Boston’s Brad Marchand scores the winning goal in the overtime after faking out Montreal goalie Jake Allen in Montreal on Monday. Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press via AP

MONTREAL — Brad Marchand scored his second goal of the game 34 seconds into overtime to give the Boston Bruins a 3-2 win over the Montreal Canadiens on Monday night.

Connor Clifton had a goal and an assist and Erik Haula had two assists for Boston. Jeremy Swayman, a former UMaine goalie, stopped 26 shots.

Joel Armia and Denis Savard scored for Montreal, and Jake Allen finished with 43 saves.

In overtime, the Bruins brought the puck up the ice and Haula sent a pass in the middle to Marchand. Marchand skated in, faked to his left and went to his right and backhanded it past Allen for his 27th of the season.

The Bruins scored first after a Montreal turnover. Haula sent the puck over to Marchand in the crease and he tapped it in at 9:21 of the first period.

Savard tied it at 8:49 of the second on a delayed penalty advantage in his first game back from an ankle injury when his backhand shot from the high slot deflected off Boston’s Derek Forbort and past Swayman.

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Montreal’s Alexander Romanov was called for tripping, giving the Bruin a power play in the final seconds of the second period. Marchand tried to send both teams to the second intermission with a one-timer but Allen robbed him with a glove save.

The Canadiens then got a short-handed goal at 1:13 of the third as Armia took the puck away from Charlie McAvoy in the neutral zone and scored on a breakaway.

Clifton tied it with just under 3 minutes remaining in regulation as he controlled Craig Smith’s pass with his skate before beating Allen for his second of the season.

NOTES: Jake DeBrusk agreed a two-year, $8 million contract extension hours before the NHL trade deadline, an abrupt change in direction for a player who had requested a trade and been shopped around for months.

General Manager Don Sweeney said conversations about DeBrusk continued with teams until the 3 p.m. deadline, but having him signed for two more years gave the team more options and sends a signal to him that he’s valued.

“We could have moved him prior to the deadline. We could revisit this in the summer time,” Sweeney said. “He could also go forward – most importantly – with just playing hockey and realizing he’s a big part of our team.”

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DeBrusk, 25, has 15 goals and 11 assists this season. In his five-year NHL career, he has 82 goals and 78 assists.

“The impact he can have on a hockey club, I think we believe in,” Sweeney said. “I sent a clear message to Jake, and he sent one to us, that he just wants to play hockey. The bottom line is, he knows he’s an important part and if he plays to his capability, he’s going to help us out.”

Two days after acquiring defenseman Hampus Lindholm from Anaheim and one day after signing him to an eight-year contract extension, the Bruins made another move to shore up the defense, acquiring Josh Brown from Ottawa. Boston also gets a conditional seventh-round draft pick in exchange for sending Zach Senyshyn and a fifth-rounder to the Senators.

Brown, 28, has six assists this season while averaging 13:59 in ice time. Sweeney said he would have liked to add more depth on the blue line, which was one of Boston’s weaknesses during recent playoff runs.

“The bottom line is the war of attrition starts from now until when the Cup is presented,” Sweeney said. “And staying healthy’s a big part of that.”

Sweeney also said that captain Patrice Bergeron skated on Monday and remains on track to return for Thursday’s game against the Tampa Bay Lightning.

The Bruins biggest question for the playoffs is the goaltending tandem of Linus Ullmark and Jeremy Swayman, who have never started a playoff game. But Sweeney expressed confidence in the team’s chances in the postseason.

“Let’s just saddle up,” he said. “I think the guys are excited.”


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