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New England fans flood streets, chant anti-Yankee slogans, in celebration of Super Bowl

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Posted 3:48PM on Monday 4th February 2002 ( 23 years ago )
BOSTON - Fans danced on cars, climbed lightpoles and chanted anti-New York Yankee slogans after Adam Vinatieri&#39;s spectacular kick ended decades of Super Bowl failure for the New England Patriots. <br> <br> Vinatieri&#39;s 48-yard field goal on Sunday in the last second gave New England its first Super Bowl championship ever, a 20-17 victory over the heavily favored St. Louis Rams. <br> <br> &#34;For so long, the city&#39;s been known as being losers,&#34; said Dan Shapira, 23, of Framingham. &#34;(Sunday) was Boston&#39;s day. The tables are going to turn. The fans are going to feed off this and support all the teams.&#34; <br> <br> There will be more celebrations Tuesday, with a parade from Copley Square to City Hall Plaza. <br> <br> In Kenmore Square, near the Red Sox&#39;s Fenway Park, more than 1,000 fans crowded the streets and chanted Yankee slogans Sunday. <br> <br> Seth Burton watched celebrators outside his Northeastern University dorm room surround an empty car. <br> <br> &#34;I saw them flip the car onto a fire made out of paper boxes and newspapers,&#34; Burton said. &#34;The cops came and flipped the car back over, and left.&#34; Then, people returned to pulverize the car, he said. <br> <br> Things got out of hand at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, 75 miles from Boston, where students stormed a dining hall, stole a table and tossed it onto a bonfire. Two people were arrested. <br> <br> Police in Boston and surrounding areas reported four arrests for offenses including vandalism and disorderly conduct. <br> <br> Boston&#39;s sports teams had become known more for failure than success, with the Red Sox&#39;s 83-year baseball championship drought emblematic of the regional frustration. Boston&#39;s last championship came when the Celtics won the NBA title in 1986. <br> <br> But the Patriots defied the odds and bad Boston karma all season, beating favored teams and overcoming a 1-3 start en route to Sunday&#39;s upset over the Rams, who were favored by 14 points. <br> <br> &#34;We&#39;re the champions of the world,&#34; Marshfield native Scott Kantor, 35, exclaimed as he and 300 other fans at the Sports Depot restaurant in Boston&#39;s Allston section leaped after Vinatieri&#39;s kick. <br> <br> &#34;Nobody gave us any respect at all,&#34; Kantor said, pausing to catch his breath as fans went crazy. &#34;All the so-called experts had us being blown out. No one thought we could do it except for us.&#34; <br> <br> <br>

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