"We've been starved!" yelled Clyde Hawthorne II, 53, who wore an Eagles cap and waved a 76ers towel at the culminating City Hall rally. "We needed this for inspiration. Tell our major sports teams to get a hint."
This wasn't one of the four big sports team forming the traditional - if seldom seen - Broad Street parade. In fact, only half of Market Street was closed for less than a half-hour as the Soul players and their cheerleaders, the Soul Mates, waved from the back of Harley-Davidsons and honking flatbed trucks.
But for some in this sports-loving city, which hasn't seen a major championship since the 76ers won the NBA title a quarter-century ago, the Soul's 59-56 victory Sunday over the defending champions, the San Jose SaberCats, in ArenaBowl XXII in New Orleans was good enough.
"I'll take what I can get," said James Holland, 33, of Northeast Philadelphia. "A parade is a parade."
Buzz Carobus, an assistant district attorney who stepped away from his office to catch the parade, wore a huge smile.
"It's good to have a team win one," Carobus said, who acknowledged he wasn't enough of a fan to know that ArenaBowl XXII was going to be televised live. "I've managed to see all four sports teams lose."
Sometimes, Philly just needs a reason to cheer.
Heck, four years ago when Smarty Jones was making a bid for racing's Triple Crown, there was talk of giving him a parade if he were to win the Belmont Stakes. He did not, and the city did not suffer the indignity of having a horse paraded along Broad Street.
Yesterday, vendors hawked Soul T-shirts, the Soul marching band played on a double-decker tour bus, and team co-owner Jon Bon Jovi addressed the crowd from a stage north of City Hall.