SAN FRANCISCO —
Orange-and-black clad hordes flooded the streets of San Francisco on Wednesday for a ticker-tape parade celebrating the 2012 World Series champion Giants — a Halloween treat made all the more sweet as a repeat performance.
Tens of thousands of people decked out in the team's holiday-appropriate colors stood 20 deep behind barriers along the city's main commercial street to watch their favorite players wave from atop individual convertibles.
Standing next to a gold Rolls Royce that served as his ride, Giants manager Bruce Bochy credited the fans with helping lift San Francisco to its second World Series victory in three years, an improbable double play for a team that before 2010 had not won a World Series title since 1954.
"The support they gave us was unwavering," Bochy said. "Even when we were six to seven games back, they kept filling the park. They never gave up on us. They are like part of the club."
As with the 2010 parade, this year's edition drew a cross-section of the region's diversity, from children who were allowed to skip school to older couples who had been Giants fans since the team arrived in San Francisco from New York in 1958.
Spectators watched San Francisco 49ers quarterback Alex Smith drive a car carrying Giants pitcher Matt Cain, while 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh did the honors for Giant Brandon Belt.
With the victory parade coinciding with Halloween, , costumed masses brought an even more festive feel to what city officials stressed will be a family friendly, alcohol-free event.
Richmond resident Kevin Yarbrough wore a giant white panda costume in tribute to Giants slugger Pablo Sandoval, whose nickname is the "Panda."
Yarbough had gotten up early to put in some time at work before getting to the parade route around 7:30 a.m.
"You've got to come out and celebrate like this. You meet a whole new family, make new friends, and it really lets the community celebrate in a positive way," he said.
Vendors got an early start as well, hawking everything from pennants to lawn chairs from makeshift sidewalk stands amid the crush of the morning commute.
The convertibles were intended to give fans better views along the parade route that began at the foot of Market Street near San Francisco Bay and covered about 1 1/2 miles to Civic Center Plaza, the scene of a rally.
Many camped overnight at the site to ensure a good vantage point, erecting tents and crawling into sleeping bags for a few hours of uncomfortable sleep amid the chill and drizzle of a foggy night.
By 9 a.m., bottles of whiskey and wine were being passed around, and the pungent scent of marijuana floated through the air.
James Darden, 42, dubbed the tent city "Occupy San Francisco Giants" and said the wait was worth it.
"I'm front and center," the Yountville resident said. "There's no other place I'd rather be right now."
Alex Warlen and Kelly Simms, both 17, also spent the night in the park. Warlen is a pitcher and Simms a catcher for San Francisco's Mercy High School's softball team, the co-champions of its division.
"Buster is the reason I'm a catcher," read a sign Simms was carrying that referred to the Giants' Buster Posey. The high school seniors said Mercy administrators gave students the day off, so they weren't cutting school.
"We would have skipped anyway," Simms said.
The 2010 World Series victory parade occurred with little incident, and officials said they expected a peaceful encore Wednesday.
The city spent Monday cleaning up after a rowdy celebration Sunday night turned violent in some neighborhoods and police arrested three dozen people. Bonfires of trash were lit in several intersections, and a $700,000 public transit bus was torched.
Homepage
San Francisco goes orange and black for SF Giants
- Local News
-
-
County millage rate remains same
Tift County Commissioners voted unanimously in a called meeting Tuesday to keep the millage rate set at 12.183 for both incorporated and unincorporated areas of the county.
Continued ...
The rate was set at .312 mills for the Special Services Tax District, which includes Ty Ty and Omega. - GEMA study reveals increased emergency preparedness across state
- Gazette captures GPA Awards
- Fitzgerald juvenile on the loose
- Man airlifted in Ocilla after being trapped in silo
-
County millage rate remains same
- Local Sports
-
The southern half of the 1962 Class AA girls state hoops tournament was played in Fitzgerald, despite Fitzgerald having dropped their girls program in 1957.
-
Girls basketball had long road to equality
When Georgia decided in 1945 to play a girls state basketball tournament, Macon Telegraph writer Sam Glassman was in favor, writing that the district tournaments that had always been held were just as strenuous. Days later, though, he wondered about the mental strain it was causing the players.
- Kilgore resigns baseball post at ABAC
- TCRD hosting pair of hardball tournaments
- Future Devils learn the ropes at ESMS
- Tidal Wave takes third triumph at Georgia Games
-
Girls basketball had long road to equality
- Opinion
-
-
Southern problems...some folks got’em
I was able to take a trip down to Tampa this past weekend with my mom to see my niece in her dance recital.We didn’t get to see her dance in her recital. She kept saying she was sick, and we all kept saying, “You’ll be OK...it’s just nerves.”
- Rants & Raves – June 19
- Rants & Raves - June 18
- Angye Morrison column: How different life would have been
- Letter to the Editor – Turn to the airwaves when danger threatens
-
Southern problems...some folks got’em
- Obituaries
- Police Reports
- Your Agenda



