Friday, March 29

Rams fans celebrate Super Bowl parade in LA


Exposition Park on Wednesday was transformed into a sea of ​​blue and gold as excited LA Rams fans gathered for a parade and rally to honor the Super Bowl champions.

There were cheers. There were bullhorns. There were speakers blaring Dr. Dre.

But above it all, four words range loud and clear:

“Whose house?”

“Ram’s house!”

The team defeated the Cincinnati Bengals 23-20 in Super Bowl LVI on Sunday at SoFi Stadium in Inglewood, but in many ways, the celebration was years in the making.

Los Angeles in 2020 claimed championship wins for the Lakers and the Dodgers, but parades were never held in their honor because of concerns about large gatherings during the COVID-19 pandemic.

On Wednesday, the county lifted its outdoor mask mandate as the number of hospitalized coronavirus-positive patients continued to fall.

The joy was palpable as Angelenos young and old donned Rams gear — and in some cases, Dodgers and Lakers gear — and gathered outside the LA Coliseum and along the parade route from the Shrine Auditorium.

Super Bowl MVP Cooper Kupp appeared in a Kobe Bryant jersey, but the day unmistakably belonged to the Rams — and to the city of LA itself.

“Finally my Rams win the Super Bowl,” said superfan Jesse Castellanos, 32. “I don’t have any kids. I’m not married. … This is one of the best days of my life. I just want to show people how much I love this team.”

Double-decker buses, wrapped in bright blue Rams and carrying the championship team and their family members along with cheerleaders, wound their way through the streets as fans cheered and waved flags.

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There were cigars and beers and celebratory kisses, smiling and shimmying and selfies. And a great big silver trophy.

At the street level, the smell of bacon sizzled from one street vendor’s grill while another displayed hand-painted Rams masks for sale. Confetti swirled through the air.

One fan, Hilton Rodriguez, wore a jacket adorned with Lakers, Dodgers and Rams logos amid the words “City of Champions.”

Another, who goes by the nickname Gee Enzel, wore a handmade faux-fur-lined sweatshirt with a gold-embossed Rams logo.

Fans said they came from Koreatown, North Hollywood, Riverside and even as far as Arizona. Many erupted at the sign of buses.

Watts resident Latasha Bracks stood in head-to-toe blue-and-gold Rams gear handing Twizzlers out to the youngest attendees of the parade.

A mother of six, including a son who was killed three years ago at age 19, said her goal was to spread positivity while supporting her hometown team.

“I love the Rams so I came out for the parade — and to make the kids happy because they’re here with their parents,” she said.

A group of three friends — Gilbert Nieto, 58, Danny Viveros, 59, and Jared Chavarria, 32 — all took the day off from their jobs at a DHL warehouse in the Inland Empire.

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“I’m representing LA The city of champions, that’s what we’re about,” said Chavarria, who was born and raised in Los Angeles, “All that negativity is out the window.”

Viveros said he has been a Rams fan since the 1960s. “When they left for St. Louis, they broke my heart,” he said.

On Sunday, as I watched Rams quarterback Matthew Stafford take a knee to run out the clock, he and Chavarria cried.

Others played hooky to honor the team. Andrew Torres claimed an elevated spot on the sidewalk along the parade route on Jefferson Boulevard.

He carried his 8-month-old daughter, Audrianna, who also donned a Rams jersey.

“We had to take her out of school,” Torres said, pointing to his 7-year-old daughter, Aria, sitting in a stroller.

These last few days have been extra special for Torres and his longtime girlfriend, Darline Olguin. He got on one knee and proposed to her right after the Rams won.

“It was the perfect day,” Olguin said.

For a two-year period marked by highs and lows — championship wins, devastating surges of COVID-19 — the day was nothing if not a big, blue-and-gold release.

“It’s just this wonderful feeling seeing this,” said Dorsey High School football coach Stafon Johnson, who is also a USC and NFL alum. “I think LA needs it to pump that exposure, pump the excitement back in Los Angeles.”

Dorsey called into the Los Angeles Times’ livestream to share his joy with those watching from home.

“This is amazing, man. This is right here in the heart of Los Angeles,” he said.

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Times video journalist Jessica Q. Chen contributed to this report.




www.latimes.com

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