The Day

Philly, Eagles party down at Super Bowl celebratio­n

- By MICHAEL SISAK and ANTHONY IZAGUIRRE

Philadelph­ia — Philadelph­ia's first Super Bowl parade provided catharsis Thursday for hundreds of thousands of Eagles fans, deliriousl­y joyful after decades without a title and relishing the national spotlight on a team that few outside the city thought could win it all.

Fans clad in Eagles green jammed the streets from dawn near the stadium to an afternoon rally at the city's famed “Rocky” steps, lining up 20 deep in spots to catch a glimpse of the champs. The Eagles rode in open-top double decker buses to the art museum that Sylvester Stallone made famous for a rally nearly 60 years in the making.

Center Jason Kelce gave voice to every frustrated Philly fan with a remarkable, impassione­d and profane speech that had him defending the general manager, the coach and a litany of players who supposedly weren't smart enough, big enough or talented enough to win a championsh­ip.

“We were a bunch of underdogs,” shouted Kelce, channeling Rocky himself. “Bottom line is we wanted it more!”

And so did football-crazed Philly — desperatel­y.

Until Sunday's 41-33 victory over the favored New England Patriots, the Eagles remained the only team in their division without a Super Bowl title — an ongoing humiliatio­n that gave Philly an inferiorit­y complex and made Eagles fans an easy target for fans of other teams, especially the rival Dallas Cowboys and New York Giants.

“This Super Bowl championsh­ip is for you,” Eagles owner Jeffrey Lurie told the vast crowd. “You are the most passionate and deserving sports fans on the planet. We couldn't have done it without you.”

Added Super Bowl MVP quarterbac­k Nick Foles: “We finally did it. We're Super Bowl champs!”

The parade began at the Eagles' stadium complex and slowly made its way up Broad Street past the cheering throngs. Carrying the Lombardi Trophy, coach Doug Pederson walked part of the route — allowing fans to touch the gleaming hardware — while Lurie held a sign saying “THANK YOU FANS” as he stood next to the team's three quarterbac­ks: Foles, injured starter Carson Wentz and third-stringer Nate Sudfeld.

Dan Tarvin, 29, was pumped after getting to high-five Pederson and GM Howie Roseman, who was instrument­al in putting together a squad expected to compete for championsh­ips for years to come.

“They are more than heroes. They're legends. They're immortal in this city, forever,” Tarvin said.

Corey Carter, 32, of West Philadelph­ia, clutched a woodcut of an Eagle that he dubbed the “Lombirdy Trophy.”

“This is the greatest day!” Carter said. “Besides God, my kids and my wife, it's Eagles. That's all there is. My family and then Eagles, and this is the greatest day of my life, ever.”

Schools, museums, courts, government offices and even the Philadelph­ia Zoo were shut down so the city could fete an underdog Eagles team that few outside Philadelph­ia thought had a prayer of beating the mighty Patriots led by superstar quarterbac­k Tom Brady and coach Bill Belichick.

Organizers prepared for as many as 2 million people, though city officials didn't release a crowd estimate.

Terry Gallen, a fan from Glen Mills, in the Philadelph­ia suburbs, said he “broke down like a baby and cried” when the Eagles won the Super Bowl.

“It means everything,” Gallen said. “We're loving it.”

At the rally, Lurie, Pederson and a slew of players all took the microphone and dedicated Sunday's victory to the fans.

But it was the crowd-pleasing Kelce who best channeled the gruff but ultimately good-hearted “attytood” for which Philadelph­ians are famous.

Wearing an outlandish­ly sequined Mummers getup — a nod to Philadelph­ia's raucous New Year's Day parade — Kelce declared that “no one wanted us. No analyst liked to see us win the Super Bowl. And nobody likes our fans.”

He then led the crowd in a jolly — and filthy — chant set to the tune of “My Darling Clementine”: “No one likes us, no one likes us, no one likes us, we don't care!” The big-bearded lineman uttered at least two profanitie­s that made it onto live TV, recalling Chase Utley's similarly profane speech at the Phillies' World Series parade 10 years ago.

Police investigat­ed at least two stabbings on parade day, including one man stabbed inside a mall just off the route. No details about his condition were released. A second man was taken to a hospital with a stab wound, and police said they were trying to piece together what happened. City officials said they wouldn't have arrest numbers until Friday.

The parade was overwhelmi­ngly peaceful, though, giving fans an emotional release after decades of disappoint­ment.

For lots of fans, the parade was a reminder of the Phillies' victory lap after a 28-year World Series title drought.

For others, it took on spiritual shades of the pope's visit in 2015.

“It is like a religion,” said Kevin Fry, 37, of Prospect Park in suburban Philadelph­ia, a press operator at the Inquirer and Daily News who helped print 700,000 copies of the Super Bowl edition that proclaimed “At Last!”

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP PHOTO ?? Eagles’ fans gather in front of the Philadelph­ia Museum of Art before the team’s Super Bowl victory parade on Thursday. Philadelph­ia beat New England on Sunday, 41-33, in Super Bowl 52.
ALEX BRANDON/AP PHOTO Eagles’ fans gather in front of the Philadelph­ia Museum of Art before the team’s Super Bowl victory parade on Thursday. Philadelph­ia beat New England on Sunday, 41-33, in Super Bowl 52.

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