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For her, it was a moment of joy surrounded by stark reality. Her street is dotted by boarded-up homes, abandoned by flood victims who were unable to come back or couldn't find the will to rebuild.
"One house after the other is empty," said Schexnyder, whose own house is still being rebuilt. "I had some bad luck with contractors. I have extension cords around the house. My plumbing is not finished. FEMA took my trailer away."
The Saints were temporarily relocated to San Antonio after Katrina. In exile like the rest of the city, the players lived out of hotels and did weight training at Gold's Gyms. They went 3-13 that season and for a while practiced at a high school.
Meanwhile, San Antonio's mayor said he had set up talks with team owner Tom Benson about moving the club to Texas. Even the future of the Louisiana Superdome, where thousands sought refuge after Katrina, was in doubt.
"They wanted to tear down the Superdome! You can't do that to us," said Lacey Hyer, holding a mimosa after a noisy, all-night party in the French Quarter.
The stars had begun to align for the Saints by 2006. The Dome was fixed up. Payton and quarterback Drew Brees were brought in. Heisman Trophy winner Reggie Bush was obtained by a stroke of good fortune in the draft, and the Saints sold out their season tickets. They went to the NFC championship for the first time that first season back in New Orleans.
And on Sunday, after only their ninth winning season in their 43 years, the Saints became champions. Long-suffering fans throughout the city shot off fireworks, danced in the streets and on rooftops, and celebrated a team, and maybe a city, reborn.
[Associated Press;
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