Mask-clad fans stream into Buccaneers' home stadium for Super Bowl
unlike any other
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[February 08, 2021]
By Amy Tennery
TAMPA, Fla. (Reuters) - Mask-clad fans
streamed into the Tampa Bay Buccaneers' stadium on Super Bowl Sunday
for the NFL's championship game, as the limited crowd of attendees
largely observed COVID-19 health and safety restrictions.
The showdown between the hometown Bucs and the reigning Super Bowl
champion Kansas City Chiefs is the culmination of a National
Football League season that once appeared in doubt, as the novel
coronavirus ripped through the United States and plunged the world
of professional sports into disarray nearly 11 months ago.
The 65,618-capacity Raymond James Stadium, which is allowing 25,000
ticketed fans in the stands and suites for America's biggest annual
sporting event, had the appearance of a packed crowd, as cardboard
cutouts were scattered between the in-person fans.
"I love this," said Colleen O'Malley, 61, a lifelong Chiefs fan who
traveled from Lawrence, Kansas, gesturing to the cutouts, as she enjoyed
the sunny skies and 71-degree Fahrenheit (22 C) weather. "We were
worried about the rain and look at this!"
The cutouts, which feature images of average fans, former NFL players
and celebrities including disc jockey and record producer DJ Khaled and
singer Lizzo, were among the measures designed to keep attendees
socially distanced.
Officials scattered throughout the stadium reminded ticket holders to
space themselves out on escalators, while pop singer Miley Cyrus crooned
her cover of "Heart of Glass" to a crammed tailgate concert for some of
the 7,500 vaccinated healthcare workers to whom the league provided free
tickets.
While the vast majority of fans were wearing masks, the
signage requesting that attendees stay 6 feet (1.8 m) apart was largely
ignored around of some of the stadium’s concession stands.
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Fans check their cellular
phones outside Raymond James Stadium before Super Bowl LV between
the Kansas City Chiefs and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Mandatory
Credit: Kim Klement-USA TODAY Sports
Michael Simpkins, 51, a Buccaneers season-ticket holder for five
years, was among the many hometown fans hoping to see Tampa Bay
clinch its first NFL championship since 2003, with six-time Super
Bowl-winning quarterback Tom Brady – playing his first season for
the team – at the helm.
"I hated him until he came here," Simpkins said of the longtime New
England Patriot. "Now I love him! I love Brady. He’s awesome."
Tampa is the first city to host its own team at the Super Bowl, and
fans shelled out thousands of dollars for the limited supply of
tickets. The lowest price for a pair on Ticketmaster was $10,716 as
of Friday, according to data supplied by the ticket seller.
Keith Kunzig, a 53-year-old financial adviser in Tampa, who is
attending his second straight Super Bowl, was accompanied by his
21-year-old daughter, Destiny.
"I knocked this off my bucket list to be in the home stadium with
our Tampa Bay Bucs and my baby girl. That’s all I can ask," Kunzig
said. "Now let’s get a victory."
(Reporting by Amy Tennery and Gabriella Borter in Tampa, Florida;
Editing by Peter Cooney)
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