![]() ![]() I went through every emotion in my head, the repercussions and the consequences. The biggest fear factor I had was for the Super Bowl and that started before I even left Liverpool. I don’t make a good looking woman, honestly.ĭoes the fear factor fluctuate according to the event? Streaking among the skinny stewards at Wimbledon must be different than a police state like the Super Bowl. I’ve even got into Royal Ascot, one of the biggest horse race weekends in the UK, dressed as a woman - thought I looked like the Undertaker from WWF. Now I’ve got to get past people who are looking out for me. Every time in every station at every sport, it’s the same reaction.Īre you recognized? Even if I’m not planning anything, if there’s a major sporting event in the UK, the police are pre-warned and they have security talks just on me. That’s when I started doing golf, tennis, all the rugby events and such. A couple of months later I did press-ups in the penalty area at a Liverpool v Arsenal game and that’s when I got a football ban.Ī ban? I wasn’t allowed to go to any stadiums for 12 months. ![]() So I did a big a football game, Liverpool v Everton, and it went down great again. There hadn’t been anyone streaking for nearly 20 years in the UK. I quickly realized that people really enjoyed watching me do this – this crazy mad streaking – so I decided I’d see when I came home to England if it would be the same here. There was a big Chinese football game on two days later and I agreed to go to that. It was the adrenaline I got from that first day. What a debut.Īnd you were instantly hooked? It was just infectious. I believe I’m the first person who’s ever streaked twice at the same event on the same day. The police threw me out of the stadium and I came straight back in and did it again about a half hour later. I went to the stadium and had a few beers, then I ran on and took the ball off the New Zealand All Blacks – who were the best team in the world at the time – and scored a try. I had no intention, but the next day a guy came and dragged me out of the apartment. The owner of the bar dared me to do it the next day during the final. ![]() The Rugby Sevens was happening there, a two-day event, and I drunkenly said in a bar one evening that anybody can streak. The energy there at that time in the early 90s was infectious, just unbelievable. But people at the game captured what CBS didn’t broadcast, and Kevin Harlan’s radio call is an instant all-timer.What made you do this for the first time? I went to Hong Kong in 1993 with a one-way ticket and £30 in my pocket. The CBS cameras didn’t show the vast majority of Andrade’s run, and the broadcasters didn’t describe it. Clad in an electric pink thong leotard and shorts, Andrade evaded security and ran most of the length of the field before being downed and detained in the end zone. Run of a lifetimeĪndrade gave viewers quite a surprise on Sunday night, suddenly appearing on screen during the fourth quarter of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ dominant win over the Kansas City Chiefs. Records viewed by WFLA show that he was released just before 8 a.m. Andrade was arrested and charged with trespassing before posting $500 bond. The man who became “famous” for his scantily clad on-field run during Super Bowl LV has been officially identified and charged with a crime.Īccording to Tampa TV station WFLA, authorities identified the streaker as 31-year-old Florida man Yuri Andrade, a resident of Boca Raton.
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