The 50 or so kids and a handful of parents paid little mind to the fireworks booming across north Minneapolis during football practice one evening last week at Jordan Park.
But as a car slowly turned the corner, blasts of gunfire reverberated across the field. Bullets pinged off the posts above children ages 5 to 14 who took cover while their coaches shielded them with their bodies. A woman prayed and cried.
"I could hear the bullets whizzing over my head," a shaken but steeled Carrie Heinrich said in a Facebook video that went live barely two hours later, which has been viewed more than 1.5 million times since the incident.
"The worst feeling as a parent," Heinrich said, "was seeing my kid out in the middle of an open field with bullets flying and not being able to get to him."
In an especially violent day amid skyrocketing gun violence since George Floyd's May 25 death at the hands of Minneapolis police, nine people were shot across the city on June 22. Another two were stabbed, and one of them didn't survive.
The park shooting prompted Police Chief Medaria Arradondo to pledge Wednesday that "our children must be protected, and those who would dare to bring harm their way must be held accountable."
The shooting could have been much worse. Gunfire sprayed from one moving vehicle to another over the heads of youngsters, coaches and parents during practice that day. The adults swooped up the kids, hustled them into vehicles and spared the innocent from being wounded or worse.
From there, multiple vehicles took everyone to coach Melvin Thompson's home a few minutes' drive away.