POOL A QUE SASK BC NB PEI Record  
  Quebec —– 71-69 68-65 87-71 97-29 (4-0)  
  Saskatchewan 69-71 —– 80-60 80-71 97-29 (3-1)  
  British Columbia 65-68 60-80 —– 79-77 117-57 (2-2)  
  New Brunswick 71-87 71-80 77-79 —– 84-56 (1-3)  
  PEI 29-97 29-97 57-117 56-84 —– (0-4)  
                 
  POOL B ONT MAN ALTA NS NFLD Record  
  Ontario —– 78-62 72-74 87-78 123-48 (3-1)  
  Manitoba 62-78 —– 68-62 79-62 109-86 (3-1)  
  Alberta 74-72 62-68 —– 58-81  89-68 (2-2)  
  Nova Scotia 78-87 62-79 81-58 —–  92-75 (2-2)  
  Newfoundland 48-123 86-109 75-92 68-89 —– (0-4)  
                 
  semi Quebec 87 Manitoba 80
  Semi Ontario 99 Saskatchewan 80
  9th Newfoundland 77 Prince Edward Island 63
  7th New Brunswick 78 Alberta 73
  5th Nova Scotia 81 British Columbia 75
  Bronze Manitoba 72 Saskatchewan 68
  Final Quebec 81 Ontario 69
     

        In pool A play, held in Sherbrooke: …………………………………………………… Saskatchewan thrashed British Columbia 80-60 as Chris Biegler scored 26, Sheldon Ryma 16 and James Hillis 14. BC led 41-30 at the half. Bob Hieltjes led BC with 25. …………………………………………………… Saskatchewan clipped New Brunswick 80-71 as Chris Biegler scored 25, John Cleland 14, Kirk Jones 12 and Sheldon Ryma 11. New Brunswick led 45-44 at the half. …………………………………………………… Saskatchewan pounded Prince Edward Island as Greg Jockims scored 14 and Chris Biegler 13. …………………………………………………… Quebec edged Saskatchewan 71-69 as Dave King hit three free throws in the final minute. …………………………………………………… Quebec nipped British Columbia 68-65 as Dave King hit two free throws in the final minute. Bob Hieltjes paced BC with 28.

        In pool B play: …………………………………………………… Manitoba dumped Alberta 68-62 as Joey Vickery scored 16 and Dan Becker 15. …………………………………………………… Manitoba defeated Nova Scotia 79-62 as Blaine Acton scored 18 and Dean Goodbrandson 12. …………………………………………………… Manitoba thumped Newfoundland 109-86 as Blaine Acton scored 28 and Joey Vickery 18. …………………………………………………… Ontario dumped Manitoba 78-62. Dean Goodbrandson led Manitoba with 18. …………………………………………………… Alberta thrashed Newfoundland 89-68 as Mark Baker scored 17 and Dave Clutchey 12. …………………………………………………… Alberta edged Ontario 74-72 as Scott McIntyre scored 18 and Gary Maillet 11.

        In the semis, Ontario defeated Saskatchewan 99-80 despite trailing 49-48 at the half. Chris Biegler led Saskatchewan with 15. John Cleland added 14.

        In the other semi, Quebec defeated Manitoba 87-70. Blaine Acton paced Manitoba with 31. Joey Vickery added 19.

        In the seventh-place playoff, it is alternately reported that Nova Scotia defeated Alberta 78-73. But the Calgary Herald asserted that Alberta dispatched Nova Scotia 76-70 as John Vigna scored 24 and Mark Naylor 18.

        In the bronze medal match, Manitoba defeated Saskatchewan 72-68. Saskatchewan led at the half 41-38. The score was tied at 66 late when it became a free throw shooting contest down the stretch. Manitoba hit four from the line in the final minute to pull out the win. Bill Knudsen had notched a pair from the line to knot the score at 68 with 11 seconds to play. Saskatchewan coach Glenn Szabo told the Regina Leader-Post “with a few breaks, we could have been 5-1 and brought back the gold medal. To lose by two points to the national champions bodes well for our team. We surprised a lot of people but we didn’t surprise ourselves.” Dan Becker led Manitoba with 14. Joey Vickery added 13. Chris Biegler scored 18 to lead Saskatchewan while Greg Jockims had 12, Kirk Jones 11 and John Cleland 10. Saskatchewan also included James Hillis, Sheldon Ryma, Kirk Jones.

        In the final, Quebec defeated Ontario 81-69. Quebec led 11-2 early 44-34 at the half. Ontario rallied to within four before Quebec closed it out with a 6-0 run. Garfield Glasgow and David King each scored 18 for Quebec. James Pettiford led Ontario with 20. Mark Henry added 19.

The all-tourney team featured: MVP Mark Henry (Ontario); Robert Dufort (Quebec); David King (Quebec); Joey Vickery (Manitoba); Chris Biegler (Saskatchewan)

        The bronze medalist from Manitoba: Dan Becker; Joey Vickery; Bryan Gray; Mike Ayotte; Blaine Acton; Jason Chopp; Ken Frith; Dean Goodbrandson; David Filmon; Murray Gelman; Chris Adam; coach Dale Bradshaw; coach Dave Guss; manager Tim Chiwinski

        The silver medalists from Ontario: Mark Henry; James Pettiford;

        The gold medalists from Quebec: Garfield Glasgow; David King; Robert Duford;