POOL A ONT NB SASK ALTA NFLD Record  
  Ontario —– 109-83 98-69 100-70 74-43 (4-0)  
  New Brunswick 83-109 —– 112-85 96-82 79-73 (3-1)  
  Saskatchewan 69-98 85-112 —– 76-55 103-67 (2-2)  
  Alberta 70-100 82-96 55-76 —– 106-41 (1-3)  
  Newfoundland 43-74 73-79 67-103 41-106 —– (0-4)  
                 
  POOL B BC MAN NS QUE Record    
  British Columbia —– 74-72 120-78 87-52 (3-0)    
  Manitoba 72-74 —– 75-79 84-68 (1-2)    
  Nova Scotia 78-120 79-75 —– 82-90 (1-2)    
  Quebec 52-87 68-84 90-82 —– (1-2)    
                 
  Semi: Ontario 94 Manitoba 58
  Semi: New Brunswick 95 B.C. 93
  7th Alberta v. Quebec
  5th Saskatchewan v. Nova Scotia
  Bronze British Columbia 79 Manitoba 58
  Final Ontario 102 New Brunswick 77
     

        In pool A play, held in Fredericton: …………………………………………………… Ontario thrashed Alberta 100-70 as Alex Urosevic scored 25. Alberta was led by Richard Bohne. …………………………………………………… New Brunswick crushed Alberta 96-82. …………………………………………………… Saskatchewan clipped Alberta 76-55. Richard Bohne led Alberta with 11. …………………………………………………… Alberta clipped Newfoundland 106-41. Alberta (coached by Rob Wilson and Kelly Goheen) included Richard Bohne, Larry Johnson, Jason Scriven.

In Pool B round robin play, held in August in Fredericton: …………………………………………………… Quebec defeated Nova Scotia 90-82 as Danny Eveleigh scored 22. …………………………………………………… British Columbia nipped Manitoba 74-72. BC built an early 27-4 lead and then held on for the win. J.D. Jackson paced BC with 20. Mike Clark added 17. Garth Thomson led Manitoba with 13. John Lutzer 13. …………………………………………………… BC thrashed Quebec 87-52 as J.D. Jackson scored 19. Quebec (coached by Olga Hrycak) included Danny Eveleish, Eric Roger, Todd MacDougall, David Evans, Pascal Fleury, Curtis Robinson, Charles Boyce, Howard S. Billings, Carl Comeau, Cabral Douglas, Eric Elysee, Glen Faucher, Benoit Deschamps, Sebastien Pleau-Gauthier, Sylvain Robitaille and Pellegrino Varrichio.

        In the semis, Ontario whipped Manitoba 94-58 after leading 45-30 at the half. Ontario hit 16-25 free throws and was paced by 22 points from Alex Urosevic 22. Kory Hallas added 19, Bobby Allen 15 and Mark Daly 12. Manitoba was led by John Mathieson 17, Ron Lutze 13 and Jeff Smith 11.

In the other semi, New Brunswick defeated defending champion B.C. 95-93 after rallying from a 39-37 deficit at the half. New Brunswick took its first lead, by nine, with three minutes to play. But a 9-0 B.C. run tied the contest with three seconds on the clock. N.B. brought the ball downcourt and Tom Whitters hit a jumper for the victory. Tom Whitters led New Brunswick with 24 points. Todd Middleton added 22, Jim Charters 22 and Brian Elliott 13. B.C. was led by J.D. Jackson’s 30 points, Mike Clarke 25, Dale Dergousoff 12, Brian Tait 12 and Jason Leslie 10.

In the bronze medal match, British Columbia thumped Manitoba 79-58 B.C. as Dale Dergousoff scored 17, Jason Leslie 11, Brian Tait 10 and Andrew Stenfield 10. Manitoba was paced by Kevin Clelland 17, Mike Ifill 11, Jeff Smith 10 and John Mathieson 10. Manitoba (coach Larry Sawchuk, assistant Ron Hutsal, manager Don Ewonchuk) also included Scott Anderson, Jeremy Rattai, Ron Lutzer, Bryan Johnson, Trevor Normandeau, Gregg Filmon, Garth Thomson and Dave Sommerfeld.

        In the final, Ontario took a 57-45 halftime lead and romped to a 102-77 win. N.B. rallied to within six but Ontario’s strength, size and superior bench proved the difference. Ontario was led by Bobby Allen’s 24 points (including 18 in the first half); Alex Urosevic 15, Mark Daly 14, Ainsley Brooks 14, and Kory Hallas 12. New Brunswick was led by Jim Charters 27, Todd Middleton 10, Scott Messer 9 and Brian Elliott 9.

        The all-tourney selections were: MVP Bobby Allen (Ontario); Brian Elliott (New Brunswick); Todd Middleton (New Brunswick); Alex Urosevic (Ontario); Kory Hallas (Ontario); J.D. Jackson (BC)

        The bronze medalist from British Columbia: J.D. Jackson; Mike Clarke; Dale Dergousoff; Brian Tait; Jason Leslie; Andrew Stenfield; coach Norm Bradley

        The silver medalists from New Brunswick: Brian Elliott; Todd Middleton; Tom Whitters; Jim Charters; Scott Messer;

        The gold medalists from Ontario: Bobby Allen; Alex Urosevic; Mark Daly; Ainsley Brooks; Kory Hallas;