There was a desire to celebrate an old-fashioned title after four years without being able to sing the alirón, and as soon as the referee Burgos Bengoetxea whistled the end of the derby that faced the FC Barcelona with the Spanish in which the club trained by Xavi Hernández has sealed The league With a resounding 2-4 victory at the RCDE Stadium, hundreds of fans of the Barca club have crowded into one of the mythical locations when it comes to celebrating triumphs: Canaletes.
The fans of FC Barcelona They have begun to gather before the game ended, although around 11:00 pm they have already filled the central sidewalk of La Rambla at the height of the Canaletas fountain, the club’s historic point of celebration.
Given this forecast that more and more people would join the celebration, the Urban Guard has decided to block Pelai street.
The party has been in style, unleashed euphoria, with fireworks, fans perched on the Canaletes fountain and the newsstands, raising their scarves and singing the club’s anthem. Something has changed, yes, compared to the last League celebration of 2019: this time, surveillance was carried out by a drone that flew over the party.
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The repertoire of songs (if the observation of a half hour of celebration serves as an example) has been more charged with Barcelona (again and again, songs of “Campeones” and the traditional “Ser del Barça és el millor que hi ha”) that of allusions to the winners of the title, practically absent. In a while, Messi (with his name chanted longing for his return), ‘Uruguasho’ (1) and, finally, a “Busi, Busi” have beaten on the counter.
Winning the title in the Cornellà field has made the memories of the eternal rival very present: a banner with the cat Silvestre about to gobble up a parakeet and chants of “A second, second” and “I hate the Spanish”, almost above the eternal “Madrid, bastard, say hello to the champion” and followed by not very affectionate memories of PSG after the cheers for Messi.