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Sports International

‘Saints Go Marching in’ as New Orleans celebrates rare win

New Orleans Saints fans celebrate on Bourbon Street in the French Quarter after the NFL Super Bowl between the Indianapolis Colts and the New Orleans Saints in the French Quarter in New Orleans.
New Orleans Saints fans celebrate on Bourbon Street in the French Quarter after the NFL Super Bowl between the Indianapolis Colts and the New Orleans Saints in the French Quarter in New Orleans.
Saints fans hugged, kissed, and spilled onto the streets on Sunday as a citywide party erupted after their once woebegone NFL franchise defeated the Indiapolis Colts in the Super Bowl.

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 Crowds in the city’s historic French Quarter, beefed up by tourists in town for Carnival season and by those wanting to experience the euphoria of a Saints victory, poured onto Bourbon Street to celebrate in a scene that looked more like Fat Tuesday than a Sunday night. The Saints won 31-17 in the franchise’s first appearance in the big game.

As a brass band played “When the Saints Go Marching In” inside Irvin Mayfield’s Jazz Playhouse, revelers jumped up and down, stood on chairs and tables and waved black and gold umbrellas when the Saints won. “This is so awesome,” said Darlene Milliet, as she hugged her sister, Cindy Lasiter, both of them crying in the French Quarter. “I can’t believe it!”

“It’s like a dream come true. It’s just a dream come true,” said Lasiter. Vince Scanil, a Tampa Bay Buccaneers fan in town for an anniversary weekend with his wife, said he remembered how special it was when his team won their first Super Bowl, but it seemed extra special for New Orleans, a city that suffered so much after Hurricane Katrina. “Our hearts pour out for them. What a great city to win it,” he said as plastic beads swung from his neck and he watched revelers. “It’s a heartwarming thing, the Saints.”

Trina Pearley-Brown was raised by her mother to be a Saints fan, and she was carrying on the legacy even though her mother died before Katrina. “You can’t describe it. It’s so awesome. We’ve been waiting for this for years,” said 47-year-old from Gramercy, La. “It’s means so much to the city. They’re back. They’re alive.” It was a similar scene along a row of neighborhood bars and restaurants on Maple Street, not far from Tulane and Loyola universities, where college students and area residents, most clad in black and gold, hit the street screaming and cheering.

09 February 2010, Tuesday

AP  NEW ORLEANS

   

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