Carnival floats carrying Saints players, coaches and team owner Tom Benson rolled past tens of thousands of jubilant fans in downtown New Orleans on Tuesday, two days after the 43-year-old franchise won its first NFL championship.
Players, wearing team jerseys instead of traditional Carnival masks and costumes, tossed beads into the crowd and signed autographs for throngs of screaming fans. Benson shouted âWho Dat!â into a microphone from his perch atop a float. Head coach Sean Payton blew kisses and held the Lombardi Trophy over his head.âThis is wilder than Mardi Gras,â said Frank V. Smith, 55, a lifelong New Orleans resident who shot photographs of players from the rear of a pickup truck. âIâve never seen so many people out here like this. This is beautiful, man.â
The parade, a week before the cityâs signature Fat Tuesday celebration, started outside their home turf at the Louisiana Superdome. Black, gold and white confetti floated over the crowd and a man wearing a Saints jacket held aloft a sign that read, âHappy Lombardi Gras!âThe floats stopped at a reviewing stand at historic Gallier Hall so elected officials, including Mayor Ray Nagin, Sen. Mary Landrieu and Gov. Bobby Jindal, could toast the teamâs 31-17 win over the Indianapolis Colts.âHowâs the âWho Datâ nation feel tonight?â Super Bowl MVP Drew Brees yelled when his float stopped at the reviewing stand. âThis toast goes out to you. We love you and we won that championship for you.â
More than a dozen marching bands joined the team on its route, which passed by the edge of the French Quarter and ended at the cityâs convention centre.Shannon Cobb, 28, said the parade was a party with a purpose.âEverybody is here for one reason: their love for the city and their love for the Saints and to show our appreciation for what theyâve done for us,â she said.
The Super Bowl win, which capped just the ninth winning season in franchise history, was a stunning reversal of fortunes for a team once derided as the âAints.â Few players could appreciate that better than fan favourite Deuce McAllister, the teamâs retired all-time leading rusher who joined the team on the sidelines for the Super Bowl. âItâs been pretty crazy,â he said Tuesday. âEverywhere you go, you can see the pride in the fans.â
Fans are grateful for more than just the teamâs on-field performance. Many members of âWho Datâ nation credit the team with uniting a city that has struggled with racial divisions and laboured to rebuild in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, which left about 85 per cent of the city underwater in August 2005.âAfter the hurricane, people were more willing to come back when they realized the Saints were coming back,â said Scott Catalanotto, 35, whose seven-year-old son sat on a ladder and yelled for beads.
In the French Quarter, thousands streamed toward the parade route, turning Bourbon Street into a river of black and gold.Will Kaplan, 28, stood out in a billowing white toga with a gold-coloured halo and the word âBreesusâ on his back.His Jesus-inspired costume, he said, was made from sheets he had in a FEMA trailer he stayed in after Hurricane Katrina on the University of New Orleans campus. âIâm the spirit of the party,â he said.
Enduring chilly, windy weather under overcast skies, fans started staking out spots along the parade route more than seven hours before the floats rolled.Tim Thorn, a 35-year-old landscaper, drove in from Baton Rouge to be among the early birds. He said he gave his daughters, Cameron and Carson, the day off school because the event was too big to miss. âItâs probably the biggest party in the world,â he said.
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