Boston celebrates another Red Sox crown

City honors World Series champions with victory parade

Boston Red Sox reliever Jonathan Papelbon plays the air guitar with a broom as he rides in the team's victory parade. Pitcher Mike Timlin stands at right. The Red Sox were honored Tuesday in Boston after sweeping the Colorado Rockies in the World Series.

? When the Red Sox needed a closer – even for their World Series championship parade – Jonathan Papelbon was their man.

Papelbon donned a kilt and danced his trademark Irish jig to the roars of tens of thousands of fans Tuesday as the city celebrated Boston’s second World Series title in four years with a three-mile-long rolling rally from Fenway Park to City Hall Plaza.

“The fans connect to Papelbon because he cuts loose, he’s passionate,” said Red Sox fan Ryan McCarthy, who was carrying “Mobile Papelbon,” a giant cardboard likeness with its legs on hinges to mimic his dance moves.

Players and their families boarded 20 amphibious, World War II-era duck boats outside the stadium for a journey through the city. Manny Ramirez grabbed a microphone and yelled to fans along the route. “You guys are No. 1.” “There’s a party at my house tonight.” “We did it for you guys.” “We’re gonna do it again next year.” “You guys are the best fans in the whole world.”

Fans showed their love back for the team, chanting “MVP” to Mike Lowell and waving signs with wedding proposals to rookie Jacoby Ellsbury.

The two-hour parade paused three times for Papelbon to dance on a flatbed truck, accompanied by the Dropkick Murphys, a Boston-based punk rock band with heavy Irish folk music influence.

Before the parade, the band presented Papelbon with his own kilt plus one for ace Josh Beckett and general manager Theo Epstein, who had promised to dance with him. They also made a kilt for slugger David Ortiz, whom they hoped to coax into the jig.

At the first two stops at Copley Plaza and Boston Common, Papelbon danced alone, wearing jeans, a red championship T-shirt and dark sunglasses and waving a large cigar in his hand. Along the route, he played air guitar on a broom – a reference to Boston’s sweep of the Colorado Rockies.

But he saved his best dancing – and wardrobe change, putting the kilt over his jeans – for the largest crowd, which packed City Hall Plaza, the end of the parade. He was joined by relievers Hideki Okajima and Mike Timlin, who earlier had tied the bullpen mascot, a stuffed parrot, onto one of the speakers on the Dropkick Murphys’ flatbed. On another boat, six members of Boston’s bullpen recreated their postseason jam sessions.

Ortiz and Epstein never got the chance to don their kilts, as their duck boats continued on the route.

The caravan of duck boats followed a similar route to the rolling celebration staged after the Red Sox broke an 86-year World Series drought in 2004 by sweeping the St. Louis Cardinals. The Red Sox completed a sweep of the Rockies with a 4-3 victory Sunday in Denver.

Mark Rinaldi, a student at Harvard, said he attended the 2004 parade and “I never thought I’d be able to do it again in my lifetime. To do it twice is pretty incredible.”

Most of the players and manager Terry Francona wore bright red hooded championship sweat shirts. Some, including first baseman Kevin Youkilis and Timlin, wore T-shirts that said “We did it AGAIN.” Many of the players took photos or video recordings of the fans along the way.

Owner John Henry, wearing an argyle gray sweater, tapped his hand on his heart in thanks as he waved to fans from a lead boat, which also carried the new World Series trophy.

Fans decked out in Red Sox gear lined the route, holding signs and cheering for the team. Some couldn’t resist a shot at the archrival New York Yankees and former Red Sox star Johnny Damon, who defected to New York after the 2004 championship.

“Johnny Damon is home changing diapers,” read one sign. “This is better.”