MONTREAL — Defenseman Victor Mete scored twice and the Montreal Canadiens beat the Boston Bruins 5-4 on Tuesday night.

Ben Chiarot scored the winner in the third period and Tomas Tatar and Paul Byron also scored for the Canadiens (8-5-2), who have won 4 of 5. Jeff Petry had two assists.

David Pastrnak, Connor Clifton, Anders Bjork and Sean Kuraly scored for the Bruins (11-2-2), who had a six-game win streak halted.

It was hardly a goaltending battle, with Carey Price stopping 21 of 25 shots and Tuukka Rask allowing five goals on 31 shots.

The Canadiens took a 4-3 lead into the third period, but Boston overcame its third deficit of the game when Kuraly surprised Price on a wraparound at 3:03.

Chiarot gave Montreal the win on a wrist shot from the faceoff circle at 9:06, just minutes after the Bruins had a goal overturned for offside.

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Boston came into the game with one regulation loss this season, on Oct. 10 in Colorado against the Avalanche.

The Bruins were playing the second game of a back-to-back and it showed. They trailed 3-1 in the first period.

The Canadiens scored 1:13 into the game when Mete fired the rebound of a shot by Petry under Rask’s glove for his second of the season.

Pastrnak scored the tying goal 6 seconds into a Boston power play, a one-timer at 14:55. Pastrnak, the NHL scoring leader, extended his career-high point streak to 13 games.

Montreal was back in it two minutes later. A breakout pass by Brendan Gallagher led to a two-on-one with Tatar scoring on a shot off the post.

After Artturi Lehkonen forced a turnover, Byron scored between Rask’s pads to make it 3-1 for the Canadiens at 17:16 with his first goal of the year.

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The Bruins clawed back in the second period.

The Canadiens failed to clear their zone and Clifton made them pay with his first NHL goal at 7:17 on Boston’s first shot of the period to make it 3-2.

The Bruins tied the score at 18:13 when Bjork scored on a loose puck in the crease. Mete gave Montreal the 4-3 lead 42 seconds later with a shot from the point.

NOTES: Montreal’s Claude Julien coached his 1,200th NHL game, and Bruins captain Zdeno Chara played his 1,500th game. Bell Centre fans gave Chara, who is usually booed in Montreal, a rare ovation for the accomplishment. The 42-year-old is the 21st player to reach that mark … Boston had won five straight games in Montreal.