Rain was falling, but the kids kept coming.
About 50 Minnesota Jays football players showed up for practice at Bryn Mawr Meadows Park in Minneapolis last week. The park was lined with vehicles as parents, siblings and friends watched the Jays go through drills while rain clouds eventually moved on. The young players came from around the Twin Cities, including Blaine, Coon Rapids and even St. Cloud. But most of the players were from north Minneapolis. Football is their favorite sport. It's also their best diversion.
Jays parents support the program because it keeps their sons occupied during the summer. They have structure. They are part of a team. And they are staying away from trouble.
The Jays play a spring and a fall schedule, traveling to tournaments throughout the country. It requires nearly year-round training. The coaches have even shoveled snow in the winter to create practice space.
"I would say that for the parents who stuck around, it has created more of a safety net," said Alyshia Jackson, whose son, Bashawn Williams, 7, is a member of the Baby Jays. "My kid is in good hands when they are around these other boys. My kid is in good hands when he's around the other coaches. They are going to do whatever is in the best interest of our kids."
That has included protecting their lives.
It was just three years ago this summer when Jays practice at Jordan Park in north Minneapolis was halted by gunfire. Bullets whizzed over heads as coaches ordered players to lie on the ground or hide behind walls. The very thing the kids and these families were trying to avoid suddenly threatened their lives.
"We're all used to gunshots," said Adel Morey, one of the coaches. "But it's the gunshots followed by the sound of bullets going over everyone. There were parents running to get their kids, and we are tackling kids and tackling parents, crawling and telling everyone to get down. I'm getting goosebumps from talking about it."

