The Post

‘Merci’ from the metro to the Louvre

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The football world champions have returned to Paris to a heroes’ reception with a huge crowd of fans lining the Champs-Elysees in red, white and blue to celebrate France’s triumph at the Fifa World Cup in Russia.

It was a spectacula­r show as French fighter jets flew above the famous avenue in France’s capital with plumes of smoke of the nation’s colours after the team’s second World Cup success after they first won it on home soil in 1998.

France’s squad began parading the golden trophy after departing their plane at Paris’ Charles de Gaulle Airport, where a red carpet was laid out as captain Hugo Lloris and manager Didier Deschamps led the World Cup winners home.

An open-top bus with players, coaches and staff made its way through Paris and up the Champs-Elysees to meet with President Emmanuel Macron for a reception before an ecstatic, colourful crowd numbering in the hundreds of thousands.

Macron was first pictured celebratin­g next to Russia President Vladimir Putin at Moscow’s Luzhniki Stadium where France won the final with a 4-2 victory over Croatia on Monday.

The players led the celebratio­ns though and were seen dancing on tables after the The victorious French team rides through Paris on an open-top bus as hundreds of thousands of spectators line city streets. final, serenading midfielder N’Golo Kante, one of the their unsung heroes.

The Paris metro has temporaril­y renamed six stations in honour of France’s World Cup victors as part of the capital’s salute: the Notre-Dame des Champs becomes Notre Didier Deschamps, while one of the central stops is renamed Deschamps Elyse´es-Cle´menceau, and another was changed to Victor Hugo Lloris.

The Louvre museum also congratula­ted the team by tweeting an image of the Mona Lisa wearing France’s national football jersey with two stars representi­ng their World Cup victories.

On arrival at Charles de Gaulle, airport personnel and Sports Minister Laura Flesse were the first to tell them ‘‘merci’’ on behalf of a grateful nation that was sorely in need of a boost.

‘‘Eternal Happiness’’ read the headline in French sports daily L’Equipe, summing up the mood of the many who hoped the euphoria would last for months.

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