POOL A ONT NB MAN ALTA PEI Record  
  Ontario —– 83-68 91-59 96-63 114-35 (4-0)  
  New Brunswick 68-83 —– 85-73 77-66 72-49 (3-1)  
  Manitoba 59-91 73-85 —– 72-66 91-57 (2-2)  
  Alberta 63-96 66-77 66-72 —– 93-37 (1-3)  
  PEI 35-114 49-72 57-91 37-93 —– (0-4)  
                 
  POOL B NS BC QUE NFLD SASK Record  
  Nova Scotia —– 103-89 75-77 94-73 88-65 (3-1)  
  British Columbia 89-103 —– 105-86 108-71 101-96 (3-1)  
  Quebec 77-75 86-105 —– 102-78 74-78 (2-2)  
  Newfoundland 73-94 71-108 78-102 —– 96-79 (1-3)  
  Saskatchewan 65-88 96-101 78-74 79-96 —– (1-3)  
                 
  5-8th Manitoba 86 Newfoundland 74
  5-8th Quebec 89 Alberta 66
  Semi Ontario 100 British Columbia 96
  Semi Nova Scotia 78 New Brunswick 68
  9th Saskatchewan 90 P.E.I. 32
  7th Newfoundland 89 Alberta 87
  5th Quebec 93 Manitoba 74
  Bronze British Columbia 100 New Brunswick 95
  Final Ontario 86 Nova Scotia 69
     

        In pool A play, held in Brandon: …………………………………………………… Ben Gorham scored 20 and nabbed 8 boards to lead Ontario past New Brunswick 83-68. Jan Trojanowski led New Brunswick with 22 points and 10 rebounds. …………………………………………………… Rodney Baptiste scored 18 to lead Ontario past Manitoba 91-59. Ogo Okwumabua led Manitoba with 13. …………………………………………………… Rodney Baptiste scored 14 in Ontario’s 96-63 win over Alberta. John Tschritter led Alberta with 10. …………………………………………………… Jan Trojanowski scored 38 to lead New Brunswick past Manitoba. Matej Marotti led Manitoba with 26. …………………………………………………… Danny Gomez scored 13 to lead New Brunswick past PEI 72-49. Matthew Green and Keith Little each scored 9 for PEI. …………………………………………………… Ogo Okwumabua and Derek Shore each scored 13 in Manitoba’s win 72-66 over Alberta. Okuwamba added 11 rebounds. Andre Gustafson led Alberta with 15. …………………………………………………… Richard Van Dorp scored 20 in Manitoba’s 91-57 win over PEI. Keith Little led Manitoba with 16. …………………………………………………… Greg Montgomery scored 17 in Alberta’s 93-37 win over PEI. Quentin Bevan and Jarred Cheverie each scored 9 for PEI.

        In pool B play: …………………………………………………… Jordan Croucher scored 29, Fred Perry 28 and Dennie Oliver 18 to lead Nova Scotia past BC 103-89. Allister Willmott scored 20 and Jordie McTavish 16 for BC. Nova Scotia led 47-32 at the half and by as much as 23 in the second half but B.C. closed the gap to eight in the second frame before the Bluenosers finally adjusted to the loss of David Paris (shoulder bruise) and Dennie Oliver (sprained ankle), settling their offence and pulling out the win. Nova Scotia shot 13-24 from the line in the final eight minutes. “If we had made our free throws it would have been a much bigger spread,” said coach Ian MacMillan. “The kids played hard and the defence was great, considering the calibre of their team.” …………………………………………………… Marc-Leonce Volcy scored 19 to lead Quebec past Nova Scotia 77-75. Fred Perry scored 25 for Nova Scotia. Jordan Croucher added 14, L.J. Evans 14 and Peter Turnbull 12. Quebec pounded on a loose ball and scored with five seconds on the clock to win it. A desperation 60-footer by Jonah Taussig at the buzzer went wide. Nova Scotia had knotted the score at 75 on a Peter Turnbull trey with 32 seconds to play. Nova Scotia led 39-38 at the half. …………………………………………………… Nova Scotia defeated Newfoundland 94-73 as Fred Perry scored 18, Jordan Croucher 17, Dennie Oliver 15, Steve Nelson 14 and David Paris 14. Shane Butland led Newfoundland with 21. Nova Scotia led 40-37 at the half. “It was a real foul-filled contest,” said Nova Scotia Ian MacMillan. “We had 23 and they had 33. We kept them in the game because we shot 29-for-51 from the free throw line. We were 1-for-13 on threes. We didn’t shoot the ball very well and we missed a lot of layups in the first half. We probably played well enough to win by 40. But, in this game, you have to make the layups and the free throws. We could very easily have been up 15-20 at the half. That would have made the evening a lot easier from a coaching standpoint.” …………………………………………………… Nova Scotia pounded Saskatchewan 88-65 as Jordan Croucher scored 22 and Fred Perry 21. Starters David Paris, who’d bruised a shoulder in the tournament opener, and Dennie Oliver, who had a sprained ankle, returned to line-up and proved the difference, said coach Ian MacMillan. “Their speed and defence put the game away after the first five minutes. Thank heaven they’re young and they recover quickly. I thought they were gone for good. Chris Warnecki paced Saskatchewan with 17. Ryan Mitchell added 14. Nova Scotia took a 21 point after five minutes and cruised to a 55-37 lead at the half. …………………………………………………… Aaron Mitchell scored 23 in B.C.’s 101-96 win over Saskatchewan. Chris Warnecke led Saskatchewan with 31. …………………………………………………… Kyle Russell and Aaron Olson each scored 20 in BC’s 105-86 win over Quebec. Marce-Leonce Volcy led Quebec with 12. …………………………………………………… Randy Nohr scored 16 in B.C.’s win over Newfoundland 108-71. Ryan Michalski led Newfoundland with 18. …………………………………………………… Marc-Leonce Volcy scored 21 in Quebec’s 102-78 win over Newfoundland. Samuel Dalembert added 14 points and 13 boards. Michael Sooley led Newfoundland with 17. …………………………………………………… Ryan Michell scored 25 to lead Saskatchewan past Quebec 78-74. Marc-Leonce Volcy led Quebec with 20. …………………………………………………… Richard Brenton scored 27 to lead Newfoundland past Saskatchewan 96-79. Ryan Michell led Saskatchewan with 16.

        In the consolation semis, Derek Shore scored 18 as Manitoba defeated Newfoundland 86-74, who were led by Richard Brenton’s 16 points.    Marc-Leonce Volcy scored 29 to lead Quebec past Alberta 89-66. Greg Montgomery led Alberta with 18.

        In the semis, Robert Smart scored 20 as Ontario defeated BC 93-90. Aaron Olson led BC with 18.

        In the other semi, Dennie Oliver was chosen player of the game as he scored 19 in Nova Scotia’s 78-68 win over New Brunswick. Fred Perry added 14 points. Mike King and Ryan Johnston each scored 15 for New Brunswick. Jan Trojanowski and Jeff Kotter each added 14. Nova Scotia led 37-29 at the half. Coach Ian MacMillan was impressed with the effort of Oliver, who was playing with an ankle sprain and bone ships in his foot. “He led us in scoring and rebounding. He stepped up his game and really rose to the challenge for us. New Brunswick was inspired by the fact we had beaten them three times in exhibition play this summer. That just made them scrappy. They came out in the second half and went up on us 40-37. Then we decided to play some great defence for the last 18 minutes and held them to 28 the rest of the way, and eight of those were layups at the end when we were trying to avoid fouling them.”

        In the 9th place playoff, Saskatchewan defeated PEI 90-32 as Craig Gartener scored 20. Peter Houston led PEI with 8. Saskatchewan (coached by Kevin Koster and Steve Burrows) also included Stephen Podwin, A.J. Schepers, Chris Warnecke, Scott Goebel, Jamie Carlton, Mike Lambert, Rob Peace, Adam Wilson, Wade Bourassa, Derek Czarnota and Ryan Michell. PEI also included Ajiri Ikede, Scott Bateman, Dennis Manning, Matthew Green, Mike Saunders, Jarred Cheverie, Quentin Bevan, Mike Chandler, John Arnold and Keith Little.

        In the 7th place playoff, Newfoundland defeated Alberta 89-87 as Shane Butland scored 22. Nick Hughes led Alberta with 19. Newfoundland (coached by Glenn Normore, assisted Clarence Sutton and George Power) included Todd Halleran, Robin Pennell, Shane Butland, Greg Winter, Michael Sooley, Craig Finlay, Jeff Merrigan, Ryan Michalski, Mark Seaborn, Scott Gibbons, Dion Langdon and Richard Brenton. Alberta (coached by Dave Adams, assisted by Rick Pease) included John Tschritter, Kris Wiggins; Jesse Stanford; Greg Montgomery; Jason Adams; Paul Guse; Troy Arnett; Rob Baptist; Nick Hughes; Andrew Gustafson; Max Darrah; Ryan Roberts; Patrick Crevolin and alternate Michael Fitz.

        In the fifth-place match, Marc-Leonce Volcy scored 29 as Quebec defeated Manitoba 93-74. Jeff Sinclair led Manitoba with 14 points. Quebec (coached by Nevio Marzinotto, assisted by Guy Pariseau) also included Jonathan Mckercher, Philippe Langlois, Jacques Vigneault, Frederic Berhard, Kabongo Tshidimba, Domenico Marcario, David Ruel, Prosper Karangwa, Samuel Dalembert, Eric Zulu and Daniel Lacasse. Manitoba (coached by Scott Martin and Joel Themmen) also included J.P. Lynch, Juphell Falcis, Luc Buller, Brad Unger, Ogo Okwumanbua, Derek Shore, Robert Martin, Matej Marotti, Richard Van Dorp, Dwayne Burkett and Devon Nowroski.

        In the bronze match, Troy McCrory scored 18 to lead British Columbia past New Brunswick 100-95. Jan Trojanowski led New Brunswick with 35. New Brunswick also included Mike King, Tim Evans, Vince Fournier, Jeff Cotter, Barry Anderson, Steve LeBlanc, Ryan Johnson, Chuck Keding, Dwayne Ells, Peter Krause and Danny Gomez.

        In the gold medal match, Andy Kwiatkowski scored 27 to lead Ontario over Nova Scotia 86-69. Fred Perry led Nova Scotia with 25 points. David Parris added 12. Nova Scotia trailed 45-37 at the half but trimmed the margin to 73-67 with four minutes to play.

        The all-tourney selections were: MVP Andy Kwiatkowski (Ontario); Marc-Leonce Volcy (Quebec); Jan Trojanowski (New Brunswick); Aaron Mitchell (BC); Fred Perry (Nova Scotia); Rodney Baptiste (Ontario)

        The bronze medalists from British Columbia: Jordie McTavish; Randy Nohr; Aaron Olson; Allister Willmott; James Maksymiw; Jason Bristow; Darcy Deutscher; Tony McCrory; Chris Nevoral; Kyle Russell; Joel Nickel; Aaron Mitchell; Tasso Kanavos; Jassie Osei-Tutu; coach Kevin Hanson; assistant Jameel Aziz

        The silver medalists from Nova Scotia: L.J. Evans; Fred Perry; Jonah Taussig; Dennie Oliver; Jason Hiscock; Jordan Croucher; Jamie Cox; David Paris; Chuck Harrison; Brian Silver; Peter Turnbull; Steve Nelson; coach Ian MacMillan; assistant Dave Nutbrown; assistant Fred Perry Sr.

        The gold medalists from Ontario: Andy Kwiatkowski; Robert Smart; Rodney Baptiste; Ben Gorham; Chris Peskun; Markus Jankus; Ian Bryan; Ryan Serravalle; Matt Boulton; Ognjen Kapetanovic; Nick Rupcich; Mike Ayandadejo; coach Chris Dooley; assistant Dave Smart