The second day of the 2014 NHL Draft is complete following seven rounds of picks and a flurry of trades. The Maple Leafs may not have had a pick until the third round, but they have made the biggest move of the second day of the Draft, dealing defenceman Carl Gunnarsson and a fourth-round pick in the draft to the St. Louis Blues in exchange for defenceman Roman Polak. They would open their Draft day by selecting Rinat Valiev from Kootenay Ice of the WHL in the third round. The Leafs then selected 511 forward John Piccinich in the fourth round and forward Dakota Joshua one round later, at 128th overall. The Maple Leafs drafted American forward Nolan Vesey in the sixth round (158th overall) before selecting Swedish forward Pierre Engvall with their final pick of the draft, 188th overall in the seventh round. The Calgary Flames traded their third-round selection, 83rd overall, to the Chicago Blackhawks for forward Brandon Bollig. The Flames started their second day by selecting Charlottetown goaltender Mason McDonald before taking big Oshawa Generals winger Hunter Smith at 54th overall. The Flames selected defenceman Brandon Hickey of the Alberta Junior Hockey League 64th overall. The Flames selected forward Austin Carroll with their final pick in the draft, 184th overall. The Vancouver Canucks selected goaltender Thatcher Demko to start their second round, before continuing their busy weekend by trading the 50th pick in the Draft to the Los Angeles Kings for forward Linden Vey. The Canucks also selected Russian defenceman Nikita Tryamkin at 66th overall, before drafting defenceman Gustav Forsling with the 126th overall selection in the fifth round. In the sixth round, the Canucks selected forward Kyle Pettit. The Ottawa Senators got their draft started in the second round, selecting Andreas Englund, a Swedish defenceman at 40th overall. The Senators then selected defenceman Miles Gendron at 70th overall with their second pick of the draft. The team later selected forward Shane Eiserman from the United States Hockey League in the fourth round. The Senators ended their draft by selecting Carleton Place, Ont. native defenceman Kelly Summers and forward Francis Perron with consecutive seventh-round picks, 189th and 190th overall. The Winnipeg Jets entered the trade action, sending the 159th pick in the draft and goaltender Eddie Pasquale to the Washington Capitals for 164th overall selection, 192nd pick and seventh round pick in 2015. The Jets first pick of the day came in the third round, with the selection of American defenceman Jack Glover at 69th overall. The Jets selected forward Chase De Leo from the Portland Winterhawks of the WHL and defenceman Nelson Nogier from the Saskatoon Blades of the WHL with the 99th and 101st overall picks, respectively. In the fifth round, the Jets selected forward Clinston Franklin from the United States Hockey League. The Jets used the 164th overall pick on Russian forward Pavel Kraskovsky. The Jets selected forward Matt Utaski with the 192nd overall pick, acquired from Washington. The Montreal Canadiens selected defenceman Brett Lernout from the Swift Current Broncos of the Western Hockey League with the 73rd overall pick. Montreal selected defenceman Nikolas Koberstein 125th overall and forward Daniel Audette at 147th overall in the fifth round. The Canadiens drafted goaltender Hayden Hawkey in the sixth round with the 177th overall selection. The final pick by a Canadian team in the draft, the Canadiens selected forward Jake Evans of the Ontario Junior Hockey League. The Oilers first pick of the day didnt come until the fourth round, when the team selected Swedish defenceman William Lagesson with the 91st overall pick. The Oilers also selected goaltender Zachary Nagelvoort in fourth round, with the 111st overall pick. In the fifth round, the Oilers drafted American forward Liam Coughlin. With their sixth-round pick, the Oilers selected forward Tyler Vesel from the USHL. The Oilers used their final pick of the day to select Val-dOr goaltender Keven Bouchard with the 183rd pick of the draft. Carolina Hurricanes Jerseys .C. - Heat coach Erik Spoelstra says Danny Granger, Chris Andersen and Udonis Haslem are still not ready to play and will miss Wednesday nights game against the Charlotte Hornets. Justin Faulk Jersey . Canadas 5-1 loss to Finland in the semifinal ranks as the tournaments most-watched game with a record 2.7 million viewers, the largest ever for a World Juniors game played outside of North America, and winning Saturday as the most-watched program on Canadian television. http://www.hurricanessale.com/authentic-...ricanes-jersey/. A player confirmed to TSN on the condition of anonymity that he received his ballot yesterday. Another confirms hes been told to expect his shortly. "The unions executive committee insists a strike vote does not mean were pushing away from the table," the player said. "But we want the league to know were serious about our position. Custom Carolina Hurricanes Jerseys . And former Maple Leafs coach Ron Wilson certainly knows his pain. "Its pretty hard to coach there without allowing some of these things to kind of affect you," Wilson told TSN Hockey Insider Pierre LeBrun in his ESPN.PHOENIX -- Gerald Green came to the NBA straight from high school with an abundance of raw talent that never translated into a big-time pro career. Then came his off-season trade to Phoenix -- his seventh team in seven seasons -- and he seems finally to have found a home. On Thursday night, especially in one remarkable quarter, Green was as good as it gets against one of the best teams in the NBA. He scored 25 of his career-high 41 points in the third quarter and the Suns erased a 16-point deficit to beat the Oklahoma City Thunder 128-122. "I havent done nothing in this league," Green said. "Every day I come into practice or come into a game, Im just trying to prove myself." Markieff Morris added 24 points, including two free throws with 24.4 seconds to play. Goran Dragic scored 22, including six of the Suns final 12 points after Oklahoma City led 118-116. Russell Westbrook scored a season-high 36 for the Thunder, who would have pulled a half-game ahead of Indiana for the NBAs best record with a victory. Kevin Durant added 34. Greens outburst fell one point shy of a Suns record for most points in a quarter set by Stephon Marbury in 2002. His career-best eight 3-pointers also was one shy of the franchise mark. "I love the way hes playing right now," Suns coach Jeff Hornacek said. "We knew he could shoot the ball. Theres not too many guys that can get on a roll like that. The thing that makes him unique (is) some guys you can get up into and maybe challenge a shot a little harder. But Gerald just jumps over everybody. Hes making shots that other guys cant get that high to shoot." It was Phoenixs second 40-point performance in four games. Dragic had 40 against New Orleans on Friday. Green set a career high for the second time this season. He had 36 at Denver on Feb. 18. In the third quarter, Green was 7 of 11, including 6 of 6 on 3s. Fouled on a 3-pointer with 6.9 seconds left, Green missed one of the three free throws or he would have tied Marburys franchise record. "I was just feeling it, man," he said. "Guys were finding me in transition. I was just being real aggressivve.dddddddddddd... Im not afraid to take big shots. Im not afraid to take any type of shot. " The Thunder had won three in a row, but have lost four of seven. "We gave up 15 3s and we put them on the free throw line 39 times," Oklahoma City coach Scott Brooks said. "Youve got to get back. Weve been talking about it for about 10 days now. Youve got to get back in a defensive disposition when we play these teams who are small and fast and quick." Westbrook agreed. "Defensively, thats got to be our identity," he said. "We can score with the best of them, but weve got to be able to stop them." After trailing by as many as 16 in the quarter, the Suns scored the final 14 points of the third to lead 101-98 entering the fourth. The run reached 21-3 when Marcus Morris 3 put Phoenix up 108-101 with 9:34 to play. But Westbrook brought the Thunder back. He made three 3s, the last to tie it at 116 with 4:34 to play. Ibakas dunk put Oklahoma City back on top, 118-116, with 4:10 to go. Dragic tied it with a driving layup with 2:22 left, then his reverse layup gave the Suns a 118-116 lead with 2:02 left. He was fouled on the play but missed the free throw, one of 10 misses from the line by Phoenix. Oklahoma City was 19 of 19. Markieff Morris scored to make it 122-118 with 1:11 left, then Durant cut it to 122-120 with 1:01 to go. Dragics 16-footer boosted the lead to 124-120 with 45.9 seconds remaining. Durant scored again to make it 124-122 with 40.9 seconds left. But Morris made two free throws, then twin brother Marcus made two more with 5.6 seconds to go. Up by four at the half, Oklahoma City used a 13-3 surge to build a 96-80 lead on Caron Butlers fourth 3-pointer with 3:47 left in the third. Notes: The Suns were without centre Miles Plumlee for the second game in a row with a sprained shoulder. ... Phoenix G Eric Bledsoe is close to playing and could be back in any of the coming three games. ... The Thunder had won three in a row in Phoenix. ... Oklahoma Citys 41-point first quarter was its highest-scoring quarter of the season and the highest-scoring quarter for a Suns opponent. 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