But that all changed on Thursday night as Smith broke through for his third career hat trick to help pace the Bruins to a 5-2 victory over the Golden Knights at T-Mobile Arena.
"Obviously road wins are huge, too. Anytime you get three, you'll take when you can get them," said Smith.
Smith's first two goals were the result of some cohesive work from the B's third line as he finished off nifty feeds from Trent Frederic and Charlie Coyle, respectively. The trio has worked well together over the past few weeks, though they had not been rewarded on the scoresheet consistently before Thursday night.
"They're spending time in the O-zone. We had a good, good meeting this morning with them about something where they can start building a little more attacking mentality," said Bruins coach Bruce Cassidy. "It happened to work tonight. And good for them, because they made a mistake the other night [in Anaheim].
"They've been a really good starting line for us, done a real good job setting the tone, so we don't want to lose that and don't want to punish them for one decision and they came through for us."
Cassidy went on to say that the triumvirate reminds him of 2019 when Boston boasted a stellar third line of Coyle, Marcus Johansson, and Danton Heinen that helped lead the Bruins to the Stanley Cup Final.
"It takes me back to the [2019] playoffs, the Coyle and Jo-Jo trades years ago where we had three lines going and offensively our fourth line was built to kill penalties. Give us energy. We have that," said Cassidy. "And now if, yeah, if that line can generate, we've become dangerous like that offensively."