Rasmus Ristolainen’s stock trending up, Ronnie Attard’s down after Flyers’ preseason loss to Canadiens
Attard finished the 5-0 loss a minus-3 and had several turnovers. Ristolainen looked healthy and reliable on the blue line, playing alongside his partner from last season Egor Zamula.
The Flyers headed north of the border for the second of seven preseason games ahead of the start of the 2024-25 season.
But featuring a lineup with a good mix of veterans and players with a few NHL games under their belt — and several with Quebec ties — the Flyers lost 5-0 to the Montreal Canadiens.
Here are three players who impressed and three who did not.
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Three down
Ronnie Attard
The defenseman is already a long shot to earn a spot on the stacked Flyers blue line, and his game Monday night did not help him plead his case.
Attard played 15 games for the Flyers in 2021-22, two the next season, and was a late call-up last season when Jamie Drysdale and Nick Seeler were out of the lineup. He played in 12 games and had two assists to up his NHL point total to six (two goals, four assists).
At 25 years old and a restricted free agent after this season, he had a minus-3 rating on the night along with several turnovers and misplays. On the Canadiens’ first goal, he was stripped of the puck inside his own blue line by Jared Davidson, who fed Luke Tuch for the score.
Later in the second period, he turned the puck over as he tried to chip it up the boards. Montreal got a good chance on net and Attard’s defensive partner Louie Belpedio was forced into taking a penalty to prevent a goal. In the third, he went to pinch off Josh Anderson in the neutral zone but released him too early and Anderson ended up scoring as he streaked to the net, giving the Canadiens a 4-0 lead.
Cal Petersen
Petersen is an intriguing goalie. Last season, the Lehigh Valley Phantoms rode /the former Los Angeles Kings No. 1. in the playoffs and he was impressive, even posting a 22-save shutout against the eventual Calder Cup champion Hershey Bears in the second round. But when he steps into an NHL crease, Petersen struggles.
The soon-to-be-30-year-old came on in relief for Eetu Mäkiniemi midway through the second period. Mäkiniemi is in camp on a professional tryout contract and played a cool, calm game stopping 11 of 12 shots. Petersen looked good initially, sliding across and making a big-time save on a Patrik Laine one-timer.
But in the third period, the wheels fell off. Was it all his fault? No. Attard lost Anderson on the fourth goal and nobody tied up Alex Barré-Boulet as he camped out in front for the fifth one. But Petersen should have had David Savard’s shot from the right face-off circle and Emil Heineman’s quick shot from the slot. Petersen, who surrendered four goals on 11 shots overall, didn’t inspire a ton of confidence in the Flyers’ goaltending depth behind Sam Ersson and Ivan Fedotov.
Oscar Eklind
A number of guys didn’t leave much of an impression in Montreal but newcomer Eklind, who was signed as a veteran free agent in Apri out of Sweden, is fighting for a spot among the forward group and needs to be more noticeable. As Hall of Famer Brendan Shanahan once said, he wanted to be remembered for being involved. Eklind, 26, needs to be involved if he’s to make a push for the roster.
A big hulking winger at 6-foot-4, 220 pounds, he was throwing his body around during scrimmages but wasn’t doing much of that on Monday. He finished minus-1 in more than 13 minutes of ice time.
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Three up
Rasmus Ristolainen
No matter what Ristolainen did in this game, just having him back on the ice was big for the Flyers. The last time the blueliner suited up in orange and black was back on Feb. 10 due to multiple surgeries “in the same place,” including a repair to a ruptured triceps tendon in April.
He told reporters Thursday, “I feel good. I’m fully healthy and ready to go.” On Monday, He showed it.
He may have had some rust to shake off but Ristolainen was reliable on the blue line, playing alongside his partner from last season Egor Zamula. In a goalless first period, he had three shots, four hits, three blocked shots, while the pairing finished the game as the only players on the Flyers who did not have a negative plus-minus. Zamula played a game-high 23 minutes, 34 seconds, and Ristolanen was right behind him at 21:38.
Anthony Richard
Signed to a two-year, two-way deal this summer, Richard flashed the speed that he has been showing off in scrimmages at the Flyers Training Center.
A veteran AHLer, Richard does have NHL experience with 24 games under his belt between the Nashville Predators, Canadiens, and Boston Bruins. In the first period especially, he controlled the puck well and created space and chances for his linemates. He was also on the Flyers’ first power-play unit that was busy in the opening frame with three opportunities.
Tyson Foerster
Foerster seemed eager to shoot often and from anywhere in this game. Skating on a line with Richard and Sean Couturier, according to Natural Stat Trick, the trio had a Corsi For percentage of 76.47 during five-on-five action. The speed of Richard certainly helped open up the ice for Foerster, who finished the game with three shots on goal and eight shot attempts, three of which were on the power play.
» READ MORE: Sean Couturier and two other Flyers are healthy after surgery. They welcome the start of camp.
Breakaways
Montreal native and Phantoms coach Ian Laperrière served as the Flyers bench boss. His starting line was comprised of guys with Quebec ties in Nic Deslauriers (LaSalle), Jacob Gaucher (Longueuil), and Elliot Desnoyers (Saint-Hyacinthe). … The Flyers’ power play went 0-for-4 while the penalty kill was 3-for-3.
Up next
The Flyers play their first home preseason game on Thursday when Patrick Roy and the New York Islanders visit the Wells Fargo Center (7 p.m. on NBCSP).