New York to fete Women's World Cup soccer
champs with parade
Send a link to a friend
[July 10, 2015]
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Thousands
headed for New York City's "Canyon of Heroes" on Friday to celebrate
with the players and coaches of the United States women's soccer team
for winning the World Cup, the first ticker tape parade honoring a
women's sports team.
|
The team will join the ranks of Apollo astronauts, foreign monarchs
and baseball's New York Yankees in being honored with a parade and a
granite marker on Broadway in lower Manhattan.
"This team captured the imagination of the nation," said New York
City Mayor Bill de Blasio at a press conference on the eve of the
procession. "Their victory, I think, sends a message about the
strength of women, the power of women, and the changes that we need
in our society."
The United States defeated Japan 5-2 in the FIFA Women's World Cup
final on Sunday in Vancouver, Canada, the third time the U.S. women
have won the title of world champions.
The last woman athlete to be honored with a ticker tape parade was
Olympic figure skating champion Carol Heiss Jenkins in 1960.
The 23 U.S. team members and their coaches will be driven on a
decorated vehicle, or float, north toward City Hall from the
southern tip of Manhattan with the Statue of Liberty at their back
on a parade route lined with towering office buildings.
The New York tradition began in 1886, when people who worked in
skyscrapers threw ticker tape - ribbons of white paper on which
stock information was recorded in those days - onto a parade
celebrating the dedication of the Statue of Liberty.
With stock information now computerized, ticker tape has been
replaced with shredded office paper and confetti. On Thursday, the
Downtown Alliance neighborhood group delivered about two tons of
shredded paper to more than 50 buildings and tenants along the
parade route, a fraction of the paper that will be used.
[to top of second column] |
The City of New York Department of Sanitation cleaned up more than
34 tons of paper after the New York Giants of the National Football
League had its Super Bowl victory parade in 2012. The department
will deploy 400 extra sanitation employees to clear debris on
Friday.
The parade will cost the city $1.5 million and will use $450,000 in
private donations.
"It’s called the Canyon of Heroes for good reason. The visual is
stunning," said Downtown Alliance President Jessica Lappin. "To have
a parade in your honor, it’s the ultimate distinction."
(Reporting by Katie Reilly; Editing by Grant McCool)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|