Pool A ONT MAN QUE SASK Record
Ontario —– 96-47 86-67 94-62 (3-0)
Manitoba 47-96 —– 78-61 85-60 (2-1)
Quebec 67-86 61-78 —– 83-79 (1-2)
Saskatchewan 61-94 60-85 79-83 —– (0-3)
POOL B ALTA BC NFLD NB Record
Alberta —– 68-58 87-62 67-45 (3-0)
British Columbia 58-68 —– 87-66 73-53 (2-1)
Newfoundland 62-87 66-87 —– 73-55 (1-2)
New Brunswick 45-67 53-73 55-73 —– (0-3)
Semi Ontario 71 British Columbia 67
Semi Alberta 93 Manitoba 91
7th Saskatchewan 84 New Brunswick 77
5th Quebec 87 Newfoundland 82
Bronze British Columbia 84 Manitoba 70
Final Ontario 91 Alberta 71

        In pool A play: …………………………………………………… Isaac Ansah scored 26 to lead Manitoba past Quebec, who were paced by Etienne Wilsey’s 17 points. …………………………………………………… Adam Falsetto scored 16 to lead Ontario past Saskatchewan 94-62. Bryden Wright paced Saskatchewan with 14. Kerry Graybiel added 12 and Adam Patola 10. …………………………………………………… Kingsley Costain scored 23 as Ontario hammered Manitoba. Kyle Kane added 15. Ansah led Manitoba with 18. …………………………………………………… Wilsey scored 22 as Quebec nipped Saskatchewan 83-79. Kerry Graybiel led Saskatchewan with 23. …………………………………………………… Isaac Ansah scored 19 to lead Manitoba past Saskatchewan. Jordan Kozey led Saskatchewan with 11. Kerry Graybiel and Adam Patola each added 10. …………………………………………………… Kyle Kane scored 18 as Ontario whipped Quebec. Wilsey led Quebec with 20.

        In pool B play: …………………………………………………… Cody Darrah scored 21 as Alberta thrashed Newfoundland 87-62. Newfoundland was led by Evan Constantine’s 17 points. …………………………………………………… Casey Archibald scored 14 in BC’s 73-53 win over New Brunswick. Clint Bateman led New Brunswick with 12. …………………………………………………… Evan Constantine scored 15 as Newfoundland pounded New Brunswick. Justin Halleran added 13. Newfoundland led 28-25 at the half. Ryan Watson led New Brunswick with 15. …………………………………………………… Spencer Dorward scored 20 to lead Alberta past BC 68-58. Casey Archibald led BC with 15. …………………………………………………… Henry Bekkering scored 15 as Alberta thumped New Brunswick 87-62. Bateman led New Brunswick with 10. …………………………………………………… Levon Kendall scored 23 as BC whipped Newfoundland 87-66. Matthew O’Brien led Newfoundland with 20.

        In the seventh-place contest, Bryden Wright scored 18 to lead Saskatchewan past New Brunswick 84-77. Saskatchewan (coached by Bill Weir, assisted by Trevor Mirtle and Darcy McKeown) also included Adam Patola, Kerry Graybiel, Justin Wolverton, Jordan Kozey, Mark Breker, Andrew Herron, Luke Sayer, Cameron Penner and David Tallman. Clint Bateman led New Brunswick with 22. New Brunswick (coached by Thom Gillespie, assisted by Kirt Monbourquette) also included Andrew Maxwell, Brad McLean, Josh Prescott, Mike Thomas, Barret Williams, Ryan Watson, Darren Lohnes, Adam Thornton and Adam Parent.

        In the fifth-place battle, Olivier Lamoureux scored 21 to lead Quebec past Newfoundland 87-82. Quebec also included Etienne Labrecque, Saliou Babou, Greg Page, J.F. Beaulieu, P.P. Dube, James Celestin, Etienne Wilsey, Marc-Andre D’Amours, Yann Jolicoeur, Mathieu Simard, Collin Page and alternates Jonathan Belizaire and Matthew Ouellette. Evan Constantine paced Newfoundland with 21. George Mammen and Justin Halleran each added 18. Newfoundland (coached by Dave Constantine, assisted by Pam Constantine and Martin Cull) also included Andrew Boland, Matt O’Brien, Patrick Snow, Ian Hennebury, Adam Joyce, Curtis Power, Colin Power, Jonathan Loder and Mark English.

        In the semis, Shane Janes scored 19 as Ontario nipped BC 71-67. Kyle Kane added 10. Casey Archibald led BC with 15.

        In the other semi, Henry Bekkering scored 29 as Alberta nipped Manitoba 93-91. Isaac Ansah led Manitoba with 32.

        In the bronze medal match, Raj Mander scored 21 to lead BC past Manitoba 84-70. Isaac Ansah led Manitoba with 29. Manitoba (coached by Kirby Schepp, assisted by David Bard and Garth McAlpine) also included Erfan Nasajpour, Brock Tokar, Chris Byrnes, Chris Dyck, Adam Hartman, Rhys DeGrave, A.J. Gervais, Charlie Brake, Donovan Alexander, Arvin Arabe and Tyson Jones.

        In the gold medal match, Ontario clipped Alberta 91-71 as Kyle Kane scored 22. Spencer Dorward scored 17 for Alberta.

        The all-tourney team featured MVP Kingsley Costain (Ontario); Levon Kendall (BC); Jemino Sobers (Ontario); Spencer Dorward (Alberta); Henry Bekkering (Alberta); Isaac Ansah (Manitoba).

The second team selections were: Etienne Wilsey (Quebec); Casey Archibald (BC) Olivier Lamoureux (Quebec); Erfan Nasajpour (Manitoba); Shane James (Ontario).

        The bronze medalists from British Columbia: Ryan Vetrie; Brent McLaren; Raj Mander; Luke Robinson; Casey Archibald; Evan Southern; Tylor Hynd; Brody Bishop; Patrick Sponaski; Cam McDonald; Levon Kendall; Sean Denison; coach Mark Simpson; assistant Scott Clark; mentor coach Ted Murray

        The silver medalists from Alberta: Henry Bekkering; Graeme Bollinger; Cody Darrah; Kelvin De La Pena; Spencer Dorward; Brendan Groat; Bronson Harker; Adam Huffman; Paul Rabel; Micheal Szynkowski; Allen Tollestrup; Tefferi Wendu; coach Tom Groat; assistant Cheyno Finnie; assistant Terry Schipper; assistant Josh Nugent

        The gold medalists from Ontario: Kingsley Costain; Jemino Sobers; Shane James; Adam Falsetto; Dejan Grkovic; Kyle Kane; Mike Muir; Sean Peter; Brad Rootes; Sheldon Stewart; coach Chris O’Rourke; assistant John Grace; manager Rod Bynum