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Los Angeles honors champs with encore parade
Associated Press
LOS ANGELES -- More than a half-million fans celebrated the
Los Angeles Lakers' second straight NBA championship Monday as
Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant promised to do it all again next
year.
| | Kobe Bryant and Shaquille O'Neal are the biggest reasons the Lakers were in a position to celebrate Monday. |
"Three-peat, three-peat, three-peat," rap master Shaq exhorted
a purple-and-gold throng massed outside Staples Center in a rousing
hip-hop performance that capped the festivities.
Bryant put it another way: "We're going to get another one next
year, again -- back to back to back."
Baking heat couldn't keep fans from flocking downtown to
celebrate the Lakers' out-of-town victory over the Eastern
Conference-champion Philadelphia 76ers.
An estimated 550,000 people turned out for the parade and rally,
according to police spokesman Lt. Horace Frank.
Paramedics treated 95 people, mostly for heat-related problems,
Fire Department spokesman Brian Humphrey said. The most serious
injury was a leg fracture suffered by a 43-year-old woman who was
hit by a car near the parade route.
On stage, Bryant squirted teammates with a giant water gun.
"Man, it's hot out here, but my brothers and I just had to be
here," said Julio Rodriguez, 13, of Los Angeles. "What a lot of
people. What a lot of fun."
Crowds packed the parade route from the civic center area to
Staples. Fans perched in trees and leaned out from garages. Office
workers mixed with schoolchildren clad in gold-and-purple Lakers
jerseys. Vendors hawked Lakers pennants and beaded necklaces as the
sound of people tooting purple plastic horns filled the air.
"They're my team, that's why I'm here. Some people just turn
out when they win, but I'm the real deal," said Malcolm Keane, 29,
of Van Nuys.
Fernando Garcia, 21, of Palm Springs, and his wife drove more
than 100 miles Sunday night to camp outside Staples.
"I think we will do this again next year," Garcia said, "and
for as many years as they keep Shaq and Kobe."
Kendra Nathaniel, 21, and four friends arrived at 6 a.m. to get
a prime spot.
"I want to see Kobe, I'm in love with Kobe," she professed.
When the parade arrived at Staples, coach Phil Jackson
apologized to fans for the Lakers' loss in the opening game at
Staples before going on to finish the 76ers on their court.
"We're sorry we lost one game at home. It wasn't your fault,
believe me, it was ours," Jackson said. "Without getting too far
ahead, wouldn't it be sweet to repeat?"
Fans shared the Lakers' confidence.
"They'll take it next year," said Martha Cruz of Los Angeles,
wearing a jersey with O'Neal's No. 34 on it.
"I think they'll win five more years as long as they don't take
Kobe away from Shaq or Shaq away from Kobe," said Manuel Bravo,
also sporting a No. 34 jersey.
Magic Johnson, a member of the Showtime Lakers, called the
current lineup "quite probably the greatest team that's ever
played."
In the opening ceremony, outgoing Mayor Richard Riordan and
Mayor-elect James Hahn jointly declared Monday Los Angeles Lakers
Day.
"If I get eight years, I want eight national championships,"
Hahn added.
Police Chief Bernard Parks thanked fans for celebrating Friday's
victory responsibly and avoiding the kind of destructive melee that
marred the team's championship a year ago.
The chief also joked that the Lakers' owners, staff and coach
were being charged with conspiring to win more championships.
"Shaquille O'Neal is being charged with assault and battery for
countless acts against NBA centers," Parks added. "Kobe Bryant is
being charged for flying without a permit, and the other Lakers who
carry the alias The Super Friends are accused of breaking and
entering -- breaking records and entering the new championship
era."
For the NBA champions, it was an encore parade.
This time the 12-block route was marked by purple lines, which
crowds were supposed to stay behind. Last year, fans swelled off
the sidewalks and slowed the procession to a crawl, sometimes
bringing it to a stop.
An estimated quarter-million people lined Figueroa Street for
last year's championship parade along a route that may become
"Shaq & Kobe Way," since O'Neal is 29 and Bryant is 22 and the
two are expected to keep the Lakers in championship contention for
years to come.
Los Angeles took its second consecutive league title Friday,
beating the 76ers 108-96 in Philadelphia to win the championship in
five games.
The Lakers finished the playoffs with a record of 15-1, the best
ever, and they also became the first team to go through the
playoffs undefeated on the road.
Victory night was not marred with the violence that marked last
year's Lakers' win over Indiana. After the Lakers clinched the
title with a victory against the Pacers at Staples in the sixth
game last year, a small mob of hooligans roamed the streets around
the arena, torching two police cars and a TV van and damaging other
vehicles.
This time, police were out in force around Staples, where more
than 18,000 fans paid $10 each to watch the Lakers-76ers game on
giant screen TVs. Send this story to a friend | Most sent stories
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AUDIO/VIDEO
Shaquille O'Neal has them singing in the streets of L.A. RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN Cable Modem
Kobe Bryant has lofty expectations for the 2001-2002 Lakers. wav: 112 k RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6
Magic Johnson salutes the 2001 NBA champion Lakers. wav: 144 k RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6
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