Brendan Smith says his mother Deirdre has FOMO, so there was no way she was going to miss Thursday night's game against Philadelphia at Prudential Center.
Despite his insistence that she didn't need to be there, he knew deep down his words weren't going to change her mind. She wasn't going to miss watching her son play his 600th NHL game.
"My mother, she won't miss anything, she's got FOMO," Smith said, the morning of his 600th career game. "So, she won't miss it. She won't miss any milestone whether it's (younger brother) Riley or myself or my older brother, Rory. For her to not even take what I had to say, like (telling her to) stay home, and make sure that she got here, it speaks volumes."
At first, he didn't feel like there was anything for his mom to miss. There was, in his mind, nothing to make a big deal of. What were 600 games, when he could have played more? It didn't feel like something he wanted to celebrate, which in itself felt unusual for the 33-year-old. Smith is always an optimist, but he's also a realist, and suddenly he was facing an unfamiliar emotion.
"I'm kind of, for this topic, I'm sometimes more upset than the positive way of looking at 600," he said. "But that's been due to injuries and lockouts and whatnot. But I think that through my mom and my wife's outlook is, everybody looks at it like that somebody who's even on 1,000 games could say I wish I had 1,400, so I like how they kind of helped me put that in perspective because my mom came into town for this game, which is awesome that she would do that."
Don't misconstrue things, he knows how fortunate he is to have played all these years in the National Hockey League, living out a dream, to compete against the very best, but there was something in him that initially struggled to see 600 games as something to celebrate.
In his mind, there were so many what-ifs.
Brendan Smith's 600 Game Journey | FEATURE
Smith had an uncharacteristic negative view of 600 games until he opened his mind to the big picture




















