The crowd was a little late to arrive, but that's easily understood.
Minneapolis South had never played a homecoming football game under the lights before Friday night. This was a new experience.
South opened its remodeled stadium a month and a half ago. The hardscrabble, patchy grass field has been replaced with synthetic turf, new bleachers, a new scoreboard, a quality sound system.
And lights. For the first time.
Minneapolis Washburn was the opponent, one of South's most fierce rivals. The perfect foe for this inaugural event. The South band was present, cheerleaders roamed the sidelines, parents staked out prime bleacher seats and students turned it into a social event.
At most other schools, a typical homecoming. At South, a chance to show off a little community pride.
"This [field] just makes you want to be here," said Athena Garnett, who heads the South Tigers booster club and has two sons, Cassius and Aurelius, on the team. "When I first moved here, I'd look at the field and think, 'This doesn't make you want to play football.' But look at it now."
South came out firing Friday. Behind pugnacious 5-2 quarterback Daniel Avre, the Tigers moved downfield with determination on their first drive, getting a 4-yard touchdown reception by Nate Childs.