POOL A ONT ALTA NS QUE NFLD Record  
  Ontario —– 60-73 75-58 69-68 90-56 (3-1)  
  Alberta 73-60 —– 69-75 91-79 91-79 (3-1)  
  Nova Scotia 58-75 75-69 —– 89-88 86-44 (3-1)   
  Quebec 68-69 79-91 88-89 —– 121-82 (1-3)   
  Newfoundland 56-90 77-91 44-86 82-121 —– (0-4)   
                 
  POOL B BC SASK PEI MAN NB Record  
  British Columbia —– 130-73 100-52 93-40 100-74 (4-0)  
  Saskatchewan 73-130 —– 79-43 56-53 73-94 (2-2)  
  P.E.I. 52-100 43-79 —– 60-58 73-61 (2-2)  
  Manitoba 40-93 53-56 58-60 —– 87-83 (1-3)  
  New Brunswick 74-100 94-73 61-73 83-87 —– (1-3)  
                 
  Semi British Columbia 87 Alberta 55
  Semi Ontario 68 Saskatchewan 40
  9th Newfoundland 87 New Brunswick 68
  7th Quebec 99 Manitoba 88
  5th Nova Scotia 84 P.E.I. 70
  Bronze Alberta 103 Saskatchewan 57
  Final British Columbia 67 Ontario 63
     

        Held in conjunction with the Canada Games in Thunder Bay.

        In pool B play: PEI nipped Manitoba 60-58. Art Koop led Manitoba with 11. Rolf Sickert added 9 and Tom King 9. …………………………………………………… Manitoba edged New Brunswick 87-83 as Tony Kaufman scored 21, Gary Sherman 16, Rolf Sickert 12, Grant Coulter 12 and Tom King 12. …………………………………………………… Saskatchewan defeated Manitoba 56-53. Tony Kaufman paced Manitoba with 21. Art Koop added 10.

        In the semis, British Columbia thrashed Alberta 87-55. BC hit its first eight shots and coasted to the easy win. Quinn Groenhyde paced BC with 18. Eli Pasquale added 14 and Kelly Dukeshire 14, Diego Marchese 13 and Gerald Kazanowski 11. Greg Dell led Alberta with 11. Karl Tilleman added 10, John Hatch 8. BC led 52-24 at the half.

        In the other semi, Ontario whipped Saskatchewan 68-40.

        In the 9th place playoff, Newfoundland thrashed New Brunswick 87-68. Newfoundland included Devlin, Duff, Finn, Griffin, Jayes, MacCharles, Ryan, Spurrell, Stacey, Stanford, Thompson, Traverse, Wadden, and Whelan. New Brunswick (coached by Brien Forsythe and managed by Peter MacAleenan) included Jamie Bliss, Kevin Lewis, Donald McCormack, Tim McGarrigle, Michael McLaughlin, Scott Nicholson, Brian Putnam, Greg Rideout, Paul Vaughan, Anthony Walker, David Wheaton and Steve Wilson.

        In the 7th place playoff, Quebec defeated Manitoba 99-88. Art Koop paced Manitoba with 24. Tony Kaufman added 19, Gord Tucker 13 and Tom King 12. Quebec included Adam, Brodeur, Carresse, Clark, Dion, Dufort, Hinz, Levac, Craig Norman, Plante, Roy and Van Herk. Manitoba (coach Bruce Enns, manager Dale Bradshaw) also included Kurt Brenner, Duane Brothers, Grant Coulter, Richard Derksen, Wayne Harder, Gary Sherman, Rolf Sickert, Kurt Kelly and Gord Tucker.

        In the 5th place playoff, Nova Scotia thrashed PEI 84-70. Nova Scotia included Archibald, Baker, Buckland, Dowell, Draws, Ehler, Izzard, Lohr, Malett, McIver, Morash, Parker, Romkey and Wave. PEI included Cox, Deighan, Desroches, Gallant, McIsaac, McIsaac, Montgomery, Moore, Perry, Woodside, coach Mike Connolly?

        In the bronze medal match, Alberta dumped Saskatchewan 103-57. Saskatchewan included Beckie, Dewar, Ell, Hoffman, Humbert, Johnson, Morris, Patola, Patola, Peters, Shoobert and Tokarchuk.

In the final, B.C. defeated Ontario 67-63 after rallying from a seven-point second-half deficit as Gerald Kazanowski scored 27, including 16 in the second half.

        The bronze medalist Alberta: John Rhodin; Roger Poon; Jack Lilja; Murray Hanna; Karl Tilleman; Jerome Ell; Garth Van Gaalen; Robert Arnett; Dave Kakoschke; John Hatch; Greg Dell; Jim Pratt; coach David Hoy; manager Ken Olynyk

        The silver medalist Ontario: Enzo Spagnuolo; Chris Jonsson; P. Lambropoulos; J. Kennedy; M. Vern Jones; M. Soufan; B. Biasutto; R. Samuels; R. Hurd; Roger Rollocks; B. Skeoch.

        The gold medalist British Columbia: Eli Pasquale; Kelly Dukeshire; David Sheehan; Bob Forsythe; Wilf Haak; Wayne Andrews; Diego Marchese; Quinn Groenhyde; Dan Brosseuk; Greg Walters; Ken Klassen; Gerald Kazanowski; Dean Peters; Alan Tait; coach Ken Shields; assistant Rich Chambers