NCAA Women's Final Four fans made their way out of town Monday after a resounding South Carolina victory and a full weekend of activities that brought celebration back to the streets of downtown Minneapolis.
"It was our opportunity, and we took advantage of it. It really came at a good time," said Steve Cramer, CEO and president of the Minneapolis Downtown Council. "We're struggling to not only come out of COVID but the reputational impact" of George Floyd's murder and the aftermath.
The multiday event was viewed as a chance for rejuvenation and a reset for the city and the NCAA, which pledged to treat the women's tournament with the same enthusiasm and money as the men's after a viral video from the 2021 women's tournament revealed a gaping disparity with the men's amenities.
Local hero Paige Bueckers' Connecticut Huskies didn't leave with the championship trophy, but by most accounts her hometown and her sport fared well.
"I could not have written it any better," said Wendy Blackshaw, CEO and president of Minnesota Sports and Events (MNSE), which organized the Final Four weekend.
Blackshaw was beaming about a weekend headline in the New York Times: "Minnesota, a Mecca of Women's Basketball, Is Having Its Moment."
"That was a big deal because the recent headlines have been difficult for Minneapolis," she said.
For most of the past two years, the Times' reports on Minneapolis have been about tragedy: Floyd's murder at the hands of police officers in May 2020, the trials of the four former officers, the shooting of Daunte Wright by a Brooklyn Center police officer in 2021 and that officer's trial and conviction.