BOSTON – The Boston Bruins kept up the pressure after pouncing on Philadelphia for two quick goals in Game 3. It’s a lesson they hope will help them finish off the Flyers and avoid a repeat of last year’s historical collapse.

Zdeno Chara and David Krejci scored in the opening 63 seconds, and the Bruins added two more goals in a 95-second span in the second period on Wednesday night to beat the Flyers 5-1 and take a 3-0 lead in the Eastern Conference semifinals.

It’s the same position Boston was in last year before losing four straight games — and the series — to the Flyers.

“We’re happy tonight, but we can’t get too high in the playoffs,” said Patrice Bergeron, who helped set up Chara’s goal just 30 seconds into the game — his 10th assist of the postseason. “We’re going to celebrate tonight, but we’re going to get right back to work tomorrow and make sure we work Friday, because Philly is not going to quit.”

Tim Thomas made 37 saves for Boston, which hasn’t reached the conference finals since 1992. Whoever wins this series will have home-ice advantage against the fifth-seeded Tampa Bay Lightning with a spot in the Stanley Cup finals on the line.

The Lightning completed a four-game sweep of top-seeded Washington with a 5-3 win Wednesday night.

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Brian Boucher stopped 16 shots for the Flyers before he was replaced with 4:46 left in the second period when Daniel Paille and Nathan Horton scored to make it 4-0. Sergei Bobrovsky made seven saves the rest of the way.

Andrej Meszaros spoiled Thomas’ shutout bid with 3:34 left in the middle period. The Flyers pulled the goalie with over 2 minutes left, but back-to-back penalties gave the Bruins a 5-on-3 advantage. Chara put a slap shot in with 1:22 left for Boston’s first power-play goal of the playoffs.

“When we got up in the series, and in the game, we want to make it hard on them,” Bruins forward Brad Marchand said. “We want them to know that it’s going to be tough, and they’re going to have to work their butt off and really sacrifice their bodies if they even want to have a chance back in the game or the series.”

One year after watching their 3-0 series lead disappear, the Bruins again moved one game from sweeping Philadelphia in the conference semis. This year they have a chance to do it at home, with Game 4 on Friday night at the TD Garden.

A victory in any of the next three games would help erase the sting of last year’s collapse, when Boston led 3-0 in games before Philadelphia came back to tie the series. In Game 7, the Bruins took a 3-0 lead but lost 4-3 and the Flyers went on to the Stanley Cup finals.

“We were not quite as prepared as we should have been for what they did at the beginning of the game,” Flyers chairman and founder Ed Snider said in rare postgame comments in the locker room. “I never think this team doesn’t fight. … Last year we showed fight throughout the playoffs. (It’s) very much the same squad. They’re not ever going to quit.”

The Bruins came back to Boston after taking the first two games in Philadelphia to steal home-ice advantage and jumped right on the Flyers.

Boucher made the initial save on Boston’s first charge, but the puck wound up behind the net. Bergeron dug it out and passed it in front to Chara, who slapped it into the net just 30 seconds in. Only 33 seconds later, with the crowd still celebrating the first goal, Horton helped set up Krejci to make it 2-0.

The goals were the fastest allowed by the Flyers at the start of a playoff game in franchise history. It was the fastest a team had scored two goals to start a playoff game since the Red Wings tallied twice in 61 seconds against Phoenix in 1998.


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