The Philadelphia Eagles didn't look like the less experienced team during their win in Super Bowl LII against the New England Patriots, but their fans sure showed that the Super Bowl parade was their first ever.

As reported by Anthony Izaguirre of the Associated Press, Philadelphia's Police Commissioner Richard Ross said that two fans were stabbed during the celebrations on Thursday. No suspects were arrested for the stabbings, and the victims are expected to survive.

Ross also tallied the major damage at the parade as two arrests, a police officer assaulted by an overzealous female fan and a destroyed Jumbotron which, it turns out, responded poorly to people trying to scale it. Four police cars were climbed by fans, but escaped merely with dents.

The Commissioner himself didn't escape unscathed. Unplanned celebrations on the night of the Super Bowl saw Commissioner Ross get hit in the head with a bottle. In addition, some cars got overturned, some storefront windows got shattered, and some horse droppings got orally recycled by fans.

As a comparison, the Patriots' Super Bowl parade after last year's Super Bowl LI was relatively safer. Patriots fans, experienced from their five Lombardi Trophies in 15 years, celebrated their victory with no arrests.

The events in Philadelphia were downplayed by Mayor Jim Kenney, who said “I don’t think many people would argue when I say this week has been one of the greatest weeks in Philadelphia history,” and noted that the parade “went off without a hitch.” The parade was estimated to be attended by 700,000 fans according to examinations of parade route photos, but the expected number was around two million.