The Montreal Canadiens dropped a highly entertaining 5-4 shootout loss to the Philadelphia Flyers on Tuesday night at the Bell Centre. The Canadiens rallied from an early 3-0 deficit to take a 4-3 lead in the second period. The Flyers tied the game in the third before grabbing the extra point in the shootout.Kirby Dach scored twice for the Montreal Canadiens, with Nick Suzuki (PPG) and Ivan Demidov (PPG) getting the others for the Habs. Meanwhile, Bobby Brink scored twice for the Flyers, with Cam York (PPG), and Nikita Grebenkin getting the other tallies for Philadelphia.So, here’s a look at the three least impressive Montreal Canadiens players from their shootout loss to the Philadelphia Flyers on Tuesday night.3 least impressive Montreal Canadiens players from SO to Philadelphia Flyers#3 Jayden StrubleJayden Struble didn’t have his best game of the season on Tuesday night despite picking up an assist in over 15 minutes of ice time. Struble looked overmatched at times, while making less-than-stellar plays at times.A good example came on the Flyers’ first goal of the game. Here’s the replay as shown on the Flyers’ official X account:During the sequence, Struble picked up the puck along the boards, but was unable to clear the zone. The Flyers picked up the puck and got the chance to score the game’s first goal. Meanwhile, Struble stood at the top of the faceoff circle, puck-watching.The early defensive lapses cost the Habs three goals in less than eight minutes.#2 Arber XhekajThe Montreal Canadiens enforcer was once again an afterthought on the team’s blue line. He it the ice for just over 10 minutes across 15 shifts. He was a minus-1 while failing to get a shot on goal or block a shot.The highlight of Xhekaj’s night came during a third-period tilt with Flyers’ strongman Nic Deslauriers.#1 Samuel MontembeaultThe Montreal Canadiens' starting netminder had a decent night on paper. He stopped 38 of 42 shots. However, he allowed three goals on the first five shots of the game, putting his team in an early hole.While he settled down enough to give his team enough time to recover, Montembeault did not pick up his team when most needed. A good example was Grebenkin’s third-period goal. Montembeault had lost his stick behind the net, allowing the Flyers to capitalize on the situation.Then, Monteambeault gave up the winner in the shootout, surrendering the goal to Trevor Zegras in the first round. Montembeault’s overall play should raise some red flags, as the Canadiens should have won that game.The Canadiens will have a chance to get back on track as they take on the New Jersey Devils at the Prudential Center on Thursday night.