Jagr reinjured his groin in the Flyers' 4-1 win over the host New Jersey Devils on Jan. 21.
He said that he did some skating during the all-star break and that he would know more about playing in Tuesday's game at the Wells Fargo Center against the Winnipeg Jets after the morning skate.
"I don't feel any pain," Jagr said after practice. "Like I said before, the game is totally different."
Van Riemsdyk has not played since a Jan. 12 game at the New York Islanders. Briere's most recent game was the Jan. 21 encounter with the Devils. Van Riemsdyk and Briere were unavailable for comment.
Rinaldo said he originally suffered a neck injury on Jan. 14 in Nashville.
"I came back [to] practice the day after, shouldn't have practiced - pulled it again," Rinaldo said. "Took a couple days off, played in New Jersey, shouldn't have played."
He said the rest during the break was greatly beneficial.
"I went back home and regrouped, and I feel great right now."
Snider's plaudits. Flyers chairman Ed Snider gave 24-year-old Claude Giroux the highest compliment by comparing him to the person considered the greatest Flyer of all.
"I tell everybody he reminds me of Bobby Clarke at a similar age," Snider said before Monday's Philadelphia Sports Writers Association Dinner, where Giroux received the Outstanding Philadelphia Pro Athlete Award. "He looks like he did, acts like he did, played like he did. It's kind of exciting."
Snider said it did not take long to see that Giroux, now a two-time all-star, would be a special player.
"I remember watching him the first 10-15 games and telling guys we have a future superstar there," Snider said. "He just does things a lot of players just can't do."