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Parties, merch, and joy: An underdog city gears up for the Super Bowl

Known as the underdog city to many, Philadelphia is a blue-collar town with hardworking people who wear the success and failure of sports teams not only on their faces but also in their hearts. 

The city experienced a record-breaking number of homicides in 2021, amid an ongoing battle with crime. But when sports teams win, neighborhood tribalism gets swept to the side and more hugs and high-fives get exchanged, like gifts on Christmas morning.

Why We Wrote This

What happens when a city that contends with an “underdog” label has a football team headed to the Super Bowl?

Game time is a few short days away for Super Bowl LVII and optimism abounds. Mention the possibility of the Philadelphia Eagles losing to the Kansas City Chiefs, and smiles quickly fade into quizzical expressions of “Why would you even ask that question?”

Fans here have already engaged in some of the boisterous celebrating they are known for – including climbing poles that the city has intentionally greased. Their revelry isn’t easily discouraged.

“Right now this is the biggest thing for Philadelphia,” says Domenic Romano, a lifelong South Philly resident, as he sells shirts and hoodies ahead of the big game. “We need this.” 

Game time is a few short days away around these parts. Everybody here in Philadelphia thinks that the Eagles are going to win Super Bowl LVII against the Kansas City Chiefs. Mention the possibility of them losing and smiles quickly fade into quizzical expressions of “Why would you even ask that question?”

Excited Eagles fans gathered in the middle of Lincoln Financial Field, known as “the Linc,” Sunday morning to give the team a joyous pep rally before they boarded a flight to Arizona. Partying in Philly started the night the Eagles punched their ticket to the big game after the NFC Championship on Jan. 29. As they did during the Phillies’ 2022 World Series run and the Eagles’ last Super Bowl appearance in 2018, city employees greased light poles so boisterous fans wouldn’t climb them and potentially hurt themselves. It didn’t work. 

“I knew that it was going to go down out there, that’s why I had to go,” says Omar Torrance, as a smile washes over his face. He is a barber at South Street Barbers, where some Eagles players have gotten haircuts.

Why We Wrote This

What happens when a city that contends with an “underdog” label has a football team headed to the Super Bowl?

Mr. Torrance watched the NFC championship game with a friend in South Philly, 2 1/2 miles away from the Linc. His friend’s house is also two blocks away from Broad Street, where much of the partying happened.

“They had a DJ out there and everything,” he says. “We went down there and within 45 minutes to an hour, the crowd just kept getting bigger and bigger. They were walking up from the stadium. People came out of their houses. It was kids, older people, Black, white, and everybody in between just giving high-fives and dancing, and it was all peaceful,” Mr. Torrance says.

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