Don't remind Daniel Black that he ponied up for some of the best seats money could buy to glimpse Auburn's bid for glory at the Final Four in Minneapolis.
As the crowd roared inside a transformed U.S. Bank Stadium during Saturday's semifinal games, the investment banker from Birmingham paced before a TV screen in a lounge area just outside the frenzy, nerves frayed thin by the marquee event in college basketball's biggest tournament. The evening dealt his team a last-second loss to Virginia before Michigan State and Texas Tech faced off.
"I'm so nervous I could barely sleep. I don't have an appetite," Black said in a drawl Southern enough to beg for a football reference. "I feel like we're playing in the Iron Bowl."
Never mind the rain and the daunting cross-country quests undertaken by truck, bus and plane. A crush of out-of-town visitors, estimated at 100,000 strong, crammed into the Twin Cities this weekend as the four remaining teams faced off at a stadium built for football.
Attendance on Saturday night at U.S. Bank Stadium was 72,711, and the area around the stadium, including the light-rail platform, was crowded at least until 11:30 p.m.
Ahead of Saturday night's two semifinal matchups, fans milled around the rain-slicked streets in downtown Minneapolis in high spirits. Shortly before tipoff, they raised shouts, streamers and cups of beer before clasping hands during more turbulent moments.
Some drove through the night while others flew in from overseas. Fans came in cowboy hats, baseball caps and Spartan helmets, snapping photos with the Mary Tyler Moore statue and queuing up for the Ferris wheel on Nicollet Mall. One woman slipped on a custom Gucci tiger jacket to cheer on Auburn.
Minneapolis police nodded to Saturday's rain for helping keep things "exceedingly quiet" in terms of trouble. Final Four organizers also reported smooth sailing and steady crowds, calling the damp weather a "nonissue."