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Unbelievable, like stopping another 28 shots in the team’s home opener, a 6-3 win over the Winnipeg Jets.

Unbelievable, like posting a 43-save effort in his first shutout of 2017-18 in a 2-0 victory at the Honda Center where the Flames hadn’t won a regular-season game since 2004. (For that, alone, he probably could run in Calgary’s mayoral race and win).

“I’m not sure if I can see anything in particular when he’s on,” Stone continued. “But when he’s getting all of those shots, he seems to get better and better.

“He just gets in that battle zone, and he wants to make those saves. He just takes it to another level on games like that.”

And three games in, there’s certainly a lot to like.

To the surprise of no one, Smith took Tuesday off for “maintenance” as the Flames brought out a shooter-tutor in his place at the L.A. Kings practice facility, the Toyota Sports Center, in El Segundo, Calif.

In the final 14.8 seconds of Monday’s game, he appeared to jam his left arm in a goalmouth scramble but hung on to secure the victory.

Smith insisted everything was fine.

“A tough game … I want to get the mind right and get ready for (Wednesday),” he said. “There’s always little bumps and bruises that come out of every game but nothing that’s going to keep me out of the lineup.”

The Flames, however, are aiming to limit the amount of traffic Smith gets in front of him.

In an ironic twist, the Flames are second in the NHL for shots allowed (an average of 38.7) through the first three games of the season, sitting behind only — you guessed it — the Arizona Coyotes, who have allowed an average of 4.15 shots.