WASHINGTON — No one can diss Karri Ramo for being dead set on not starting up where he left off.

Where he left off, after all, would be back on April 9th, 2009, and a 4-2 loss. At the hands — insert irony here — of the Washington Capitals.

“Well, it’s a new start for my NHL career, I guess,” hedged the rangy Finnish puck-repeller, who Thursday relaunches his North American dream when the Calgary Flames kick off their long-delayed rebuild against Alexander Ovechkin and the 2013-2014 edition of the Caps at the Verizon Centre, “but my hockey career is just continuing.

“I don’t have to do anything different here. It’s the same game.”

Ramo’s Lightning career ended inauspiciously following that loss to Washington, mopping up the last 25 minutes and 51 seconds for a shell-shocked Mike McKenna in a 6-2 drubbing at Atlanta two nights later.

But the April 9th game represents Ramo’s final start before fleeing to the Kontinental Hockey League.

A more pleasant entry in his personal memory banks, undoubtedly, would be his first NHL start, Dec. 20th, 2007.

“It was,” recalled Ramo, “against the Maple Leafs, in Tampa Bay. We won 2-1. That was a while back. I’ve played a lot of hockey since then but I remember. Of course.”

For now, Maritimer Joey MacDonald rides the pine here and Reto Berra preps in Abbotsford while Ramo, who the Flames invested $5.8 million in over two seasons, endeavours to land the job with a solid first interview.

Sorry, but a 99-48-22 record, .923 save percentage and itsy-bitsy 2.01 GAA over three seasons in the ‘K’ isn’t going to have Alexander Ovechkin petrified with dread.

“This is going to be a good challenge for him,’’ said coach Bob Hartley of Ramo facing up to the offensively-gifted Capitals. “We talked with Karri yesterday. We talked with Mac. Obviously the discussion was different from one to the other because they’re two different cases.

“With Karri, he was in Tampa as a young guy, didn’t really know about North American hockey and about the NHL, so it was new. Now he got a taste and I think that he can really use his experience in Tampa to benefit his stay over here.

“And they’re (both) well aware that Reto Berra is a one-hour flight away from coming back so the battle is not won for no one.”

That uncertainty, the hovering threat of replacement,

“You have to play well if you want to play,” he reasoned with a well-whaddaya-expect? shrug. “Being a goalie there’s a lot of pressure. I don’t think it’s different here than anywhere else.

“It was always a goal to get back (to the NHL) at some point. It (seems) a little faster. Everything happens a little faster. You have to be ready, all the time.”

Does he expect the nerves to be ’a-jangling as the finals strains of the Star Spangled Banner fade away around 7:10 local time?

“You have certain feeling for all games,” is the reply. “But that’s what makes it fun. You’re always really excited to play. At the end of the game, it’s just a game, another day.

“You can’t be afraid of mistakes.”

The Caps may have dropped their season opener at the United Centre but a quick roster check provides plenty to be anxious about. Newbie Mikhail Grabovski rang up a hat trick, Ovechkin notched a pair of points and the PP hit for four goals. They’ll be smarting from the loss, jacked by their fans and eager to atone in the home opener.