Long before Tuesday night's first All-Star pitch at Target Field comes the first whiff.
Taxis have been stocked with special air freshener, hoping to give thousands of baseball aficionados visiting this week a sweet-smelling first impression as they hail airport cabs. Then there are the 5,700 linear feet of red carpet, deep-cleaned and ready for unrolling as the players head to the ballpark.
Those are just a couple of the countless details culminating from nearly two years of planning for the highest profile event to hit the Twin Cities since John McCain, Sarah Palin and a bunch of anarchists came to town for the 2008 Republican National Convention. Event planners say it's a critical prelude to the 2018 Super Bowl.
"We do big events all the time, but this one's a little special and unique," Minneapolis Mayor Betsy Hodges said. "It's a huge opportunity to showcase to the rest of the world how great we are."
And just how cool we are — literally. Forecasters say temperatures will dip into the 60s for Tuesday's game. But 2014's frequent and historic rainfalls aren't expected to dampen or postpone the festivities.
No longer simply a nine-inning exhibition, the All-Star Game has mushroomed into a massive baseball convention, TV production, fan frenzy and corporate hoedown. There's a Nike-sponsored 5K at the State Fairgrounds for 25,000 runners Sunday morning, then one of ESPN's top-rated summer programs: the Home Run Derby on Monday Night. Throw in a showcase of minor-league phenoms Sunday, a 400,000-square-foot FanFest at the Convention Center and Monday night's invitation-only gala for 5,000 along the Mississippi River near the Mill City Museum, among other soirees.
"Usually my beverage manager is ordering cases of things, but this week it's pallets," said Patrick Fitzgerald, D'Amico Catering's top event planner.
A green line has been spray-painted on sidewalks from the Convention Center to Target Field, where head groundskeeper Larry DiVito has been sleeping on a cot in his office behind the center-field wall in case he needs to do some midnight fertilizing. He has a 10-page MLB agenda and has had to adjust mowing heights to make room for a new All-Star logo.