Sports

CIS men's basketball: Carleton wins 5th consecutive title

The Carleton Ravens roared to their fifth consecutive Canadian university men's basketball title Sunday, thoroughly dismantling the cross-town rival Ottawa Gee-Gees 93-46.

Defeats cross-town rival Ottawa

Carleton Ravens win Men's CIS Basketball title

10 years ago
Duration 2:02
The Carleton Ravens defeat the Ottawa Gee Gees 93-46 on their way to a 5th consecutive title.

During a timeout huddle with four minutes to go in the Carleton Ravens' Canadian university basketball victory Sunday, an animated coach Dave Smart was screaming in the face of his star guard Philip Scrubb.

The Ravens were leading by 41 points at the time.

There is no mercy in the Carleton Ravens, who thoroughly dismantled cross-town rival Ottawa Gee-Gees 93-46 to capture their fifth consecutive CIS title, and 11th in 13 years.

And moments after the final buzzer sounded on his college career, Scrubb said the Ravens' relentless attitude is part of their M.O. It's what makes them so good.

"That's what makes (Smart) a great coach, he doesn't take any possession off. If we're not trying and we're up 40, that kind of speaks to our character," Scrubb said. "We want to focus on playing every possession like it's a one-point game, so he just expects the best from us."

Philip Scrubb poured in 28 points, while Thomas Scrubb added 20, capping spectacular college careers for the brothers from Richmond, B.C. They became just the fifth and sixth players in CIS history to win five CIS titles.

The late-game scene on Carleton's bench, Smart said, is how he's instilled fierceness in his star player.

"Phil and I since Day 1, we've been very close, and . . . we always talked about the fact that me without him would be horrible, and him without my competitiveness might be horrible too," Smart said. "So since Day 1, he can't give me his talent, but I can hopefully teach him how to be insanely competitive.

"That's the one thing he needs, he needs to always want to step on people's throats. It sounds bad but the bottom line is, he wants to play at the highest level, and if you look at the Chris Pauls, the Russell Westbrooks, the Kyle Lowrys of the world, they're mean guys when they walk on the floor, Phil's not a mean guy. He needs to become a crazy competitor."

Philip Scrubb shot 10-for-16 in his CIS finale, dropping shots from all over the floor, including one spectacular circus shot he threw up while falling out of bounds. He also dished out 10 assists.

Scrubb brothers receive ovation 

Thomas Scrubb grabbed a game-high 12 rebounds. Smart subbed the brothers out of the game with a minute left to a standing ovation.

"It was a little bit (emotional), yeah, just thinking this is my last game and this is the last time I'll be on the court with these guys," Philip said.

Moe Ismail scored 10 points to top the Gee-Gees, who played the fourth quarter without James Derouin, this season's CIS coach of the year. Derouin picked up his second technical with just under a minute to play in the third and was ejected.

That's the kind of day it was for Ottawa, who split their two games with Carleton in the regular season.

The game was played before an energized crowd of 3,917 fans at Ryerson's Mattamy Athletic Centre that included noisy sections of students from each school. One red-clad Ravens supporter held aloft a sign that said, simply: Raven Domination.

"They play hard right to the end, that's their motto," Derouin said of Carleton. "Whoever they're playing doesn't matter, the score doesn't matter. I wasn't out here so I didn't see the last 12 minutes unfortunately. But no, that's how they play and that's how Dave coaches. And I expect nothing less when we play them."

The Ravens topped the Gee-Gees 79-67 in last year's final.

The host Ryerson Rams won the bronze medal early Sunday, defeating the Canada West champion Victoria Vikes 82-68.