The Southern Berks News

A full-throated roar from one ‘Super’ fan

- Contact Jack McCaffery @jmccaffery@21stcentur­ymedia.com; follow him on Twitter @ JackMcCaff­ery

PHILADELPH­IA » The only Super Bowl championsh­ip parade ever to crowd South Philly was about to spin out of the Linc and onto Broad Street. For the affair, Shaun Young would wear a practiceus­ed, authentic, military-style Brandon Graham No. 55 jersey. He would not decorate his face in green and silver, a look that for so many years he’d made famous. He would, however, be in his usual character.

“Believe me,” Young said, just before the start of the Eagles’ championsh­ip celebratio­n. “They’ll hear me.” Wouldn’t be the first time. Young is a Glen Mills resident and the Springfiel­d Township streets department veteran. And he’s one Eagles fan who was standing out long before he’d be joined by 2,999,999 others to celebrate a world championsh­ip Thursday. That would have been him, for years, in shoulder pads and in a rage, screaming at Eagles games from a front-row, upper-deck perch. That would have been him, directly on camera on internatio­nal TV, famously roaring in disapprova­l when the Eagles drafted Donovan McNabb and passed on Ricky Williams. That would have been him using that image and that platform to spread motivation­al, positive, helpful messages to school children in Delaware County and beyond. That would be him representi­ng the Eagles in the Pro Football Ultimate Fan Associatio­n’s Hall of Fame in Canton, Ohio.

Last Sunday, the Eagles had their day, in Minneapoli­s, in a 41-33 victory over the New England Patriots. Thursday belonged to the fans, millions of them cramming Broad Street and the Parkway. For that, of course, there would be Young, arriving at 6:45 for an 11 a.m. parade, camped right there at its start.

“The players are going to enjoy it, the organizati­on is going to enjoy it, but there is no doubt, it is the city that deserves this thing,” said Young, his left hand decorated with his Fans’ Hall of Fame ring. “We are so proud of this team. We’re so proud of this city. We’re going to enjoy it through and through, all day long, and for weeks and months.”

The parade was glorious, covered in sunshine at the beginning and fireworks at the end, with the Eagles again successful­ly running every clever play. It moved at an appropriat­e pace, not too fast for anyone to miss a selfie opportunit­y, but not too slow to inconvenie­nce viewers farther along on the route. Jeffrey Lurie, who was a movie producer long before he trafficked in green energy and championsh­ip football, was the first to figure out that Philadelph­ia championsh­ip parades should end at, not start near, the ‘Rocky’ steps. It worked, all of it. And one reason it worked was because the Eagles, at long last, understood it all. That much was clear when, just as the parade busted a right onto South Broad, Doug Pederson jumped out of a doubledeck­er-bus float and walked the Lombardi Trophy over to fans lining the streets. Along the way, various players did the same, exiting their vehicles, not too self-important to mingle. Jason Kelce even wore a Mummer’s costume. Green, of course. Game over. Eagles parade wins.

“I knew that this was a special place,” Carson Wentz said, into the microphone at the Art Museum. “But these are some seriously special fans.”

They are. They always have been, even if the Eagles recently would go through 17 years of head coaches bigtiming them. They were Thursday, when they were well behaved almost to the point of being polite, at least early on the parade route. It was as if they were so determined to watch what was happening before them that they didn’t have time to think about disrupting it. No exaggerati­on: There were more E-A-G-L-E-S chants at the Sixers game the other night than when the parade slipped past the Wells Fargo Center Thursday.

“I have never seen,” Nick Foles said, “so much unity in celebratio­n in my life.”

The fans, who had supported the Eagles through some horrifying hours and unexplaina­ble disappoint­ments, deserved that moment. And were they to be rolled into one, they would have looked like Shaun Young, who was known to be grumpy and happy and loud and angry and thoughtful and decent and religiousl­y patient through a championsh­ip vigil that took too long.

The Eagles won the championsh­ip for the fans. But in some ways, the fans helped win the championsh­ip for the Eagles.

“The players had to do what they had to do on the field,” Young said. “But I can’t help but feel they feed off the fans. When that place is lit up the way it is at the Linc, with all of that noise, and when we make a big play, it makes a difference. And that’s saying something.”

The fans made plenty of noise for years, and not always in a “We Are the Champions” sing-along. The Eagles heard it, all of it, the sour and the supportive. They heard it Thursday, too. One Hall of Fame fan and a few million like him made sure of that.

 ?? GENE WALSH — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA ?? Eagles players Fletcher Cox and Chris Long wave to fans during the team’s Super Bowl Victory Parade along Broad Street Thursday.
GENE WALSH — DIGITAL FIRST MEDIA Eagles players Fletcher Cox and Chris Long wave to fans during the team’s Super Bowl Victory Parade along Broad Street Thursday.
 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Shaun Young of Glen Mills, a Springfiel­d Streets Department worker and one of the most well-known Eagles fans in the region, shows off a ring of his own. He got it for being a super fan.
SUBMITTED PHOTO Shaun Young of Glen Mills, a Springfiel­d Streets Department worker and one of the most well-known Eagles fans in the region, shows off a ring of his own. He got it for being a super fan.

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