Rob Stephens, Dave Carere and Fraser each scored 10 to pace the Royals (coach Don Ranson). Gary Fantin added 7, Pete Waddington 5, Frangos 2 and Riley 2, while McCall, Johnson and White were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The Windsor W.F. Herman Green Griffins clocked the Kitchener St. Jerome’s Lions 65-38 as Rob Samuels scored 15, Scott Penney 12, Mario Fochesato 12, Andy Kiss 8, John Lukis 7, Brian Cheswick 3, Tim Ouellette 2 and Mike Donnelly 2, while Joe Korenic, Mark Crosby and Paul Acton were scoreless. The Griffins led 22-4 aftrer one quarter and 36-9 at the half. They outrebounded the Lions 48-22. Adam Polski paced the Lions (coach Tom Kieswetter) with 10. Gerard MacNeil added 6, Roger Barbosa 6, Jim Hummell 6, Alberto Menendez 6, Steve Tallon 2, Paul Johnston 1 and Brian Cameron 1, while Paul Almeida did not play because of a knee injury and Krismanich, Frank Schneider and Arvyd Treciokas were scoreless. Kieswetter told the Kitchener-Waterloo Record that “we just weren’t ready to play and it showed.” …………………………………………………… The London Sir Wilfrid Laurier Rams nipped the Brantford St. John’s Green Eagles 76-74 in overtime Ron Almeide hit the winner with one second to play. The score was knotted at 66 after regulation as Green Eagle Mike McCormick notched a bucket at the buzzer. Davis Mitchell led the Rams with 30. Ron Henry added 26. The score was knotted at 66 after regulation. Mike McCormick led the Green Eagles with 26. Dan Thistle added 17 and Paul Hnatiuk 11. The Green Eagles also included Mark Polischuk, Chris Urbanowicz, Rick Baldin. …………………………………………………… In the last quarterfinal, the Kitchener Collegiate Scarlett Raiders clipped the London South Lions 60-48 as Bob Urosevic scored 18, Steve Forden 13, Everton McDougall 12, Dave Mullins 9, along with 12 boards, Jeff Knight 4 and Dave Swartz 4. The Scarlett Raiders led 13-8 after one quarter and 29-21 at the half. Scarlett Raiders head coach Jim Saddler told the Kitchener-Waterloo Record that “well, if anyone was scouting us tonight, they sure didn’t see anything. We did a lot of things poorly and it was just not one of our better efforts. I’m surprised we shot as well as we did from the floor but I suppose our average wasn’t bad because we got a lot of inside stuff.” Paul Murray paced the Lions (coach Steve Officer) with 19. Shawn Manuel added 9, John Leggett 6, George Karygianis 4 and Pete Richards 4. …………………………………………………… In the semis, the Kitchener Collegiate Scarlett Raiders clipped the Windsor Assumption Purple Raiders 64-56 as Bob Urosevic scored 30, Everton MacDougall 13, Steven Forden 12, Dave Swartz 5 and Dave Mullins 4, while Somers and Wideman were scoreless. Scarlett Raiders coach Jim Saddler told the Kitchener-Waterloo Record that “it was the Bob Urosevic travelling show. I like our poise and of course, I liked what Bob did.” Assumption knotted the score five times in the fourth quarter. Guy Boniferro led the Purple Raiders with 14. Hunt Hool added 12, Vince Burgess 11, Rob Biasutto 11 and David Binder 8, while Coughlin was scoreless. Purple Raiders coach Jack Hool said “I thought we were on our way back but we couldn’t stop that guard (Urosevic) from scoring.” …………………………………………………… In the other semi, the Windsor W.F. Herman Green Griffins whipped the London Sir Wilfrid Laurier Rams 75-34 as Rob Samuels scored 17, John Lukis 16, Scott Penney 15, Ron Purdy 12, Andy Kiss 8, Brian Cheswick 3, Tim Ouellette 2 and Joe Korenic 2, while Mario Fochesato and Paul Acton were scoreless. Ron Henry led the Rams (coach Winston Sheil) with 11. Mitchell added 6, Vanrys 5, Hepplethwaite 4, x (fuzzy image) 4, Almeid 2, Brooks 2 and Henry 2, while DeSantis was scoreless. …………………………………………………… In the final, the Windsor W.F. Herman Green Griffins dispatched the Kitchener Collegiate Scarlett Raiders 77-69 as Ron Purdy scored 18, Rob Samuels 17, Scott Penney 17, John Lukis 16, Andy Kiss 7 and Mario Fochesato 2. Griffins coach Chris McCaffery told the Kitchener-Waterloo Record that “we’re peaking when it counts. I think we did an excellent job on (Bob) Urosevic. … Sure, we’re big but we’ve got speed and good outside shooting.” The Green Griffins outrebounded the Scarlett Raiders 37-28 and led by as many as 19. Bob Urosevic paced the Scarlett Raiders with 22. Everton McDougall added 19, Dave Swartz 12, Dave Mullins 11, Steve Forden 11, Dave Mullins 4 and Paul Wideman 1, while Dave Balzer was scoreless. Scarlett Raiders coach Jim Saddler told the Kitchener-Waterloo Record that “I’m afraid we didn’t play a very organized offence. … We also had trouble getting our defensive assignments sorted in the first quarter when they jumped into the 18-8 lead and were really killing us with baseline scoring.”

In the North regional final, the Sault Ste. Marie Bawating Braves dumped the Salt Ste. Marie Collegiate Wildcats 54-42 as Dave Burden scored 23. Steve Mason led the Wildcats with 17. Braves coach Norm Nielson said “we stuck to our ball control game and refused to get into a running game with them.” Wildcats coach Les Kennedy told the Sault Star that “Bawating’s boardwork was just too much.

In the provincial quarterfinals, held in Ottawa, the Windsor W.F. Herman Green Griffins, who’d entered the tourney (34-3), looked sluggish in defeating the Hamilton St. Jean de Brebeuf Braves 70-67. The Griffins blew a 19-point lead in the final nine minutes of the contest but held on to win as center John Lukis scored 19, Rob Samuels 18, Ron Purdy 11, Scott Penney 9, 6-3 guard Andrew Kiss 9 and Mario Fochesato 4. Herman game up two buckets and the lead after the third quarter, after which coach Chris McCaffery had a meltdown. They repeatedly coughed up the ball against the press. They awoke in the fourth quarter and took a 70-61 lead with 56 seconds to play and then held for the win. McCaffery told the Windsor Star that “that’s the worst game we’ve played in two months. We didn’t use our heads at either end of the floor.” Braves coach Roy Lance said “they were breaking our press early in the game. We weren’t putting it on correctly. I’m happy with the way we came back.” Rob Samuels said “defensively, in the fourth quarter, we were all just standing around in the zone. We let them take the easy shot. I don’t think we played all that badly. We were just sluggish, that’s all.” Lance told the Hamilton Spectator that “we beat ourselves in a sense because we missed those two-foot shots from in close. By the time we were over our nervousness, it was too late.” Rick Muschi paced the Braves with 24. Paul Manning added 19, Sarino Genovese 14, John Coons 8 and Paul Rowe 2. The Braves (coached by Paul Keat, assisted by Roy Lance) also included Dale Boyd, Ray Masi, Ben Doro, Dave Mason, Joe Quinlan, Bill Henneberry, John Kastelic and Steve Lopresti.

The Sault Ste. Marie Bawating Braves defeated the Toronto Runnymede Redmen 67-63 as Dave Burten scored 21 and Dan St. Amand 16. The Braves led 35-33 at the half and 53-48 after three quarters. Runnymede led by one with 55 seconds to play but two free throws by Greg Johnson gave the Braves the lead for good. Braves coach Norm Nielson told the Sault Star “it’s the best game I’ve ever been involved in. This game was just something else and the shooting of both teams was just phenomenal. Danny (St. Amand) was just great on the boards and Dave (Burden) was unreal from the floor. And Rod (Bell), he did a great job of breaking Toronto’s press.” Mitch Zuk paced the Redmen with 20. Ralph Salvino added 11. The Redmen (coached by John Petruschak) also included Dan Stoberman, Earl Roberts, Jim Poutsoungas, Bo Lisik.

The Nepean Bell Bruins dumped the Hamilton Southmont Royals 82-76. The Bruins led 10-3 early and 27-22 after one quarter. Southmount ripped off a 10-0 run the second quarter. Bell led 60-59 after three quarters. Southmount faltered when Cheddie Walker, who scored 8, fouled out in the third quarter. John Barrington led the Bruins with 24. Chris Jonsson added 15, Wilhelm Boggild 15, Andrew Thuswaldner 12 and Ian Jonsson 4. Steve Gibb led the Royals with 22. Ken Capponi added 14. “It was a good game because we got the big game from the guys that you wouldn’t really expect,” Bruins coach Dan Greeham told the Ottawa Journal. “Ian Jonsson came off the bench and played a good game and he couldn’t even see out of one eye this morning. Thuswaldner did well when I stuck him in there. And Roger Mouton dragged down a couple of big rebounds in the last two minutes.” The Royals (coached by Tim Tufford) included Cheddi Warner, Steve Gill, Rich Griffiths, Mike Knezevic, Robert Palmieri, Dan Pankerichan, Wes Hicks Jr., Don McGratton, Gus Kandilas, Ken Caponi, Linus Pilypaitis, Kevin Mickleboro. Tufford told the Hamilton Spectator that “we made more mistakes. We beat ourselves. Our kids weren’t with it and Bell deserved to win. … The team lacked discipline in a high pressure game.”

In the last quarterfinal, the Toronto Oakwood Barons dispatched the Kitchener Collegiate Scarlett Raiders 74-56 as Teejan Alleyne scored 19, John Kordich 16, Norman Clarke 14, Courtney Betty 8, Mark Jones 6 and Hugh Pinnock 6. The Barons led 15-12, 33-28 and 51-39 at the quarters. The Raiders rallied no closer than 61-54 with 3:30 to play but Oakwood responded with an 11-0 run. Barons coach Terry Thomson told the Kitchener-Waterloo Record that “we went to more defensive pressure with the fullcourt press in the second half and it forced them to speed up. Once that happened, I was confident.” Bob Urosevic led the Scarlett Raiders with 21. Steve Forden added 11, Everton McDougall 9, Dave Mullins 7, Dave Swartz 6 and Dave Balzer 2. The Scarlett Raiders (coach Jim Saddler, manager Lorraine Boggs, statistician Corina Frommert) also included Jeff Knight, Bruce Somers, Robert Gordon, Louie Fertolja and Paul Wideman. Saddler said “we were terrible at the foul line and most of the misses came at poor times. If we had been better at the line, we could have kept it closer down the stretch. … We slowed the tempo down in the first half and forced Oakwood to play our game. They got us running more in the second half and you just can’t play racehorse basketball with that team because they’re too quick. I thought Steve Forden and Dave Swartz did excellent defensive work checking Norm Clarke and Mark Jones but then we let some other kids get easy stuff inside. I thought if we held Clarke and Jones down, we’d have a chance. We did that but then a guy like (John) Kordich came off the bench and hurt us in the third quarter. That tells you something about Oakwood. They’ve got some depth.”

       In the semis, the Windsor W.F. Herman Green Griffins returned to form with a 72-43 pasting of the Sault Ste. Marie Bawating Braves after blowing open a close game with a 20-8 run in the third quarter. The contest had started rather auspiciously when the referees assessed a technical against a Bawating player in the pre-game warm-ups for hanging on the rim. Windsor opened the contest with a free throw and the ball, but Bawating took a 9-4 lead before the Griffins rallied to tie it at the quarter and then move ahead 28-21 at the half, setting the stage for its third quarter heroics. Scott Penney led Herman Green with 19. Rob Samuels added 18, Andy Kiss 16, John Lukis 8, Ron Purdy 8 and Mario Fochesato 3. Dave Burden led the Braves with 12. John Deviano added 8, Tim Donnelly 7, Dan St. Amand 6, Rod Bell 5, Don McLean 3 and Greg Johnson 2. Braves coach Norm Nielsen told the Sault Star that “Herman is a big, strong team. We managed to stay within five points of them at the half but they just blew us away in the third quarter and we were finished.”

       In the other semi, the top-seeded Toronto Oakwood Barons nipped the Nepean Bell Bruins 82-81 as Norman Clarke scored 40. Oakwood was ahead 82-80 at the final buzzer but the referees assessed two technicals against the Toronto squad after the final whistle. Bruin Jeff Grosspeitch had fouled Norman Clarke at the buzzer, but Clarke and Mark Jones “had some uncomplimentary words for the referee and were called for the double technical, after the buzzer,” the Ottawa Journal reported. Clarke missed his free throw and then the Bruins had a chance to tie the contest but sharpshooter Vilhelm Boggild missed one of the free throws. “I couldn’t have asked for anything more from the guys,” said Bell coach Dan Greenham. “Everybody did exactly what they were told. It was a great game. One point. … I would have been happy if we’d stayed within 10. Clarke just got too hot.” Oakwood led 42-32 at the half. Norman Clarke paced the Barons with 40. Vilhelm Boggild led the Bruins with 26. John Barrington added 19 and Chris Jonsson 10.

       In the final, the Windsor W.F. Herman Green Griffins defeated the top-seeded Toronto Oakwood Barons 77-68 by using a tough 2-3 zone to stymie Toronto’s fast break, while double-teaming Oakwood star Norman Clarke and holding him to 20 points. The Griffins had opened the contest with a 15-2 run before Oakwood cut the margin to 18-14 at the quarter. Herman Green forged ahead 45-30 at the half and 56-44 at the three-quarter mark as their 2-3 zone and ball-control offence stymied the Barons, who had entered the final (42-1) on the season, having lost only to an American team. Ron Purdy led the Griffins with 23. Rob Samuels added 21, Andrew Kiss 16, Scott Penney 12 and John Lukis 5. Mark Jones paced the Barons with 23. Clarke added 20, John Kordich 13, Alleyne 8, Courtney Betty 2 and Brian Morgan 2. Coach Chris McCaffery told the Windsor Star that “Oakwood is a good team and everybody knew it. But we’re a great team and nobody knew it.” Oakwood guard Mark Jones said a tough semi against Nepean Bell “was a factor (in the final). That game took a lot out of us and when we fell behind in the final, we just didn’t have the gas to come back.” McCaffrey told the Ottawa Journal that “we felt we had at least a 50-50 chance coming in. We’re bigger and we’re stronger inside. All year long, we’ve been hearing about how good Oakwood is and nobody realized we had a darn good team in Windsor.” Oakwood coach Terry Thomson told the Journal that his troops were undone by Windsor’s 15-2 start. “That was the ball game right there. We didn’t put pressure on them early enough. We didn’t shoot well. And they played exceedingly well.” McCaffery told the Star that “we were double-teaming (Norman Clarke) wherever he went … We don’t have a best player. We have a best guard, a best rebounded, a best dribbler, a best shooter.” Scott Penney said “we knew they would come down fast (on the break). But we knew they didn’t spend much time on defence … They called a timeout at about the four-minute mark. They were dragging their feet, they were so tired.” John Lukis said “that’s the way we’ve been playing all year. We knew they had a tough first game. They put everything they had left into the third quarter. But we can run with anybody. And we don’t consider one player a star. Everybody is a star.” Thomson told that the Star that “we didn’t run well. We were more emotionally drained than anything else. We didn’t consistently hit on our shots. And I didn’t think they could shoot that well.”

The co-bronze medalist Sault Ste. Marie Bawating Braves: Dave Burden; John Devuano; Tim Donnelly; Dan St. Amand; Rod Bell; Don McLean; Greg Johnson; Kevin Reid; Mike Patterson; Dave Collins; Bob Boudreau; Curtis Grandmont; coach Norm Neilson

The co-bronze medalist Nepean Bell Bruins: Vilhelm Boggild; John Barrington; Chris Jonsson; Andrew Thuswaldner; Ian Jonsson; Roger Martin; Peter Hyland; coach Greenham.

       The silver medalist Toronto Oakwood Barons: Norman Clarke; John Kordich; Mark Jones; Courtney Betty; T.J. Alleyne; Dave Clarke; Salvatore Barillari, John Simmonete; Hugh Pinnock; Eddy Lake; Miki Garakanian, Brian Morgan; coach Terry Thomson; assistant Jack Vecchio

       The champion Windsor W.F. Herman Green Griffins: Ron Purdy; Rob Samuels; Andrew Kiss; Scott Penney; John Lukis; Mario Fochesato; Mike Donnelly; Joe Korenic; Mark Crosby; Paul Acton; Brian Cheswick; Tim Ouellette; coach Chris McCaffery; assistant Bud Leonard; manager Darryl Dunn