Boston Bruins

Marchand scores with 22 seconds left, Bruins beat Flyers 3-2

Brad Marchand, celebrates his goal in the final minute of the third period. The Bruins topped the Flyers, 3-2. The Associated Press

BOSTON (AP) — Maybe Brad Marchand won’t be as surprised to find an ‘‘A’’ sewn on his jersey before the Boston Bruins’ next game.

Marchand delivered once again, this time as a surprise alternate captain, scoring with 22 seconds left in the third period to lift Boston over the Philadelphia Flyers 3-2 on Thursday night.

‘‘I think it’s just a product of everybody doing their job the right way and keeping it simple,’’ said Marchand, who has scored the winner in three straight during Boston’s five-game winning streak.

Marchand and David Pastrnak both swiped at the rebound off a shot by Zdeno Chara, and the puck slowly trickled behind goalie Alex Lyon. Marchand nudged it across the line for his 29th goal.

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‘‘I would have scored on that,’’ joked Boston goalie Tuukka Rask, who had 31 saves. ‘‘He’s a battler. He never quits on a play so it’s good that he gets rewarded.’’

Marchand was coming off a five-point night against Detroit on Tuesday, when he scored twice in regulation and then scored 34 seconds into overtime. He also scored Saturday in Boston’s 2-1 win at Montreal.

The Bruins improved to 5-0 since losing center Patrice Bergeron, the alternate captain who is out for a couple weeks with a broken right foot. Marchand said he was surprised to see before the game that the Bruins had given him the ‘‘A’’ for the evening, calling it an honor.

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‘‘I think we all have to carry the load a little bit. I think we’re all feeling that,’’ Marchand said.

Chara and Pastrnak had two assists each, and Riley Nash and Brian Gionta also scored for Boston, which won despite getting outshot 33-27 by the slumping Flyers.

Jakub Voracek and Jori Lehtera scored for Philadelphia, which is 0-4-1 in its last five and is clinging to third place in the Metropolitan Division. Coming off a 5-2 loss at home the night before against Pittsburgh, Philadelphia coach Dave Hakstol said he was pleased with the Flyers’ 24-hour turnaround.

‘‘Our guys worked their tails off from start to finish. It’s hard when you have nothing to show for it at the end,’’ Hakstol said. ‘‘We took a big step in the right direction. We got back to who we are tonight.’’

Nash tapped in a rebound after Pastrnak’s wraparound attempt at 9:14 of the first to tie it at 1, then Gionta scored on a breakaway with 26 seconds left in the period to give Boston a 2-1 lead. It was the first goal as a Bruin for Gionta, who signed with Boston as a free agent serving as captain for the U.S. Olympic team.

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‘‘We stuck with it and obviously found a way late to get one. Those are the games you need to win coming down the stretch,’’ said Gionta, who has a goal and three assists in four games for the Bruins.

Lehtera tied it on a short-handed goal 7:21 into the second. The Flyers took an early lead on Voracek’s power-play goal 1:38 into the game, just nine seconds into a double-minor called on Kevan Miller for high sticking. Nolan Patrick set up Voracek’s one-timer from the right side with a backward pass through his legs.

Notes: Bruins F David Backes sat out the first of a three-game suspension for a hit on Detroit’s Frans Nielsen on Tuesday night. … The Bruins shut out the Flyers 3-0 on Dec. 2 in the first of three meetings this season. … The Bruins have owned the Flyers over the last few years, going 10-1-2 in the previous 13 games entering Thursday. … Gionta and Simmonds needed to be separated after exchanging words at the end of the first period. … Claude Giroux’s assist on Philadelphia’s first goal moved him four points behind Eric Lindros (659) for fifth in Flyers’ scoring history.

UP NEXT

Flyers: Host Winnipeg on Saturday.

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Bruins: Host Chicago on Saturday, wrapping up a six-game homestand.