A dapper Roger Goodell stood at the podium with boos raining down on him from the fans at Radio City Music Hall.
Then the chants started: "We want football! We want football!"
Goodell, dressed in a blue suit, kept his cool, managed a smile and answered with "Me, too."
The chants continued. The NFL commissioner kept smiling.
"I hear you."
So it went for Goodell early in a draft that began a day after a federal judge ordered the NFL to lift the lockout and just a few hours after the league said players could report to team headquarters beginning Friday.
The only way Goodell could silence the draftniks was by asking for a moment of silence to remember the victims of the storms that ripped through the South on Wednesday.
Goodell has generally been a popular commissioner among fans, mostly lauded for imposing strict discipline for misbehaving players.
In many ways, his draft night was no different from his previous four years as commissioner, as he welcomed players to the league. But anyone could hear that this one was different.
There were boos and chants when he announced the draft was open for business and still more when he called Cam Newton's name as the first overall pick to the Carolina Panthers.
He greeted the Auburn quarterback with a handshake and a hug, and the two had their photographs taken while holding a Carolina Panthers jersey with No. 1 on it.
The second pick brought Goodell face-to-face with one of the players who brought the antitrust lawsuit against the league that led to the lifting of the lockout by a federal judge.
Texas A&M's Von Miller was the only draft prospect among the plaintiffs in the lawsuit. He had said there would be no awkwardness between him and Goodell when he was picked, promising to give the commissioner a hug.
That's exactly what Miller did after being drafted No. 2 overall by the Denver Broncos.
Goodell clapped as Miller walked on to the stage and broke into a wide grin, and the two embraced in a bear hug that last about 10 seconds.
"I've never had anything against Roger Goodell. I just want to make sure football continues to get played," Miller said. "When I walked across the stage, I was meeting the commissioner -- that was it.
"The whole reason why I got into this whole thing was not because of notoriety, not because of publicity. I got into this thing to represent the guys who came before me and broke their backs. I wanted to make sure football continues to get played."
It was all smiles at the draft, but not all the current players were happy to see the commissioner getting so much love from the draftees.
"It's really baffling for me to see these young guys hugging the commissioner with everyone that has gone on in past months," Packers running back Ryan Grant posted on his Twitter account.
The NFL is far from back to business as usual. Goodell said earlier in the day he feared the fight could last for a while.
"I think the litigation, unfortunately, could go on for some period of time," he told the NFL Network.
He said he was looking forward to the next round of court-ordered talks May 16.
"I think that it's important to get back to that," he said. "That's the type of thing that should happen -- real bargaining across the table."
The boos continued throughout the first round, although they weren't nearly as boisterous as the picks came off the board.
And not all the fans were so tough on Goodell. At least not when they had a chance to get up close to him.
Before the draft, Goodell mingled with fans in the lobby of Radio City Music Hall. Some even posed for pictures with the man many consider the face of the lockout.
The boos weren't lost on Goodell, who minutes later tweeted: "I agree with fans here at Radio City. We want football. I'm with you, I get it."
The Associated Press contributed to this report.