He has a 2-year-old son, Cash. He wants to bring him to hockey games as he grows up.
"It's just good to have something to do other than the Las Vegas Strip," Palumbo said. "Everyone thinks gambling, gambling. This is good entertainment for everybody. …
"Now that I've seen the stadium live … you can see it's going to be perfect."
Once you're inside T-Mobile Arena, you aren't in Las Vegas anymore. You're in the NHL. You can see The Strip outside the huge glass windows on the concourse, and you can see it on a panoramic banner hanging high across one end of the rink. But otherwise, you could be in Los Angeles or Pittsburgh or Ottawa.
Some players said T-Mobile Arena reminded them of Staples Center or PPG Paints Arena. The seats are charcoal gray. The sight lines are good. There are suites and clubs and bars, and a big, high-definition screen hangs over the ice. The pregame show featured Frank Sinatra: "This town is a make-you town. Or a break-you town and bring-you-down town."
"It's going to take a little bit of getting used to, being in Las Vegas for hockey," Stars center Jason Spezza said. "But I thought they did a good job. For a first run, I think it was pretty good. It's definitely suited for hockey. It doesn't look like there's too much extra stuff going on. The fans are in good spots. The lighting's really good. I like the bright lights."
Not everyone loved it. Jim Burr, 62, came from Thousand Oaks, California, just to see the place. He said he went to the Kings' first game at Long Beach Arena in 1967, before The Forum was finished, and he thought, this being Las Vegas, that T-Mobile Arena would be even glitzier or more glamourous.