Just outside Gate H at the Metrodome in Minneapolis on a gorgeous Saturday afternoon sat Angie Reed and her boyfriend, Mike Richardson, college students from St. Cloud who'd beaten out several thousand other sports fans as the first in line to receive a tiny square of Teflon-coated fiberglass history.
As a memento of Saturday's reopening, about 3,000 devotees of the big marshmallow that has long been a part of the Minneapolis skyline received a sample of the roof famously deflated by a December blizzard.
Even a couple of confused Green Bay Packers and New York Yankees fans stopped by.
"I know a lot of people don't like the Dome," said the 22-year-old Reed, who was wearing a Minnesota Vikings jersey she's had since she was 10. "It feels like home to me."
For a group predominately made up of football fans, the roof's collapse was symbolic of a lost season that ended with even more salt in the wound when the team from cheese country won the Super Bowl.
Some enjoyed the Vikings' brief shift to the outdoor TCF Stadium, home of the Gophers. But the team's loyal minions are pumped up for a return to the Dome.
"It was devastating when the roof collapsed," said Josh Lynch, a season-ticket-holder from Red Wing, Minn., who is completing a law enforcement degree. "I was afraid the team wouldn't play any more home games last year."
Re-patched roof or not, it was hard for him to contain his enthusiasm for new quarterback Donovan McNabb (good thing insurance covered the $18 million tab for the roof) and the start of a new season. Though Lynch is usually covered in face paint when at the Dome, on Saturday he decided to just go with a military-fatigue-style outfit sporting Vikings colors.