If you hopped in a cab 10 minutes later, rode west on Tropicana Avenue, turned into The Orleans Hotel & Casino, and went around back, you would have found one of the places he used to play: Orleans Arena. Unlike the new, sleek T-Mobile Arena, the old, New Orleans-style building was hosting a high school graduation ceremony.
The first time Engelland played for an expansion team in this city, he played for Las Vegas of the ECHL. It was 2003-04. He was 21 years old then. He went to training camp with Lowell of the American Hockey League, got demoted to Las Vegas, and started the season there. He ended up shuttling between Nevada and Massachusetts, playing 35 games for Las Vegas and 26 for Lowell. His home in Las Vegas was whatever apartment he was in.
"You live in one and then get called up and come back and go to another one," he said.
How many to an apartment? Two? Three?
"Depends on the night, I guess," he said, smiling.
The team didn't have a real weight room, so the players would work out at Gold's Gym up the street, Engelland wrote in The Players' Tribune on Oct. 24. They'd walk to an Irish bar called McMullan's after games because they were making $500 a week and the team had worked out a deal: free meal with a $5 tip. He wrote he probably ate 500 shepherd's pies there.
Nicknamed the Wranglers, the team had what it called a "Midnight Roundup," a 12 a.m. game designed to draw casino workers who worked odd hours.
"Thought it would be a little different, but once you got in the rink, it's Vegas," Engelland said, smiling. "You can't tell the time."