POOL A ONT ALTA NFLD NB NWT Record
Ontario —– 115-75 103-49 86-48 98-32 (4-0)
Alberta 75-115 —– 93-60 71-57 100-47 (3-1)
Newfoundland 49-103 60-93 —– 84-83 105-47 (2-2)
New Brunswick 48-86 57-71 83-84 —– 80-51 (1-3)
N.W.T. 32-98 47-100 47-105 51-80 —– (0-4)
POOL B BC QUE MAN NS SASK Record
British Columbia —– 104-70 66-56 85-50 94-61 (4-0)
Quebec 70-104 —– 78-76 84-61 73-61 (3-1)
Manitoba 56-66 76-78 —– 77-74 97-89 (2-2)
Nova Scotia 50-85 61-84 74-77 —– 84-80 (1-3)
Saskatchewan 61-94 61-73 89-97 80-84 —– (0-4)
Semi Ontario 74 Quebec 62
Semi Alberta 77 British Columbia 58
9h Saskatchewan 94 Northwest Territories 69
7th New Brunswick 68 Nova Scotia 45
5th Manitoba 79 Newfoundland 60
Bronze British Columbia 78 Quebec 67
Final Ontario 90 Alberta 50

        In pool A play, held in Halifax: …………………………………………………… Ontario dumped New Brunswick 86-48 as Tyrone Mattison scored 12, Ronnie Williams 11 and Ryan Wright 11. Danya Bubar and Patrick McAllister paced New Brunswick with 11 apiece. Merv Maxwell added 9 and Andrew Sullivan 8. …………………………………………………… Newfoundland whipped N.W.T. 105-47 as Ronnie Sweeney scored 20, Blair Pittman 17, Matt Smith 17, Mark Woodland 13 and Freddy Baker 11. Graeme Ryder led N.W.T. with 20. Brendan Callas added 12. …………………………………………………… Alberta whipped New Brunswick 71-57 as Kyle Landry scored 14, Ross Bekkering 11, Andrew Champagnie 11 and Ben Chua 10. Merv Maxwell paced New Brunswick with 18. Patrick McAllister added 17 and Patrick Sharkey 12. …………………………………………………… Ontario walloped Newfoundland 103-49 as Nick Pankerichin scored 18, Ronnie Williams 16, Dwayne Johnson 13, Tyrone Mattison 12 and Phil Mathies 11. Ronnie Sweeney led Newfoundland with 27. …………………………………………………… Alberta annihilated the Northwest Territories 100-47 as Ross Bekkering scored 21, Kyle Landry 15, Andrew Champagnie 12, Tyler Orr 10 and Chris Muchena 10. Graeme Ryer led N.W.T. with 12. Brendan Callas added 10. …………………………………………………… Newfoundland nipped New Brunswick 84-83 as Ronnie Sweeney scored 37 and Blair Pittman 16. Merv Maxwell led New Brunswick with 31. Patrick Sharkey added 21. …………………………………………………… Ontario walloped N.W.T. 98-32 as Papa Oppong scored 15, Jaan Montgomery 13, Dwayne Johnson 12, Kyle Dodd 10, Phil Mathies 10 and Junior Kwajah 10. Brendan Callas led N.W.T. with 6. …………………………………………………… Alberta thrashed Newfoundland 93-60 as Kyle Landry scored 24, Jordan Flagel 14, Thor Jensen 13 and Chris Muchena 10. Mark Woodland led Newfoundland with 18. Freddy Baker added 17 and Ronnie Sweeney 12. Newfoundland (coached by Scott Lynch, assisted by Dave Noseworthy and Jeff Saxby) also included Harvey Green, Blair Pittman, Steve Pittman, Adam Ivany, Cory Chafe, Randy O’Rielly, Mark Croft, Jamison Mercer, Matt Smith and Matthew Spurrell. …………………………………………………… New Brunswick whipped N.W.T. 80-51 as Merv Maxwell scored 14, Patrick Sharkey 12, Jeff Vass 11 and Matt Sweezey 11. Brendan Callas led N.W.T. with 21. …………………………………………………… Ontario crushed Alberta 115-75 as Tyrone Mattison scored 19, Phil Mathies 16, Ronnie Williams 16, Nick Pankerichin 12, Dwayne Johnson 11, Ryan Wright 10 and Kyle Dodd 10. Thor Jensen led Alberta with 21. Charles McLean added 13 and Jordan Flagel 10.

        In pool B play: …………………………………………………… Quebec dumped Nova Scotia 84-61 as Jean-Francois Beaulieu scored 16, Marc-David Vil 15 and Mathieu Pellerin 10. Tyler Richards led Nova Scotia with 20. John Scott and Joonha Hwang each added 10. …………………………………………………… British Columbia whipped Saskatchewan 94-61 as Tyler Kepkay scored 15, Bryson Kool 14 and Brett Leversage 12. Jamal Williams led Saskatchewan with 13. Andrew Giesbrecht added 12 and Justin Ames 10. …………………………………………………… Quebec nipped Manitoba 78-76 as Jean-Francois Beaulieu scored 24 and Marc-David Vil 14. Kael Smith led Manitoba with 25. …………………………………………………… Nova Scotia defeated Saskatchewan 84-80 as Tyler Richards scored 29, Liam Shaw 14, John Scott 10 and Joonha Hwang 10. Jamal Williams led Saskatchewan with 22. Paul Schubach added 12, Andrew Giesbrecht 12, Matt Britton 11 and Shea Murphy 10. Guard Tyler Richards hit a jumper with 10 seconds to play to force overtime and set up the come-from-behind win. “The way we won, it was just unbelievable,” said Nova Scotia coach Tim McGarrigle told the Halifax Daily News. “Richards hit a shot with probably five, eight seconds left to send it into overtime and then we had to come from behind in overtime to win. These guys showed huge character tonight.” …………………………………………………… B.C. beat Manitoba 66-56 as Dalbir Dosanjh scored 17, Brett Leversage 12, Matthew Rachar 12 and Bryson Kool 10. Ian Milne led Manitoba with 18. Owen Toews added 12 and Xavier Smith 10. …………………………………………………… B.C. whipped Quebec 104-70 as Tyler Kepkay scored 23, Bryson Kool 16, Matt Kuzminski 16, Matthew Rachar 14 and Dalbir Dosanjh 12. Jerome Turcotte-Routhier led Quebec with 13. Matthew Thornhill and Marc-David Vil each added 12. …………………………………………………… Ian Milne scored 17, Kael Smith 14 and Owen Toews 11 to lead Manitoba to a 77-74 win over Nova Scotia, which was paced by Tyler Richards 19, Joonha Hwang 11 and Kenneth MacQueen 10. …………………………………………………… Quebec clipped Saskatchewan 73-61 as Jean-Francois Beaulieu scored 21, Jerome Turcotte-Routhier 19 and Marc-David Vil 11. Jeff Lukomski led Saskatchewan with 11. Jordan McFarlen added 9, while Jamal Williams nabbed 11 boards. …………………………………………………… British Columbia thumped Nova Scotia 85-50 as Tyler Kepkay scored 23, Dalbir Dosanjh 13 and Mitch Gudgeon 10. Tyler Richards led Nova Scotia with 18. John Scott added 10. “We ran into juggernauts,” Tyler Richards told the Halifax Chronicle-Herald. “They’re a good team and they played hard. We played as hard as we could, did the best we could, competed for the first half. That’s all we could do.” Nova Scotia coach Tim McGarrigle said “B.C. is a great team. We’d have to play close to perfect basketball to even stand a chance of winning a game against this team. We went in down by nine, and I thought we could make a little run at the start of the second half. But they started hitting perimeter shots. “They’re very big in size, so we said we didn’t want them to beat us with their inside game, and they didn’t, but they’re a good team and they played one-on-one better.” …………………………………………………… Manitoba defeated Saskatchewan 97-89 as Xavier Smith scored 24, Kael Smith 13, Owen Toews 12, Ryan Roper 12 and Ian Milne 11. Shea Murphy led Saskatchewan with 33. Matt Britton added 16 and Jeff Lukomski 11.

        In the semi-finals, Ontario dumped Quebec 74-62 as Ronnie Williams scored 19, Tyrone Mattison 16, Ryan Wright 13 and 10 boards, Andrew Wedemire 8, D.J. Wright 7, Nick Pankerichin 7, Junior Kwajah 2 and Phil Mathies 2. Ontario shot 27-63 from the floor, 4-20 from the arc and 16-25 from the line, while garnering 44 boards, 18 fouls, 9 assists, 15 turnovers, 3 blocks and 8 steals. Jean-Francois Beaulieu led Quebec with 19 points. Jerome Turcotte-Routhier added 9, Filose Tshimbomba 8, Xavier Baribeau 6, Matthew Thornhill 5, Patrick Kervin 5, Marc-David Vil 4, Shawn Bowen 4 and Mathieu Pellerin 2. Quebec shot 24-67 from the floor, 5-12 from the arc and 9-12 from the line while collecting 41 boards, 23 fouls, 9 assists, 20 turnovers and 6 steals.

        In the other semi, Alberta defeated British Columbia 77-58 as Andrew Champagnie scored 17, Kyle Landry 13, Thor Jensen 12, Chris Muchena 12, Charles McLean 8, Ben Chua 2, Tyler Orr 2 and Dan Allard 1. Alberta shot 29-60 from the floor, 6-13 from the arc and 13-17 from the line, while collecting 43 boards, 19 fouls, 15 assists, 20 turnovers, 6 blocks and 2 steals. Dalbir Dosanjh and Matthew Rachar each scored 9 to lead B.C. Bryson Kool added 8, Greg Wallis 8, Matt Kuzminski 7, Tyrell Mara 6, Mitch Gudgeon 4, Brett Leversage 4 and Tyler Kepkay 3. B.C. shot 22-77 from the floor, 0-24 from the arc and 14-24 from the line, while garnering 47 boards, 19 fouls, 6 assists, 22 turnovers, 5 blocks and 11 steals.

        In the ninth-place game, Saskatchewan thrashed Northwest Territories 94-69 as Andrew Giesbrecht scored 23, Shea Murphy 16, Matt Britton 11, Trevor Nerdahl 8, Paul Schubach 8, Justin Ames 8, Jamal Williams 6, Scott Peterson 4, Jordan McFarlen 3, Greg Finch 3, Steven Herbison 2 and Jeff Lukomski 2. Saskatchewan shot 33-73 from the floor, 13-28 from the arc, 15-20 from the line, while garnering 44 boards, 18 fouls, 17 assists, 12 turnovers, 3 blocks and 9 steals. Brendan Callas paced the N.W.T. with 28 points and 9 boards. Rene Raque scored 15, Graeme Ryder 11, Dustin Philippon 5, Justin Shelley 5, Enoch Ford 4 and Michael Callas 1. The N.W.T. shot 27-63 from the floor, 7-21 from the arc and 8-16 from the line, while collecting 37 boards, 15 fouls, 5 assists, 1 block and 7 steals.

        In the fifth-place game, New Brunswick crushed Nova Scotia 68-45 as Patrick McAllister scored 11, Tim McAleenan 10, Colin Johnston 9, Andrew Sullivan 6, Jeff Vass 6, Merv Maxwell 6, Danya Bubar 5, Patrick Sharkey 5, Steve Wetmore 3, Matthew Finniss 3, Matt Sweezey 2 and Jordan Graham 2. New Brunswick (coached by Thom Gillespie and Dwight Dickinson) shot 23-36 from the floor, 5-11 from the arc and 17-29 from the line, while amassing 30 boards, 16 fouls, 5 assists, 23 turnovers and 6 steals. Tyler Richards led Nova Scotia with 18. Mike Hogue added 7, Liam Shaw 6, John Scott 4, Kyle Hickey 4, Brandon Burke 3, Shea Balish 2 and Joonha Hwang 1. Nova Scotia shot 16-50 from the floor, 2-9 from the arc and 11-19 from the line, while garnering 25 boards, 24 fouls, 3 assists, 22 turnovers, 2 blocks and 9 steals.

        Manitoba took fifth place by crushing Newfoundland & Labrador 79-60 as Kael Smith scored 17, Cyril Indome 14, Ian Milne 13, Owen Toews 7, Cameron Hornby 7, Buisi Okwamabua 7, Ryan Roper 5, Josh Sjoberg 5 and Xavier Smith 4 and 10 boards. Myron Dean grabbed 15 boards. Manitoba (coached by Garth McAlpine and Jeff Laping) shot 28-72 from the floor, 9-21 from the arc and 14-26 from the line, while garnering 63 boards, 15 fouls, 7 assists, 16 turnovers, 5 blocks and 10 steals. Mark Woodland led Newfoundland with 27 points. Ronnie Sweeney added 14, Blair Pittman 13, Cory Chafe 2, Jamieson Mercer 2 and Freddy Baker 2. Newfoundland shot 18-65 from the floor, 9-27 from the arc and 15-20 from the line, while collecting 38 boards, 21 fouls, 1 assist, 14 turnovers, 5 blocks and 10 steals. Newfoundland & Labrador (coach Scott Lynch, assistant Jeff Saxby, assistant Dave Noseworthy) also included Steve Pittman, Matt Smith, Matthew Spurrell, Adam Ivany, Harvey Greene, Randy O’Rielly and Mark Croft.

        British Columbia captured the bronze by dumping Quebec 78-67 as Bryson Kool scored 16, Tyrell Mara 12, Dalbir Dosanjh 10, Mitch Gudgeon 9, Clayton Heuring 8, Matthew Rachar 7, Brett Leversage 7, Tyler Kepkay 7 and Greg Wallis 2. British Columbia shot 29-56 from the floor, 6-18 from the arc and 14-26 from the line, while garnering 31 boards, 10 fouls, 9 assists, 7 turnovers, 5 blocks and 4 steals. Jean-Francois Beaulieu led Quebec with 25 points. Matthew Thornhill added 22, Filose Tshimbomba 10, Jerome Turcotte-Routhier 4, Martin Verreault 3, Marc-David Vil 2 and Xavier Baribeau 1. Quebec shot 29-57 from the floor, 3-8 from the arc and 6-14 from the line, while garnering 30 boards, 21 fouls, 8 assists, 8 turnovers, 1 block and 5 steals.

        In the final, Ontario thrashed Alberta 90-50 as player of the game Ronnie Williams scored 20, Tyrone Mattison 14, Nick Pankerichin 11, Andrew Wedemire 9, Ryan Wright 8, Kyle Dodd 8, Dwayne Johnson 6, D.J. Wright 6, Papa Oppong 4, and Phil Mathies 4. Ontario shot 35-79 from the floor, 5-21 from the arc and 15-24 from the line, while garnering 53 boards, 13 fouls, 11 assists, 17 turnovers, 4 blocks and 23 steals. Kyle Landry led Alberta with 11 points. Thor Jensen added 10, Andrew Champagnie 10, Jordan Flagel 7, Charles McLean 4, Ben Chua 3, Eric Magdanz 3 and Chris Muchena 2. Alberta shot 20-57 from the floor, 5-20 from the arc and 5-16 from the line, while garnering 40 boards, 17 fouls, 4 assists, 28 turnovers, 3 blocks and 4 steals. “There is a lot of talent in Ontario and we just prove it,” Ronnie Williams told the Halifax Daily News. “We just go out and play hard every time out and good things always happen for us. Things went great for us. We had a close one in the semis with Quebec but we pulled it off. And from there, we knew we had a good shot at the winning the championship.”

        The all-tourney team selections were MVP Ronnie Williams (Ontario); Jean-Francois Beaulieu (Quebec); Tyler Kepkay (BC); Tyrone Mattison (Ontario); Chris Muchena (Alberta); Ryan Wright (Ontario).

The second team selections were: Bryson Kool (BC); Kyle Landry (Alberta); Ian Milne (Manitoba); Tyler Richards (Nova Scotia); Ronnie Sweeney (Newfoundland).

        The bronze medalists from British Columbia: Dalbir Dosanjh, Bryson Kool; Mitch Gudgeon; Brett Leversage; Tyler Kepkay; Matt Kuzminski; Tyrell Mara; Matthew Rachar; Greg Wallis; Clayton Heuring; Sean Anthony; William Gallick; coach Rich Goulet; assistant Del Komarninski; apprentice Matt McKay.

        The silver medalists from Alberta: Thor Jensen; Chris Muchena; Ben Chua; Kyle Landry; Andrew Champagnie; Dan Allard; Tyler Orr; Eric Magdanz; Jordan Flagel; Ross Bekkering; Charles McLean; Onsi Saleh; coach Tom Groat; assistant Troy Stuckey

The gold medalists from Ontario: Ronnie Williams; Tyrone Mattison; Nick Pankerichin; Ryan Wright; Phil Mathies; Dwayne Johnson; Papa Oppong; Junior Kwajah; Andrew Wedemire; D.J. Wright; Kyle Dodd; Jaan Montgomery; coach Tom Oliveri; assistant Jay McNeilly; associate Roy Rana