ROUND ROBIN MAN NS BC ONT ALTA Record
Winnipeg St. Andrews —– 82-75 74-63 70-65 95-73 (4-0)
Wolfville Valley Lords 75-82 —– 81-71 84-74 74-65 (3-1)
Vancouver Villas 63-74 71-81 —– 87-80 111-97 (2-2)
Windsor Merrifields 65-70 74-84 80-87 —– 104-91 (1-3)
Calgary Paragon Properties 73-95 6-574 97-111 91-104 —– (0-4)
             

        In the round robin Ontario Senior A playoffs, the Windsor Merrifield Transporters defeated the Scarborough Bo-Peeps 78-68 in the decisive match as Ed Martin scored 15, Walt Lozynsky 14, tournament MVP Mario Baggio 13, Terry MacKay 10, Chris Wydrzynski 9, Bruce Dempster 9, Dave McGuffin 4 and Sante Salvador 4. Goldring led Scarborough with 11. Birkett added 11, Wagaman 11, Misikowetz 10, Mazzuchin 7, Thrower 7, West 5 and Stonkus 3. …………………………………………………… The Windsor Merrifield Transporters dumped Kingston 93-79 as Ed Martin scored 31, Chris Wydrzynski 15, Walt Lozynsky 9, Terry MacKay 9, Mario Baggio 7, Turner 6, Gloster 5, Bruce Dempster 4, Dave McGuffin 4 and Sante Salvador 3. Bob Wright led Kingston with 32. Beale added 14, Neasmith 13, Smith 10, Mackenzie 6, Crozier 2 and Fraser 2. …………………………………………………… The Scarborough Bo-Peeps dusted the Toronto YMHA Blues 95-60. …………………………………………………… The Scarborough Bo-Peeps clipped Kingston 84-72. …………………………………………………… Kingston edged the Toronto YMHA Blues 91-86. …………………………………………………… The Windsor Merrifield Transporters whipped the Toronto YMHA Blues 100-77 as Ed martin scored 19, Dave McGuffin 19, Mario Baggio 14, Cloutier 12, Walt Lozynsky 10, Terry MacKay 6, Bruce Dempster 4, Elcombe 3, Gloster 3, Turner 3, Chris Wydrzynski 2, McWha 2, Taranczuk 2 and McCullough 2. Starr led Toronto with 16. H Cohen added 15, Richman 14, E Cohen 12, Kimel 10, Jansen 8 and Kane 2. …………………………………………………… Final standings: Windsor (3-0); Scarborough Bo-Peeps (2-1); Kingston (1-2); Toronto (0-3). …………………………………………………… The all-tournament team featured MVP Mario Baggio (Windsor); Ed Martin (Windsor); Terry MacKay (Windsor); Angelo Mazzuchin (Scarborough); and Bob Wright (Kingston).

        In the Saskatchewan semis (an eight-team tournament held after the national championships), the Regina Mister Jacks dumped the Regina Campus Cubs 69-51 as Stan Metcalfe scored 11, Alex Smith 11, Hal Herbison 10 and Lorne Shmyr 10. Wayne McKeague led the Cubs with 21. Tom Morrissey added 15. The Cubs also included Pete McGeady, Bernie Schmidt, Jim Dodds. …………………………………………………… In the other semi, the Saskatoon Commodores defeated the Canadians 73-72 as Trevor Treen scored 20, John Konihowski 15 and Ross Wilson 14. Rod Stark led the Canadians with 17. Gord Schinger added 15, Dan Cameron 14 and Rich Riach 14. The Canadians also included Gary Korven. …………………………………………………… In the final, the Regina Mister Jacks nipped the Saskatoon Commodores 73-72 as Lorne Shmyr hit a free throw in the final seconds. Ken Johns led the Jacks with 24. Hal Herbison added 14. The Mister Jacks also included Gord Burges, Alex Smith, Dick Kemper, playing coach Stan Metcalfe, John Lipp, Les Robinson, John Schepers and Greg Share. Trevor Treen led the Commodores with 13. John Broughton added 13 and John Konihowski 10.

        In the Alberta finals, Calgary Paragon Properties defeated the Edmonton Chieftains 62-77; 94-74; 73-67 (2g-1). …………………………………………………… In game one, the Chieftains prevailed 77-62 as Dick Deklerk scored 21, Paul Pomietlarz 15, Al Melnychuk 8 and Garry Smith 8. Clarence Amalung led the Cascades with 20. Leigh Hammond added 11, Jim Christie 10 and Billy Newcombe 9. …………………………………………………… In game two, Paragon Properties thrashed the Chieftains 94-74 after leading 50-40 at the half. Lee Hammond led Calgary with 25. Wayne Thomas added 20 and Clarence Amalung 20. Dick DeKlerk paced Edmonton with 21. …………………………………………………… In game three, Calgary took the series with a 73-67 win in overtime as Clarence Amulung scored 20.

        In the national round-robin tournament, Winnipeg St. Andrews finished (4-0) to capture the crown.

        In the Super Saints 70-65 victory over Windsor, centre Jerry Barney scored 23 and Ted Stoesz 17 as Winnipeg hit 23 field goals and 25 free throws in the win. Winnipeg was called for 17 fouls while Windsor was hit for 28. The Merrifields were led by Ed Martin’s 25 points. Terry MacKay added 8 and Chris Wydryzynski 8. They hit for 26 field goals and 13 free throws. Windsor coach Bob Hanson later complained about the “unbelievable” officiating. “They just wouldn’t let us play our game.”

        In Winnipeg’s 82-75 defeat of Wolfville, Ted Stoesz, Frank Evans and Ross Wedlake each scored 15 to lead the Super Saints. Playing coach Fred Ingaldson later noted that the team had been significantly revamped over the past year and now averaged 24 years of age, roughly 10 years less than they’d averaged in 1971.

        In Wolfville’s 74-65 defeat of Calgary Paragon Properties, Rick Eaton scored 23, while Dick DeKlerk responded with 24.

        In Winnipeg’s 95-73 victory over Calgary Paragon Properties, Jerry Barney again led all scorers with 23.

        In the Vancouver Villas 87-80 defeat of the Windsor Merrifields, Brent Watson scored 21, Gary Smith 14, Bob Barrazzoul 13 and Sam Vandermeulen 12. Vancouver hit 26 field goals and 35 free throws. They were called for 17 fouls as compared to 27 for Windsor. Windsor was led by Mario Baggio’s 16. Point guard Baggio picked up his fourth foul with 17 minutes to go.

        In Windsor’s 104-91 victory over Calgary, Mike Gloster scored 18, Jon Elcombe 13, Walt Lozynsky 12, Terry MacKay 12 and Sante Salvador 12. Calgary was led by Dick DeKlerk 27, Wayne Thomas 18, Ed Blott 15 and Christie 10.

        In the Wolfville Valley Lords 84-74 defeat of the Windsor Merrifield Transporters, Peter Phipps scored 16, Rick Eaton 37 and Ian McMillan 10. Terry MacKay scored 17 to lead the Merrifields (coached by Bob Hansen). Chris Wydryzynski added 11, Bruce Dempster 11 and Mario Baggio 10.

        In Winnipeg’s 74-63 defeat of Vancouver, the game was tied at 35 at the half but the Super Saints came in the strong in the second. After taking a five-point lead, Winnipeg went into a stall and easily controlled the game. They were paced by Ted Stoesz 29, Jerry Barney 12 and Ross Wedlake 12. Irv Hanec added 9, Dave Mills 8, Frank Evans 7, Hymie Fox 3 and Tim Ruppel 2, while Alfonso and McKall were scoreless. The Villas, (who were selected by the BCBA to represent at nationals), were led by Gary Smith, Al Birtles and Bob Barrazzoul, each with 13. Knapfl added 8, Vandermeulen 6, Bob Molinski 6 and Ian Hunter 4, while Kootnekoff and Suderman were scoreless. The Villas (playing coach Brent Watson) also included Derek Sankey, Ed Suderman and Dave Way. Ingaldson told Canadian Press that Canada should be playing international rules, particularly in adopting a shot clock if it hoped to become an international force in basketball. The U.S. game and international rules “are as different as chess and checkers,” he said. “It’s got to go right back to the high schools and then it’s going to take us 8-10 years to show anything.” Ingaldson told the Winnipeg Tribune “now, that’s performance. This should put Winnipeg back on the basketball map. Boys like Dave (Mills) and Scooter (Alfonso) have waited a long time for this. I was beginning to think we were never going to win this thing. Not with St. Andrew’s anyway. We sputtered all year but we seemed to get something going in practice last week. Maybe the guys got the message. I can’t say enough about Barney (Jerry). He was superb.”

        The runner-up Wolfville Valley Lords: Rick Eaton; Peter Phipps; Ian MacMillan; Peter Phipps;

        The champion Winnipeg St. Andrews Super Saints: Ross Wedlake; Grant Alfonso; Jerry Barney; Dave Mills; Terry Ball; Irv Hanec; R. McKale; Ted Stoesz; Frank Evans; Bob Hazell; Tim Ruppel; Hymie Fox; coach Fred Ingaldson; manager Harvey Lipkin; trainer Joe Milkovich