Ten-year-old Addison Campion of Belle Plaine described her Sunday night plans succinctly: "See Paige play."
That she did, in a game that won't soon be forgotten even though the going was tough early on for Paige Bueckers and her legions of hometown fans. The 20-year-old Hopkins High graduate and her University of Connecticut Huskies fell behind hard and fast to top-ranked South Carolina, losing 64-49 Sunday night at Target Center.
No matter. Bueckers was the favorite of the young fans who packed the lobby and sidewalk before the game for the red carpet arrival of the two star-studded women's teams.
"I love Paige, and I want her to win in her hometown arena," said Teona Bebeau, 16, of Deer Lake, Minn., who was wearing a Connecticut hoodie as she waited for Bueckers. "It's just a cool opportunity. We all want to meet Paige or just say hi and good luck."
Sunday night's game was the culmination of the NCAA Women's Final Four 68-team tournament and a March Madness weekend that brought multiday sporting events back to the Twin Cities. The event breathed life back into downtown after two years of a pandemic that kept workers and tourists away.
Leading up to the final game, fans saw two tough semifinal basketball games Friday and kept things lively in a variety of basketball-related events and exhibitions at the Minneapolis Convention Center and Mall of America.
Organizers expected some 30,000 visitors and the fans showed up, mostly filling Target Center. The announced attendance both Friday and Saturday nights exceeded 18,000. And the crowd was eager and deep outside Target Center two hours before the finale on Sunday night.
Bebeau was among the Native American basketball-playing youth brought to Minneapolis through the Indigenous Athletics Council Engagement. They attended the games, participated in a clinic and feast Saturday at the Minneapolis American Indian Center, swam in their hotel pool and went on rides at the Mall of America.