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Floridadelphian's in Print!

Posted on Tue, Feb. 01, 2005
Faithful to Philly after years away


Inquirer Staff Writer

Kindred Eagles spirits will always find each other.

Eleven years ago, Mary McGarrigle and her husband, Hank, new in Jacksonville from Northeast Philadelphia and wearing their Eagles jerseys, were looking for an empty table in a sports bar on Third Street near the beach. Chris Lamoureux and Ted Gaskill, best friends and transplants from Chester County, ordered them into their booth.

They bonded over burgers and Birds, and now, many beers later, upward of 50 former Philadelphians - many more during big games - fill Bob Marlins Sports Grille.

Any Philly team will do. They take road trips to Clearwater to see the Phillies at spring training. They pop down to Tampa or Sunrise for a Flyers game, when there is hockey.

Last fall, they learned of Floridadelphia, a club of expats (that's former Philadelphians, not Patriots), with chapters in Tampa and the Panhandle.

And so Jaxadelphia was born.

Jaxadelphia is still a loose-knit band of Philly boosters. There's no president, no charter, no by-laws, though Lamoureaux is the designated "speller."

Speller? He stands up at key moments in Eagles games and leads the E-A-G-L-E-S chant in front of the big-screen TV at Bob Marlins. Hence, the speller.

Recite the pledge, adapted from one coined by the Floridadelphians, and you're in:

I pledge allegiance to the teams

From the City of Brotherly Love.

The Eagles, Flyers, Sixers and Phils

Will always rise above.

I'll eat my cheesesteaks, sausages and peppers

With the greatest sense of pride.

'Cause even though I'm not in Philly

That spirit lives inside.

I pledge to represent Philly

And the Jaxadelphia club as well.

And the Cowboys, Rangers, Devils and Braves

Can all go burn in hell!

Sunday night, after toasting the arrival of the Eagles at the team's Super Bowl hotel, about a dozen Jaxadelphians drove out to Marlins for a late dinner. They talked Eagles with voices still hoarse from the impromptu pep rally. It sounded like a sports bar back home. Must be something in the woorder.

Beers flowed, paper plates of burgers and deep-fried pickles were passed around, and somebody put in a CD. What sounded like the opening notes of the Jimmy Buffett classic "Margaritaville" filled the place. But Buffett sang, "Nibblin' on cheesesteak," instead of "sponge cake."

Everyone screamed the chorus: "Eagles fans are takin' over Jacksonville."

And they will, mostly later this week, when tens of thousands of Philadelphians descend on the Jaxadelphians' adopted hometown. Offering Southern hospitality spiced with Philly attitude, they will host three parties at Marlins, including a tailgate in Marlins' parking lot.

The Jaxadelphians are a varied bunch, bound only by a passion for Philadelphia sports teams. There's no shortage of prospective members. Everyone in Florida, it seems, has a Philadelphia connection.

"I've never talked to one person who's not from Philadelphia," said Mary McGarrigle.

Jaxadelphia has turned into a family thing, too. Former Mayfair resident Bernadette Marcum, 48, who works for a food brokerage, comes out with her husband, Dale, and son Fran Terpening - "born on Oct. 21, 1980!" she exclaimed.

Ya gotta believe - that was the day the Phillies won their only World Series.

The Martineza family left Aston, Delaware County, in 1993. Tony, who coordinates the Jaxadelphia.com Web site, drives 40 minutes each way. His sister, Jennifer, 33, is a regular, too, with her boyfriend, Sean - whom she converted. He was a Dallas Cowboys fan.

Mary and Jim Starr - she's originally from Kensington and he's from Juniata - moved down five years ago. They live on a golf course in a house that "would have cost a million at the Jersey Shore, and we built it for less than a third of that," said Jim, 50, who marvels at Florida's low costs, laid-back atmosphere, and weather that allows you to wear shorts pretty much year-round.

Fans of the Jacksonville Jaguars aren't pushing to rid Bob Marlins of the green-wearing Jaxadelphians. You can't even watch most Jaguars games at Bob Marlins, or in any sports bar in Jacksonville. In 10 seasons, the team has never sold out Alltel Stadium, so home games are blacked out.

After an hour or so of chanting, chatting and eating, it was time for the Jaxadelphians to wrap up.

"See y'all," McGarrigle called out on her way to the door.

Her friends' hoots stopped her. "You mean, 'See youse!' " somebody bellowed.

They can't get too far out of Philly.

Contact staff writer Michael Klein

at 215-854-5514 or mklein@phillynews.com.

Jaxadelphia's home base is Bob Marlins Sports Grille at 798 Third St. (A1A) in Jacksonville Beach (904-270-1915). A "welcome Eagles" party will begin at 5 p.m. Thursday. A pep rally will begin at 3 p.m. Saturday. A tailgate party in the parking lot will begin at 11 a.m. Sunday. Try the fried pickles.


Posted on Tue, Feb. 01, 2005
Jax Whiz some Philly flavor

Philadelphians headed for this town are excused if they confuse it for home.

Not because of the landscape, of course; this place lacks anything approaching charm.

But look around, and you see the unmistakable color of Philly: Green.

It's everywhere, on license plates, T-shirts, restaurants and billboards. And not just because the Chamber of Commerce types have sprinkled the town with both team' colors.

The people wearing Green are locals. Many of them moved south from the city, and brought their Eagles window flags with them.

It's so Philly down here, some locals call it expatriates call it Jaxadelphia.

At least a half-dozen unofficial Eagles fan clubs, who meet every Sunday during the season, are hosting Super Bowl festivities at local watering holes this week. Still others - like Floridadelphia in the Panhandle, or Philly of the South in Tampa - are headed this way, too.

As Jeff Harris, a Malvern native (Great Valley '94), said, "Jacksonville is a cheesesteak kind of town."

He should know. Harris and his wife, Kelley (Northeast High '96) run the best cheesesteak joints in town, Philly's Finest. On Sundays during the season, his two shops are packed with Eagles fans, washing down hoagies and cheesesteaks with mugs of Yuengling. For the NFC championship, it was SRO.

"We're diehard Philadelphia fans down here," Harris said. "It's like Philly south."

Eagles fans will remember when the Birds played the Jacksonville Jaguars down here two years ago, Alltel Stadium sounded more like the Linc than enemy. Harris is predicting much the same thing for the Super Bowl.

"I'm not sure how it happened," he said, "but it just turns out a lot of Philadelphians ended up in Jacksonville."

Only one problem: Though Harris goes to the trouble of shipping Amorosa rolls and authentic Philly cheesesteak beef south, he can't get his customers to order them with Cheez Whiz.

"What can I say?" he laughed. "They like American cheese down here... But we don't serve 'em with Swiss cheese! If you ordered that in Philly, you'd get slapped."

Philly's Finest (10750 Atlantic Blvd.) will host a pep rally on Thursday at 7:30. The event is expected to be broadcast in Philadelphia on CBS3.

On Sunday, fans can catch the game at the shop on a 60-inch high-def screen. Harris is expecting the crowd to overflow onto the parking lot.

Meanwhile, Jaxadelphia will host still more fans at Bob Marlin's Sports Grille (3rd & 8th streets, Jacksonville). "We hope to be able to spread our wings out to

Eagles fever spreading
From Florida to London, the feathered faithful have spread their wings but still keep an eye on The Birds.
By DAVE RALIS
phillyBurbs.com

The Atlantic Ocean may separate Bob Ramsey from his native Philadelphia, but the London, England resident is still following the Eagles' victories and rooting for them to make their first Super Bowl appearance in nearly a quarter century.

"They have three divisions over here that play American football. I have met a lot of people that are really into it," Ramsey wrote in an e-mail this week to phillyBurbs.com.

So much so, that Ramsey said he doesn't have to explain much to friends why rooms in his home - including a loo - are decorated in Eagles paraphernalia. He even sent pictures to prove it. (See them in our online Eagles fans' photo gallery).

Ramsey, a former Air Force recruiter in Philly whose first wife grew up in the Northeast, moved from McGuire Air Force base to London in 1990, and has found some high tech ways to follow the team.

"I have Field Pass, so I can listen to Merrill (Reese) and Mike Quick (on the NFL's Web site), and I also get the Eagles games on DVD from Switzerland, the week after the game is played," he wrote.

Former Philadelphians in Florida's panhandle are similarly psyched about the Eagles' 5-0 record , but don't have nearly that much trouble following Da Birds from 1,100-miles south of the city, according to Chris Kaelin, president of the Floridadelphian.com fan club.

"We have members from all over the Delaware Valley (Philly, Northeast and Western Suburbs, Jersey and Delaware)," Kaelin wrote in an e-mail this week.
 
In fact, there are so many "Floridadelphians," that Kaelin said their Panama City-based club has started branches in Jacksonville, Orlando, Ft. Myers, Ft. Lauderdale, Ft. Walton Beach, even Tampa.

SOARING WITH THE EAGLES?

Flying high with the Eagles? Dressing up to watch the game? Send us your photos (JPEG only please) and tell us why you think the Eagles will win the Super Bowl this year. Just send an e-mail to online sports editor Dave Ralis at dralis@phillyBurbs.com.

October 21, 2004 11:49 AM

Far from Philly, Eagles fans unite to follow team

Sunday, October 17, 2004

By CHUCK GORMLEY
Courier-Post Staff

As Eagles fans across the Delaware Valley sink into their easy chairs for today's 1 o'clock kickoff against the Carolina Panthers - remotes in one hand, salsa-dipped chips in the other - they may be comforted to know they are not alone in their passion for their beloved Birds.

Turn down the volume on those big screen TVs today and you're liable to hear thousands of Eagles fans in Florida singing "Fly Eagles Fly!"

Step outside the house, cup your ear and you might hear a few hundred chest-beating fans in San Diego giving a throaty "E-A-G-L-E-S" chant.

Eagles games have not just become an out-of-body experience for fans from South Philadelphia to South Jersey. They also have become Sunday rituals for fans in Panama City Beach, Fla., Lewisville, Texas, Freeman, S.D., Tigard, Ore., and San Diego, Calif. Even in London, England.

We know, because we found them. From the redwood forests to the Gulf Stream waters, this land was made for fans of Donovan and Terrell. Or at least it seems that way. On a mission

Kim Guodace is on a mission. An electrical engineer at the Kennedy Space Center in Cape Canaveral, she wants the world to know where her allegiance lies.

"Ever since I was 8 years old I've wanted to be an astronaut," said Guodace, a 31-year-old native of Levittown, Pa., now working on her doctorate in space science at the Florida Institute of Technology. "My application (to man the space shuttle) is in, and I'm hoping that someday I do get picked. If I do, damn straight I'm wearing an Eagles jersey in space."

Guodace grew up an Eagles fan, watching games with her mother, Edith, a native Philadelphian, every Sunday afternoon. She moved to Florida at the age of 17 to attend FIT, where she earned a bachelor's degree in electrical engineering and master's degrees in space management and space systems.

Guodace was never enamored with the idea of watching Eagles games at sports bars, but she found a place near Melbourne called The Purple Porpoise, where Eagles games are shown on two big-screen TVs.

"There are tons of Eagles fans," she said. "I just wanted to be around people who love the Eagles." Lone Star fan

Imagine being the lone sheep in a den of wolves. As an avid Eagles fan deep in the heart of Texas, Mimi Spreen knows the feeling.

A 42-year-old native of Cherry Hill now living in Lewisville, Texas, Spreen resides 20 miles northwest of Dallas, where anyone who is not a Cowboys fan is considered an enemy.

"Cowboys fans absolutely hate me," said Spreen, a 1980 graduate of Cherry Hill High School West who moved to Texas in 1986.

The hard feelings run even deeper when Spreen watches games with her family. She remembers watching the 2000 season opener in Dallas, when the Eagles whipped the Cowboys 41-14, in the home of her husband's uncle.

"They are all die-hard Cowboys fans," she said. "When we killed the Cowboys in that game - it was the pickle juice game - my uncle couldn't even look at me."

Spreen, who works as a pastry chef at the Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, said it's difficult to find anyone to join her for an Eagles-Cowboys game at Texas Stadium. She says the atmosphere is far different than what she experienced at Veterans Stadium, where she attended about 25 games with her father, Don, who is 83.

"I'll wear all of my Eagles clothes to the games here," she said. "My jersey, my cap, my earrings, even my panties. Everyone's afraid to go with me. They're afraid they'll get beat up or end up in jail." Philly South

When Mike Kline, 45, and Chris Kaelin, 36, left the Philadelphia region for the warmer climate of Florida - Kline in 1980 and Kaelin in 1999 - they couldn't bear the thought of detaching themselves from the team they love.

So they created the next best thing to a South Philly tailgate party. They formed Philly fan clubs.

"It started getting lonely down here," said Kaelin, a native of Bristol, Pa., who moved to Panama City Beach when his wife's parents retired in northern Florida.

Kaelin's Web site, floridadelphian.com, encourages Floridians to watch games at the Calypso Beach Cafe in Panama City Beach, about 90 miles south of Alabama, where they fry up Philly cheesesteaks and serve Yuengling on tap.

Kline has put together a similar contingent of Bird watchers in North Tampa, where 275 fans gathered at Bilmar Station for the Eagles' Oct. 3 win over Chicago.

"Sundays are an absolute blast," Kline said. "It's like walking into the 700 level."

There are pockets of Eagles fans throughout the state of Florida, including one that gathers at Gator Lanes in North Fort Myers every Sunday.

Kline is trying to gather members of six or seven Eagles' fans clubs in Florida for the inaugural "Wingapalooza" on Nov. 20-21 in Panama City Beach.

Kline is advertising his weekend as "Wings Gone Wild" and has set aside discounted rooms at the Edgewater Beach Resort, where shuttles will take fans to Florida's own version of the Wing Bowl. London calling

Bob Ramsey lives in London, but has been following the Eagles since attending his first NFL game on Thanksgiving Day 1968, at Franklin Field.

Ramsey joined the Air Force at the age of 17 and listened for Eagles game updates on Armed Forces radio as he moved from one state to another.

Since 1994, Ramsey has lived in London with his family. To quench his thirst for the Eagles, he recently purchased the NFL's Field Pass, "so I can listen to Merrill Reese and Mike Quick."

Ramsey, who decorated his downstairs bathroom in midnight green, has high hopes for this year's team.

"My wife has promised me that if the Eagles win that trophy, I'll be able to fly to Philly and watch the parade," Ramsey said. Unlikely outpost

Jason Gross was not born near Philadelphia. He hasn't even visited the place.

A 35-year-old native of Freeman, S.D., he fell in love with the Birds back in 1978 when placekicker Mike Michel missed what would have been a game-winning field goal in the NFC wild-card game.

"I remember the TV replays and he was on the field very dejected," Gross said. "After that, I just had the mentality, `Let's see how they do next year.' "

Living in the heart of Minnesota Vikings country, he said his emotional ties to the Eagles have remained strong.

"Around here, all anybody hears is Viking this, Vikings that," said Gross, who is the only Eagles fan he knows. "Do you have any idea how irritating that is?"

Gross said he took great pleasure in watching the Eagles beat Minnesota this season.

"I never followed the masses and I've never jumped on bandwagons," he said. "The Eagles can finally say they are built to win it all." Philly West

Continue west and you'll find yet another pocket of Eagles supporters at J.B. O'Brien's Irish Pub in Tigard, Ore.

Steve Watkins, 59, moved from North Philadelphia, where he graduated from Olney High School in 1963, to Beaverton, Ore., in 1980. As a lonely Eagles fan he decided to start his own fan club and Web site, eaglesnestpdx.com.

At around noon today - which is 9 a.m. in Oregon - Watkins and 40 of his closest friends will flood J.B. O'Brien's to root for their team.

"The place is full by 10 a.m.," said Watkins, who works as a corporate credit manager. "We're not 700 level fans, but we scream and holler and boo at the TV."

The atmosphere is much the same in Southern California. Doug Burke, the 29-year-old manager of Plum Crazy in San Diego, said his bar gets so many Eagles fans on Sunday mornings, the locals aren't sure what to make of the place.

"Once in a while you'll catch a stray person pop his head in, see 300 Eagles fans, and keep walking," Burke said of the bar that sits four blocks from the Pacific Ocean.

Dale Sharman, 32, is one of those Eagles crazies. A native of Bethlehem, Pa., he moved to San Diego in 1996 and now finds himself in a key role.

"Some guy used to jump up on the bar and do the `E-A-G-L-E-S' chant after every touchdown, but he moved," Sharman said. "So, I took over."

Sharman said people now stop him on the street and say they recognize him as the guy who contorts his body into letters of the alphabet.

"You have to admit we are unique fans," Sharman said. "We might not see things as clearly as most people. But no one can question our passion for our sports teams, especially the Eagles."


Reach Chuck Gormley at cgormley@courierpostonline.com
 

www.floridadelphian.com

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