POOL A ONT NB SASK YUK Record    
  Ontario —– 98-59 113-43 119-43 (3-0)    
  New Brunswick 59-98 —– 72-62 84-40 (2-1)    
  Saskatchewan 43-113 62-72 —– 93-35 (1-2)    
  Yukon 43-119 40-84 35-93 —– (0-3)    
                 
  POOL B NS MAN ALTA QUE NFLD Record  
  Nova Scotia —– 84-70 54-51 55-58 76-37 (3-1)  
  Manitoba 70-84 —– 111-91 87-76 96-36 (3-1)  
  Alberta 51-54 91-111 —– 70-65 62-40 (2-2)  
  Quebec 58-55 76-87 65-70 —– 56-16 (2-2)  
  Newfoundland 37-76 36-96 40-62 16-56 —– (0-4)  
                 
  Semi Ontario 107 Manitoba 74
  Semi Nova Scotia 79 New Brunswick 69
  9th Newfoundland
  7th Quebec 77 Yukon 42
  5th Saskatchewan 84 Alberta 78
  Bronze New Brunswick 97 Manitoba 95
  Final Ontario 84 Nova Scotia 49
     

        In pool A play, held in Halifax: …………………………………………………… New Brunswick defeated Saskatchewan as Graeme Scott scored 16, along with 10 boards, Colton Wilson 14, Andrew Wright 10 and Elliot Thompson 10. New Brunswick led 34-31 at the half and closed out the affair with a 20-9 run. Kai Williams led Saskatchewan with 15. Paul Gareau and Kris Heska each added 10. …………………………………………………… Ontario whipped the Yukon as Alex Johnson scored 18, Paul Herra 16, Scott Jaspers-Farel 15, Jorden Henry 14, Scott Brittain 12, Tyrell Vernon 11 and Adam Jesperson 10. Elijah Sanderson led the Yukon with 14. Despite the loss, Yukon coach Mike Reynolds was pleased. “Last year, we lost to Ontario by 90 points. This year, we lost to them by 70. So, to me, that’s 20 points better. We choose our team from 16 kids. They are choosing theirs from 16,000. So the fact we competed the entire game, that’s what we’re after. And we did. At halftime, we had a 20-point game.” …………………………………………………… Ontario thrashed New Brunswick as Scott Brittain scored 30, Paul Herra 14 and Jorden Henry 10. Graeme Scott led New Brunswick with 19. Elliot Thompson added 9. …………………………………………………… Ashly July scored 20, Tyrell Vernon 18, Scott Jaspers-Farel 18, Paul Herra 13, Alex Johnson 13 and Scott Brittain 10 as Ontario smoked Saskatchewan 113-43. Saskatchewan was paced by Kris Heska’s 14 points. Paul Gareau added 9 points and 7 boards. …………………………………………………… New Brunswick smacked the Yukon 84-40 as Graeme Scott scored 21, along with 8 boards, 4 blocks and 3 steals, Adam Belyea 12, Andrew Wright 12, Ryan Ferguson 11, Graham Norton 11 and Elliot Thompson 7. David Pederson paced the Yukon with 15. New Brunswick led 26-9 after one quarter and romped. …………………………………………………… Saskatchewan whipped the Yukon as Kai Williams scored 17, Paul Gareau 14, Kris Heshka 14, Rice Vaughn Jr. 11 and Tim Hollman 10. Elijah Sanderson led the Yukon with 15.

        In pool B play: …………………………………………………… Alberta defeated Quebec as Jace Saunders and A.J. Kennedy each scored 13. Thomas Pearson added 10. Nicolas Demito led Quebec with 16. M.J. Mabidi added 14 and Didier Muhire 12. …………………………………………………… Nova Scotia thrashed Manitoba as Patrick McIver scored 21, Mike Poole 19, Casey Fox 16 and Josh Balish 11. Dan Lother led Manitoba with 23. Kyle Scheurmann added 10. “It’s awesome. We couldn’t have asked for a better start,” said guard Patrick McIver told the Halifax Daily News. …………………………………………………… Quebec dumped Newfoundland as Olivier Boucher scored 9. Fabian Picco led Newfoundland with 6. …………………………………………………… Nova Scotia nipped Alberta as Patrick McIver scored 17. A.J. Kennedy led Alberta with 10. Nova Scotia took a 52-49 lead with just over a minute to play when Mike Poole took a feed from guard Patrick McIver and banked in a layup. Alberta cut the lead to one with 14 seconds to play and then fouled Josh Balish who hit a pair from the line. “It was pure concentration,” Balish told the Halifax Daily News. “We worked on our foul shots all year. The coach (Les Berry) was very hard on that. It was great to see them go in.” …………………………………………………… Manitoba whipped Newfoundland as Ryan Froese scored 21, Kyle Scheurmann 19, Mike Smalley 12 and James Horaska 10. Mark Abbott led Newfoundland with 8. …………………………………………………… Quebec thumped Nova Scotia as Didier Muhire scored 18 and Olivier Champagne-Parent 12. Patrick McIver led Nova Scotia with 18. Mike Poole added 12. …………………………………………………… Alberta dumped Newfoundland as Jace Saunders scored 16, Michael Laffin 14 and Steven Kennedy 10. Stephen Singleton led Newfoundland with 14. Jeremy Pynn added 13. …………………………………………………… Kyle Scheurmann scored 26, Abraham Daniels 13, Mike Smalley 12, Nick Lother 11 and Peter Lomoro 10 as Manitoba dumped Quebec 87-76. Quebec was paced by M.J. Mabidi’s 16 points. Rigo Katahwa added 13. …………………………………………………… Nova Scotia crushed Newfoundland 76-37 as B.J. Shaw scored 12 and John David Howlett 10. Stephen Singleton led Newfoundland with 11. Leading by four after four minutes of play, Nova Scotia ripped off a 14-4 run to take command as they exploded to a 30-point lead at the half. “Our coach was telling us in the locker room to see if we could put them away in the first half,” said Casey Fox. “Newfoundland is a fairly good team. We respect the way they play. So we just came out in the first half and came out the way we should have.” Newfoundland (coached by George Power, assisted by Tony Reardon and Frank Power) also included Jeremy Pynn, Matthew Fox, Nathan Johnson, Greg O’Brien, Jared Penney, Mark Abbott, Chad Warren, Nicholas Capps, Charles Butler, Justin Evans and Fabian Picco. …………………………………………………… Manitoba whipped Alberta as Abraham Daniels scored 27, Ryan Froese 18, Dan Lother 13 and Adam Dobriansky 10. Brennen Fule led Alberta with 20. Jace Saunders added 18 and Terrence Blake 12.

        In the semis, Ontario walloped Manitoba 107-74 as Ashly July scored 20, Jorden Hemry 19, Scott Jaspers-Farel 17, Alex Johnson 15, Rodel Grenaway 12, Tyrell Vernon 7, Conor Allin 7, Scott Brittain 6 and Paul Herra 4. Ontario shot 44-73 from the floor, 4-5 from the arc and 15-27 from the line, while collecting 42 boards, 15 fouls, 29 assists, 26 turnovers, 7 blocks and 21 steals. James Horaska paced Manitoba with 26 points. Abraham Daniels added 11, Dan Lother 10, Kyle Scheurmann 8, Adam Dobriansky 8, Nick Lother 4, Mike Smalley 4, Craig Sharpe 2 and Ryan Froese 1. Manitoba shot 30-71 from the floor, 2-18 from the arc and 12-19 from the line, while garnering 37 boards, 21 fouls, 9 assists, 31 turnovers, 1 block and 16 steals.

        In the other semi, Nova Scotia dumped New Brunswick 79-69 as Patrick McIver scored 24 and grabbed 7 boards, while shooting 9-19 from the field. Casey Fox added 20 off the bench, Mike Poole 11, Gary Gray 10, Josh Balish 8, Jonathan MacLanders 4 and John David Howlett 2. Nova Scotia shot 31-75 from the floor, 6-17 from the arc and 11-15 from the line, while garnering 34 boards, 18 fouls, 13 assists, 10 turnovers and 12 steals. Elliot Thompson led New Brunswick with 20. Graeme Scott added 19, Colton Wilson 18 and 10 boards, Adam Belyea 5, Andrew Wright 5 and Graham Norton 2. New Brunswick shot 27-54 from the floor, 4-17 from the arc and 11-16 from the line, while collecting 42 boards, 11 fouls, 1 assist, 28 turnovers, 5 blocks and 2 steals. Nova Scotia’s bench outscored that of New Brunswick 32-2. “We came through, we came through,” said an elated point guard Gary Gray, who came off the bench to provide a major spark for the Bluenosers. “First of the game, coach (Les Berry) told us to play hard and go out there and think of the championship and what it takes to (get there).” New Brunswick took an early 21-17 lead and extended it to 13 when Graeme Scott hit a jumper early in the second quarter. But Nova Scotia countered with a 17-4 run, featured a Patrick McIver buzzer beating trey as they rallied to within two at the half. “I think that was the turning point,” said McIver. “We just picked up the defence and it kept going from then on.” Nova Scotia outscored New Brunswick 20-11 in the third quarter and then moved ahead by 12 in the final frame when Gray pilfered a pair for transition layups. “I was just thinking to stop the guy,” said Gray. “Don’t let him get anywhere. And when the chance came for the steal, I took right from him.”

        In the seventh-place match, Quebec pounded Yukon as M.J. Mabidi scored 18, Rigo Katahwa 13, Didier Muhire 11, Nicolas Demito 10, Francis Mayer 8, Timotey Lachance 6, Samuel Emond 4, Olivier Champagne-Parent 4 and 10 boards, and Jean-Philippe Herbert 3. Quebec shot 31-73 from the floor, 5-19 from the arc and 10-11 from the line, while garnering 49 boards, 17 fouls, 6 assists, 12 turnovers, 2 blocks and 17 steals. David Pederson led the Yukon with 18. Jeremy Dawn added 10, Elijah Sanderson 4, Ryan Lister 4, William Dickson 4 and Jared Hougen 2. The Yukon shot 15-53 from the floor, 0-14 from the arc and 12-20 from the line, while collecting 33 boards, 12 fouls, 6 assists, 24 turnovers, 1 block and 6 steals.

        Saskatchewan captured fifth by dumping Alberta as Kristopher Heshka scored 25, Chris Bodnar 20, Paul Gareau 19, Kai Williams 6, Tim Hollman 6, Jacob Bayda 5 and Vaughn Rice Jr 3. Saskatchewan shot 37-61 from the floor, 5-16 from the arc and 5-12 from the line, while collecting 31 boards, 10 fouls, 9 assists, 12 turnovers, 1 block and 7 steals. Saskatchewan also included Taylor Orban, Adam Vangool, Patrick Neufeld, Paul Gareau and Robbie Findlay. Terrence Blake paced Alberta with 17 points. Jace Saunders added 14, Michael Laffin 9, Brennen Fule 9, Steven Kennedy 8, Thomas Pearson 6, David Newbold 5, Christopher Tron 5, David Ness 3 and Mike Loubardeas 2. Alberta shot 31-57 from the floor, 11-18 from the arc and 5-8 from the line, while garnering 26 boards, 18 fouls, 7 assists, 10 turnovers, 1 block and 9 steals. Alberta (coached by Dino Pasquotti, assisted by Broc Higginson and managed by Theresa Pasquotti) also included A.J. Kennedy.

        New Brunswick nipped Manitoba 97-95 in overtime for the bronze medal as Colton Wilson scored 27 and grabbed 13 boards. Andrew Wright added 19, Graeme Scott 17 and 11 boards, Jamie Barefoot 10, Adam Belyea 8, Elliott Thompson 7, Ryan Ferguson 5, Matt Zed 2 and Adam Creaghan 2. New Brunswick (coached by Mark Palmer and Jim Palmer) hit 35-79 from the floor, 7-14 from the arc and 20-27 from the line, while garnering 51 boards, 22 fouls, 15 assists, 29 turnovers, 5 blocks and 18 steals. Ryan Froese led Manitoba (coach Scott Kirkpatrick, assistant Spiros Kavadas) with 27 points. Kyle Scheurmann 17, Abraham Daniels 13, Dan Lother 11, James Horaska 9, Adam Dobriansky 8, Nick Lother 4, Peter Lomoro 3, Mike Smalley 2 and Craig Sharpe 1. Manitoba shot 35-77 from the floor, 4-15 from the arc and 21-27 from the line, while collecting 44 boards, 24 fouls, 18 assists, 23 turnovers, 8 blocks and 16 steals.

        In the final, Ontario crushed Nova Scotia 84-49 as Scott Jaspers-Farel scored 14, Paul Herra 13, Jordan Hemry 12 and 11 boards, Ashly July 12, Alex Johnson 9, Tyrell Vernon 7, Rodel Grenaway 6, Conor Allin 6 and Scott Brittain 5. Ontario shot 33-63 from the floor, 5-13 from the arc and 13-20 from the line, while garnering 53 boards, 14 fouls, 10 assists, 29 turnovers, 3 blocks and 10 steals. Mike Poole paced Nova Scotia with 18 points. Patrick McIver added 14, Gary Gray 7, Josh Balish 3, B.J. Shaw 2, Casey Fox 2, Jonathan MacLanders 2 and Ben Johnson 1. Nova Scotia shot 20-55 from the floor, 1-11 from the arc and 8-15 from the line, while collecting 19 boards, 13 fouls, 8 asissts, 23 turnovers, 5 blocks and 16 steals. Top-seed Ontario, which outscored opponents by an average of 43 points, led 27-12 after one quarter and by 28 points at the half. “They really jumped all over us in the first half,” said Nova Scotia coach Les Berry told the Halifax Daily News. “Our kids certainly came out and played as hard as they could, but they just ran into an offensive juggernaut.” Mike Poole added that “they were putting it to us on the press. Their press-breaks and their fast-break layups were pretty fast. We knew they were coming hard and we knew we were going to have to fight. They just worked pretty hard.” Ontario coach Darrell Glenn was pleased with his squad’s effort. “We’ve only been together for three weeks. We felt we had a great group of kids.”

        The all-tourney selections were: MVP Jorden Hemry (Ontario); Scott Brittain (Ontario); Abraham Daniels (Manitoba); Patrick McIver (Nova Scotia); Mike Poole (Nova Scotia); Graeme Scott (New Brunswick). The second-team selections were: Kris Heshka (Saskatchewan); Alex Johnson (Ontario); Didier Muhire (Quebec); Jace Saunders (Alberta); Colton Wilson (New Brunswick)

        The bronze medalists from New Brunswick: Colton Wilson; Elliot Thompson; Graeme Scott; Adam Belyea; Andrew Wright; Graham Norton; Jamie Barefoot; Matt Zed; Adam Creaghan; Stephen Bohan; Ryan Kingston; Ryan Ferguson; coach Thom Gillespie; coach Dwight Dickinson

        The silver medalists from Nova Scotia: Patrick McIver; Mike Poole; Josh Balish; Ben Johnson; Jonathan MacLanders; Jeff Inglis; B.J. Shaw; Casey Fox; Jordan Yarr; John David Howlett; Ryan Engels; Gary Gray; coach Les Berry.

        The gold medalists from Ontario: Jorden Hemry; Scott Brittain; Alex Johnson; Ashly July; Paul Herra; Tyrell Vernon; Rodel Grenaway; Luc Minani; Conor Allin; Adam Jesperson; Al Alilovic; Scott Jaspers-Farel; coach Darrell Glenn; assistant Jonathan Smith