But the cries of "Smit-ty! Smit-ty!" thundered through Scotiabank Saddledome early in the second period on Thursday, the Calgary Flames goalie making two breathtaking glove saves on the same Colorado Avalanche power play with each team looking for its first goal.
Thanks to those huge, timely saves, along with a third-period assist on forward Matthew Tkachuk's second goal of the game, Smith was instrumental in
the Flames' 4-0 victory in Game 1
of the best-of-7 Western Conference First Round.
Game 2 is at Calgary on Saturday (10:30 p.m. ET; NBCSN, CBC, SN, TVAS, ALT).
RELATED: [Complete Flames vs. Avalanche series coverage]
Smith made 26 saves for his fourth career Stanley Cup Playoff shutout, his previous three coming with the Phoenix Coyotes in 2011-12. On Thursday, he became the first goalie in Flames history to register a shutout in a series-opening game and the 12th goalie in NHL history to go at least 2,500 days between playoff games; his previous one was on May 22, 2012, a 4-3 Coyotes season-ending loss to the Los Angeles Kings in Game 5 of the Western Conference Final.
The cheers Thursday were music to Smith's ears, the 37-year-old having often heard derisive chants from Flames fans this season, enduring struggles splitting the workload with David Rittich.
Smith ranked 37th of 41 NHL goalies with 35 or more games played this season with an .898 save percentage; his 2.72 goals-against average ranked him 18th. Even if his game sharpened late in the season, there was great debate among many as to who should get the Game 1 start.
But there wasn't a discouraging word heard during Smith's tour de force Game 1 performance, one as good as you'll see in the cauldron of the playoffs.
"It felt a lot better than the other," Smith said with a grin of hearing his name chanted enthusiastically. "I haven't heard anything quite like that before in my 13 years in this league."
Smith's assist on Tkachuk's empty-net goal that iced the game with 2:45 to play was the final touch on a near-perfect night for him; and no, he insisted, having worn a mask that paid tribute to Flames goaltending legend Mike Vernon, he had no designs on trying to score into the net that had been vacated by Avalanche goalie Philipp Grubauer for a sixth skater.