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Fans leaving last year´s stadium celebration crowd into a northbound train. Both the regional rail and Broad Street subway lines carried more than twice their typical weekday haul last year.
TOM GRALISH / Staff Photographer
Fans leaving last year's stadium celebration crowd into a northbound train. Both the regional rail and Broad Street subway lines carried more than twice their typical weekday haul last year.
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Head Strong: Parade is a sure thing; first, a few tweaks

Jinx, schminx. The Phils are going to win this thing, and the city needs to get ready. Don't take it from me. Take it from the Tugger, who said it best at John F. Kennedy Stadium in the midst of the celebration of his Phillies' 1980 World Series victory:

"Throughout baseball history, Philadelphia has taken a backseat to New York City. Well, New York City can take this world championship . . . and stick it! 'Cause we're No. 1!"

He was right. And if Brad Lidge said the same thing today, he'd be right, too.

Of course, the conventional wisdom - especially in Philadelphia - is that expecting a win is the surest way to ensure a loss. As the Daily News' Catherine Lucey wrote last year after the Phils' dismissal of the Tampa Bay Rays: "The city has been cagey about releasing details of the parade before the end of the Series because the Phillies, who last won the World Series in 1980, were so fearful of a jinx."

I have no such reservations. Not with this team. Which is why I feel totally comfortable bypassing the rest of the Series and getting right to this year's celebration. For a city that went almost three decades without one, Philadelphia put on quite a championship parade last October. That said, a couple of parts of the party could use some tweaking. Good thing this year's team is poised to give the city another chance to get it right.

First, last year's noon launch gave parade-goers too much time for a liquid pregame and made the day stretch way too long. Sure, that 1980 parade started only a half-hour earlier. But it also took that team half as long to get to JFK Stadium, and city liquor stores were closed for the duration of the festivities. Bottom line: Start earlier, end earlier.

Speaking of that launch . . . Pat Burrell and the Clydesdales began last year's journey to Citizens Bank Park at 20th and Market Streets. There's nothing wrong with starting in Center City - the 1980 Phils began at 18th and JFK Boulevard. But why bypass everybody north of Market? The team should meet at Temple, drive down Broad Street and circle around City Hall.

Two thoughts on travel arrangements. First, forget the players' flatbeds. This year's event isn't likely to garner any less than the estimated two million people who lined Broad Street last year. The point? The players were hard to see, especially wearing street clothes and surrounded by their families and Phils staff. Give them each their own truck and label them so we know whom we're looking at.

And for the rest of us: Don't urge fans to use public transportation if you know the region doesn't have the resources to handle such a historic convergence on Center City. Full SEPTA trains were forced to pass crowded stations en route to the city before the parade. (One account had 10 trains passing by without stopping.) Both the regional rail and Broad Street subway lines carried more than twice their typical weekday haul last year. Some New Jersey-based fans left their cars and walked over the Ben Franklin Bridge.

It's not that SEPTA did a bad job. I'm sure it did what it could. But maybe an event of such magnitude would be better scheduled for over the weekend. That way, commuters are taken out of the equation and every seat on every train can be dedicated to parade-goers.

Yo, Philly. Act like Philly. Who cares if the New York Post deemed Philly and its fans "second-rate"? Aside from Shane Victorino tossing soft pretzels into the crowd, last year's parade lacked a certain local touch. Solution: Let the Mummers lead the way. The Overbrook High School marching band led the 1980 champs down Broad Street, and the Phils would be wise to follow a similar leader this year.

Get where you're going. Last year's caravan was supposed to take an hour and a half to get to Citizens Bank Park for the final ceremony. It took more than three hours. And when it finally arrived, the ballpark wasn't close to filled to capacity. Streamline the parade and fill those seats. Nobody likes a movie with an anticlimactic ending that runs an hour too long.

And one more thing. If Chase Utley is going to address the crowd again this year, make sure the TV and radio stations are on tape delay.


Michael Smerconish's column appears Thursdays in the Daily News and Sundays in Currents. He can be heard 5 to 9 a.m. weekdays on "The Big Talker," WPHT-AM (1210) and contacted via www.smerconish.com.

Comments   
Posted 06:55 AM, 11/01/2009
FastFrank
Mike = do we really need a parade? The cost is astronomical. Traffic and public transportation is tied up for hours. It is a major inconvenience. Work and school work doesn't get done that day. How about a nice quiet celebration. Not everything in life requires aparade you bald headed doofus!
Posted 07:17 AM, 11/01/2009
Mister Incognito
Frank, of course it requires a parade. How else will portly Brady, galpal Smuckler and Smerconish glad hand one another on the public teet.
Posted 10:04 AM, 11/01/2009
Marchus
I presume the Phillies will pay the city the extra cost of a parade - right ? Just like the city now charges other organizations or has them cut back on their festivals and marches. The Phillies are private enterprise, a profit making company. The city should not pay anything towards this parade. We already paid for the stadium. And don't blame SEPTA - blame the anti-mass transit politicians in this country, where it has always taken a back seat, way back, to cars and highways. And lastly, here you too, perpetuate this notion that Philly is down on itself - it's a story that the Inky has never let die - very strange to focus on this time and again.
Posted 11:25 AM, 11/01/2009
Ben Dover
maybe they could add a surcharge to the price of a ticket to the game to pay for a parade. why should people that could care less about playing a kids game have to pay? these so called athletes already make millions, let them pay to have themselves in a parade. and when are the phillies going to give out free ticket to the games to pay back the taxpayers for the stadium that they PLAY in?
Posted 04:49 PM, 11/01/2009
94Bravo
If Michael Smerconmanish is so hot to have a parade, then he should foot the bill for it.
Posted 09:12 AM, 11/02/2009
Hulk
Drop dead Baldy!
Posted 01:36 PM, 11/02/2009
writestuff
This is way too much effort to put into planning an event that won't happen. So ignorant.
Posted 05:01 PM, 11/02/2009
MdeanL
some things in life are worth an incovenience for a day. fast frank is clearly not a philly fan, neither is anyone who doesnt want a parade down broad street every year.
Posted 12:53 AM, 11/05/2009
proeser
Hey Mikey, what time does the parade start? The Yankees would like to be there.
Posted 09:15 AM, 11/05/2009
writestuff
How 'bout that parade, Smerconish?
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