It was the first or second game after Allianz Field opened, Jeff Shaller said, when his battle against the stadium and soccer fans began.
"So, a guy pulls right in and parks and I say, 'Sir, you're in my driveway,' and he says, 'So?' " said Shaller, who has lived just on the south side of Interstate 94 for 30 years. "It's been goofballs driving through my neighborhood ever since."
When Allianz opened in August 2019, it created quite the buzz in St. Paul and its surrounding neighborhood too. And, as it turned out, plenty of angst. Over parking. Over traffic. Over noise. It was no different Wednesday, just before kickoff for the Major League Soccer All-Star Game.
As dozens of fans strolled towards the stadium across the freeway overpass, some wearing Loons gear while others sported jerseys of Mexican teams, Shaller did as he has done for every Minnesota United home game ever since: He sat in a folding chair in his driveway, scowling. What does he do?
"Make sure they don't block my sidewalk. Make sure they don't hit my car," he said. "Or throw bottles or do crazy [stuff] like that."
Actually, the scene before Wednesday's game — pitting MLS all-stars against the all-stars from Mexico's Liga MX — was different. Signs now warn motorists that parking is allowed in the area only by permit. Unlike years past, that meant much less traffic in the hour before the game and many more open spots on the street.
In the stadium's first season, cars would speed through this normally quiet neighborhood near a stadium with little on-site parking, looking to snag open spots. That's what Jericho Tabor, a season ticket holder from Minneapolis, used to do. Once, he parked a little past the edge of Donna Elson's driveway.
"She was out doing yard work, and she walked over to me. She said, 'I see you're overlapping my driveway. I don't care, but you're going to get a ticket,' " Tabor said.