Europe's new soccer champions returned to a heroes' welcome Monday as hundreds of thousands of partying fans lined the streets to greet them, and Greece's spirits soared five weeks before the Aug. 13-29 Olympics.
Music to "Zorba the Greek" blared out and fireworks exploded as the players were showered with honors at the all-marble Panathenian stadium, where the first modern Olympics were held in 1896.
Supporters -- still hoarse from wild night-long celebrations -- roared "Greece, Greece" and "Bring on Brazil'' as the shock European Championship winners arrived.
PHOTO: EPA
"This is a great moment of joy," said Prime Minister Costas Caramanlis, who had traveled to Lisbon to watch Greece beat Portugal 1-0 in Sunday's final. "I am sure this [feeling] will peak at the Olympic Games."
More than 100,000 people in and around the stadium sang the national anthem and chanted "God is German" to honor coach Otto Rehhagel, who has been offered Greek citizenship.
A beaming Rehhagel sat holding the cup at the front of a bus which brought the team from the airport. Thousands of motorcycles blaring their horns followed the bus on its 35km route as it plowed through a sea of flares and Greek flags.
PHOTO: AP
Police, gearing up for massive Olympic security next month, occasionally appeared to lose their grip on the ecstatic crowds.
National colors of blue and white were draped over the city, over balcony rails, flapping out car windows, painted onto faces, tied around pet dogs and made into hats, T-shirts, champagne labels and cake decorations.
Angelos Charisteas' winning header against Portugal was shown all day on giant outdoor television screens -- the moment that sealed Greece's remarkable three-week run past the hosts, Russia, Spain, France and the Czech Republic.
Each victory was followed by an ever-growing street celebration in Athens, other Greece cities and in Greek communities from New York to Melbourne, Australia. Monday's party was the biggest.
"We never thought we could make you so happy. Thank you," Greece captain Theodoros Zagorakis, named player of the tournament, told the welcoming crowd.
The 65-year-old Rehhagel, now sought by his native Germany before it hosts the 2006 World Cup finals, is credited with transforming a Greek side which has no household names in the sport and a domestic league plagued by fan violence and financial crisis.
"It's not a dream. The cup is in Athens," said Rehhagel, clutching a stack of trophies. "The Greeks can be proud of their team, not just for the games they played but because they became the best ambassadors for the Olympics."
Success at Euro 2004 comes as a welcome distraction for Athenians who have been harrowed by months of road closures and other late preparations for the Olympics.
Athens newspapers compared the players to winners of the ancient Olympic Games and rued the fact there were no walls around Athens to tear down in the traditional greeting for returning champions.
"We should tear down the walls, our boys are returning home as champions of Europe," the Athens daily Ethnos said in a banner headline, while the sports daily SporTime wrote "God please give us more tears so we can keep crying from happiness."
But it was a banner hanging from a suburban Athens street that most defined the Greek mood.
It read: "If this is a dream, then I never want to wake up."
portugal
President Jorge Sampaio awarded the Portuguese national soccer team with the Order of Infante D. Henrique in a ceremony at his official residence in Belem on Monday.
Deeply moved, his voice shaken by emotion, Sampaio congratulated the team for their "outstanding performance" at the European Championship.
Portugal was beaten 1-0 by Greece in the Euro 2004 final in Lisbon Sunday night, denying the Portuguese the title on home soil.
"When I invited you here last Wednesday, I already knew that, regardless of last night's result, you would all be worthy of this commendment," Sampaio said.
"You are now linked to a never before seen feat in Portuguese soccer and helped put Portugal in the map. For that I thank you. Long live the Portuguese team and long live Portugal."
Portugal coach Luiz Felipe Scolari and Portuguese soccer federation President Gilberto Madail were presented with the award, given to one, whether at home or abroad, aids in expansion of Portuguese culture.
The head of state went on to urge the Portuguese to lend their new found enthusiasm and strength to other projects in their life other than soccer.
"It has been a beautiful thing to see, the flags draped on balconies and cars, faces painted, the red and green of our cloth everywhere," Sampaio said. "I hope the Portuguese can keep the spirit up and lend it to their everyday lives."
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