Arena football: Jaworski wants to party with a little bit of Soul

Published: Sunday, July 27 2008 12:26 a.m. MDT

Philadelphia Soul arena football team co-owner and rock star Jon Bon Jovi is seen on the practice sidelines in Philadelphia.

Matt Rourke, Associated Press

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PHILADELPHIA — Here's one "Jaws" sequel Ron Jaworski hopes ends up better than the original.

Jaworski's last trip to New Orleans with a championship on the line was a dud. The Philadelphia Eagles lost the Super Bowl to Oakland, and one of the great quarterbacks in franchise history never made it back.

Now Jaworski has another football title at stake in the Big Easy. He's traded calling plays in the huddle for calling the shots from the front office as the team president of the Arena Football League's Philadelphia Soul. In only their fifth season, the Soul have reached the ArenaBowl in New Orleans and Jaworski expects to end with the kind of victory celebration he was painfully denied 27 years ago.

"We're going to win," said the always affable Jaworski.

Jaworski, nicknamed "Jaws," can only watch from the luxury box today when the Soul play the San Jose SaberCats in ArenaBowl XXII. The SaberCats are the defending ArenaBowl champs and are making their fourth appearance in the title game in seven seasons. While the SaberCats are the New England Patriots of the AFL, the Soul are the marquee team in the high-scoring league thanks to their rock star co-owner, Jon Bon Jovi.

And if the Soul win, there will be a parade through downtown Philadelphia.

Sure, that's as routine as a walk through Faneuil Hall in a city like Boston. But in long-suffering, miserable Philadelphia, none of the four major professional sports teams has won a championship since the 76ers in 1983.

"The mayor's office would like to do it and we'd like to do it," Jaworski said of a parade. "I almost get a little nervous just thinking about it. I don't want to get too far ahead."

Jaworksi's best shot at triumphantly riding down Broad Street came in 1980 when he led the Eagles to the brink of their first Super Bowl win against the rough-and-gruff Raiders. Led by coach Dick Vermeil, Jaworksi, running back Wilbert Montgomery and wide receiver Harold Carmichael, the Eagles wiped out nearly two decades of futility since the franchise won its third and final NFL championship in 1960.

The Eagles won 11 of their first 12 games — including a 10-7 victory over the Raiders on Nov. 23 — and clinched the NFC East on the last day of the season. They knocked off division nemesis Dallas in the NFC title game and team owner Leonard Tose was so excited he threw the Eagles an extravagant party.

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