POOL A NS ONT MAN SASK Record  
  Nova Scotia Juniors —– 66-58 93-85 76-47 (3-0)  
  Windsor AKO 58-66 —– 73-65 93-52 (2-1)  
  Winnipeg St. Vital Grads 85-93 65-73 —– 88-64 (1-2)  
  Saskatoon Holy Cross Grads 47-76 52-93 64-88 —– (0-3)  
               
  POOL B NFLD BC ALTA Record    
  Memorial U. Beothuks —– 64-46 86-81 (2-0)    
  Victoria Trilecs 46-64 —– 71-59 (1-1)    
  Edmonton Blazers 81-86 59-71 —– (0-2)    
               
  Semi Windsor AKO 70 Memorial U. Beothuks 67
  Semi Nova Scotia Juniors 66 Victoria Trilecs 52
  5-7th Saskatoon Holy Cross Grads 70 Edmonton Blazers 65
  5th Winnipeg St. Vital Grads 71 Saskatoon Holy Cross Grads 65
  Bronze Memorial 66 Victoria Trilecs 64
  Final Windsor AKO 83 Nova Scotia Juniors 81
     

       In the Saskatchewan final, the Saskatoon Holy Cross Grads defeated the Regina Downtowner Optimists 60-54 as Gerry Gilewicz scored 12 and Rick Hatchman 12. The Grads led 37-28 at the half. Mike Wright led the Optimists with 10. Rick Ledingham added 10.

In national pool A play, held in Saint John, New Brunswick, with an entry fee of $1700: …………………………………………………… Windsor AKO beat Saskatoon Holy Cross 93-52 after going on an 18-0 run in the second quarter. Wayne Lauzon scored 22, Duane Matthews 21, Tom Johnson 18, Daryl Atkin 11, Roy Renaud 7, Harris 4, Len Kane 4, Mike Sobocan 4 and Dennis Bravo 2, while Kevin Coon, Paul Banks and Tony Gyemi were scoreless. Dwayne Lichtenwald led Saskatoon with 13. Ward Marlette added 8, Chris Boychuk 7, Gerry Rochon 4, Ken Fredeem 4, Don Ragush 4, Gerry Gelewicz 4, Ernie McCullough 2, Mark Bihari 2 and Murray Douglas 2. The Grads were led by Duane Litchenwald’s 17. …………………………………………………… The Nova Scotia Juniors beat Windsor AKO 66-58 as Shawn Parker scored 26, Geoff MacIver 25, M Parker 5, Bill MacDonald 4, Screaton 4 and Brinson 2. Duane Matthew paced AKO with 14. Darryl Atkin added 10, Tom Johnson 8, Wayne Lauzon 6, Mike Harris 6, Paul Banks 6, Len Kane 4, Mike Sobocan 2 and Roy Renaud 2. Windsor coach Randy Sasso told the Windsor Star that “they did what we expected them to do but they did a little better than we expected.” …………………………………………………… The Nova Scotia Juniors beat the Winnipeg St. Vital Grads 93-85 as Geoff MacIver scored 22, Shawn Parker 20, Scott McLachlan 14, Tallie Brinson 11, Art Screaton 10, Bill MacDonald 7, Ed Everett 4, Mark Parker 3 and Ian Burke 2, while Brian Ross and Cliff MacLachlan were scoreless. Lorne Duncan paced Winnipeg with 29. Playing coach Bryan Kornburger added 26, Jim Ferguson 10, Rich Sigurdson 7, Andy Erickson 6, Jim Richardson (Robertson?) 4, Rod Steeves 2 and Jamie Simpson 1. …………………………………………………… Windsor AKO beat Winnipeg St. Vital 73-65 as Duane Matthews scoring 18, Len Kane 15, Darryl Atkin 14, Mike Harris 8, Tom Johnson 8, Wayne Lauzon 6 and Paul Banks 4. Lorne Duncan led the St. Vital Grads with 18. Andy Erickson added 14, Brian Kornburger 10, Simpson 9, Ferguson 8 and Sigurdson 6. …………………………………………………… The Winnipeg St. Vital Grads clubbed the Saskatoon Holy Cross Grads 88-64 as Brian Kornburger scored 23, Lorne Duncan 23, Ferguson 12, Sigurdson 12, Simpson 8, Erikson 6 and Richardson 2. Murray Douglas led Saskatoon with 16. Dwayne Litchenwald added 15, Gilewicz 10, Boychuk 5, Rochon 4, Bihari 4, Marlette 4, McCullough 2, Fredeem 2 and Ragush 2. …………………………………………………… Nova Scotia whipped Saskatoon Holy Cross 74-42 MacIver scored 20, Parker 16, Burke 12, S MacLachlan 8, Screaton 7, Brinson 5, MacDonald 4 and C MacLachlan 2. Lichtenwald paced Saskatoon with 10. Gilewicz added 8, Bihari 7, Ragush 6, Douglas 6, Freeden (Fredeem?) 4 and Rochon 2.

In pool B play: …………………………………………………… The Victoria Trilecs beat the Edmonton Blazers 71-59 as Rick Jeffrey scored 14, Darrell Johnson 14, Art Plewes 11, Donnie Erikson 10, Chris Colnan 7, Gord Lee 6, Bill Barber 4, Paul English 2 and Al Dudderidge 2, while Steve Dunbar, Doug O’Byrne and Gwyn Shipman were scoreless. Ernie Lotz paced Edmonton with 21. Murray Proctor added 18 Ray Conway 8, Egils Anderson 7 and Gerhard Lotz 2, while Mike Medwid and Ron Lammers were scoreless. …………………………………………………… The Memorial U. Beothuks nipped Edmonton 86-81 as Glen Normore scored 52, Doug Spurrell 8, Sean Brown 7, Glen Willar 6, Dick Power 6, Tom Wadden 4, Mark Duff 2 and Mike Thompson 1, while John Pinto and Dave Kielly were scoreless. Ernie Lotz paced Edmonton with 25. Egils Anderson added 18, Mike Medwid 14, Murray Proctor 8, Ray Conway 6, Gerhard Lotz 6 and Don Lammers 4. …………………………………………………… The Memorial U. Beothuks spanked the Victoria Trilecs 64-46 as Doug Spurrell scored 20, Glen Normore 18, Kielly 12, Power 8, Willar 4 and Brown 4. Jeffrey paced Victoria with 10. Plewes added 10, lee 6, Johnson 6, Shipman 6, Dudderidge 4, Erikson 2 and Barber 2.

       In the 5-7th playoff, the Saskatoon Holy Cross Grads dispatched the Edmonton Blazers 7o-65.

       In the semis, Windsor AKO nipped the Memorial University Beothuks 70-67 despite trailing 41-38 at the half, largely because of the pressure put on the ball by guards Dick Power and Doug Spurrell of the Beothuks. Memorial went on a 9-0 run early and was up 18-14. Memorial also went on a 10-0 stretch early in the second half to take a 59-52 lead. But AKO ran off eight straight in response, including two field goals by Len Kane to take the lead back. Darryl Atkin held Glen Normore to 25. Duane Matthews 25 paced AKO with 25. Wayne Lauzon added 22, Tom Johnson 8, Darryl Atkin 3, Len Kane 8, Paul Banks 4, Dennis Bravo 4 and Mike Harris 2. Duane Matthews told the Windsor Star that “the first few games, we were spread out more, not getting the ball inside as much. But tonight, we tightened it a bit and started looking for the plays inside.” Sean Brown added 22 for Memorial, Dick Power 8, Kielly 4, Wadden 4 and Doug Spurrell 4.

       In the other semi, the Nova Scotia Juniors smacked Victoria Trilecs 66-52 as Geoff McIver scored 23, Shawn Parker 18 and Scott MacLachlin 15. Darrel Johnson paced the Trilecs with 12. Gwyn Shipman added 10. Nova Scotia coach Claude MacLachlin told Canadian Press that “before the tournament started, I saw only a glimmer in the player’s abilities. The glimmer is still there. We can play much better. We were playing at about 35% against BC and got away with it.”

       In the fifth-place playoff, the Winnipeg St. Vital Grads defeated the Saskatoon Holy Cross Grads 71-65 as Andy Erikson scored 20, Brian Kornburger 15, Ferguson 14, Sigurdson 11, Simpson 5, Lorne Duncan 4 and Robertson 2.  Doug Murray scored 20 to pace Saskatoon. Dan Ragush added 17, Ward Marlotte 10, Dwayne Litchenwald 10, Gerry Bilewicz 4, Ken Fredeem 2 and Mark Bihari 2. The Holy Cross Grads (coached by Vic Karwacki) also included Chris Boychuk, Rick Hatchman, Jerry Rochon and Ernie McCullough.

       In the bronze medal match, Memorial nipped Victoria Trilecs 66-64 as Glen Normore scored 23, Spurrell 14, Brown 14, Kielly 13 and Power 2. Darrel Johnston pace the Trilecs with 21. Rick Jeffrey added 15, Don Erickson 14, Gord Lee 8, Bruce English 2, Art Plewes 2 and Steve Dunbar 2. The Trilecs also included Chris Calnan, Bill Barber, Al Duddridge and Doug O’Byrne.

       In the final, Windsor AKO avenged a round robin loss and took the title with an 83-81 victory as Mike Harris hit a bucket on a drive into the lane with 10 seconds to play. Nova Scotia was up 53-39 at half but the Sasso brothers calmed their team down at the break and they slowly rallied back, led by Duane Matthews. With 1:11 to go, Wayne Lauzon drove the baseline to put AKO ahead 81-79. Shawn Parker missed a tying shot. Bill MacDonald and Paul Banks tied up the rebound. Geoff MacIver scored off the jump ball to tie up, setting the stage for Harris’ heroics. Harris told the Windsor Star that “when I took the shot, I didn’t think there was that much time left.” Duane Matthews led AKO with 33, including 19 in the first half. Darryl Atkin added 12, Wayne Lauzon 18, Tom Johnson 2, Dennis Bravo 20, Paul Banks 6, Mike Harris 6 and Roy Renaud 4. Nova Scotia was led by Geoff MacIver’s 24. Shawn Parker added 20, Bill MacDonald 10, Screaton 10, Scott MacLachlan 15 and M. Parker 2.

       The all-tourney team featured MVP Duane Matthews (Windsor AKO); Wayne Lauzon (Windsor AKO); Glen Normore (Memorial U); Geoff MacIver (Nova Scotia Juniors); Shawn Parker (Nova Scotia Juniors)

       The bronze medalist Memorial University Beothuks: Glen Normore; Doug Spurrell; Sean Brown; Dave Kielly; Dick Power; Glen Willar; Tom Madden; Mark Duff; Mike Thompson; John Pinto;

       The runner-up Nova Scotia Juniors: Geoff MacIver; Shawn Parker; Bill MacDonald; Art Screaton; Scott MacLachlan; M. Parker; Tallie Brinson; Bill MacDonald; Ed Everett (Evert?); Mark Parker; Ian Burke; Brian Ross; Chris MacLachlan;

       The champion Windsor AKO Fratmen: Duane Matthews; Wayne Lauzon; Mike Harris; Darryl Atkin; Len Kane; Paul Banks; Tom Johnson; Roy Renaud; Mike Sobocan; Dennis Bravo; Tony Gyemi; Kevin Coon; co-coach Randy Sasso; co-coach Sam Sasso