Haron,
I wrote a long response to this earlier today, but lost it when I was interrupted by a call and my wife took over the keyboard!!
Any single gain active device which gives current and voltage amplification, such as a plate loaded triode, will invert phase. This is inevitable. To preserve phase you must use a two terminal hybrid configuration, such as a complementary feedback pair, or two cascade common cathode/emitter gain blocks.
So, unless you use two triode sections, you will invert phase. The cathode follower (input at grid, output at cathode) and the common grid (input at cathode, output at plate) preserve phase, but the former has no gain (in fact voltage gain is less than one, though current gain is very very high) and the latter has punishingly low input impedance, requiring more drive than a big block Chevy to crank it over. This latter circuit is used in RF and Microwave technology because it's very, very fast.
Cheers,
Hugh