A warm Yinzer welcome: NFL draft fans flood Pittsburgh
- Pope Yinzer (Don Zadach of Finleyville) and Steeler Jesus (Sean Steinmetz of North Hills) have faith that their Black and Gold will draft the right players. Observer-Reporter photo by Karen Mansfield
- Fans from world over descend on the Steel City for the NFL Draft. More than 500,000 visitors are expected to fill the ’Burgh during the three-day event. Observer-Reporter photo
- Pittsburgh Steelers’ International Fan of the Year Tom McCormack came from Dublin, Ireland, to watch the NFL Draft. McCormack announced the Steelers’ sixth round draft pick last year — Ohio State quarterback Will Howard. Observer-Reporter photo by Karen Mansfield

Pope Yinzer (Don Zadach of Finleyville) and Steeler Jesus (Sean Steinmetz of North Hills) have faith that their Black and Gold will draft the right players. Observer-Reporter photo by Karen Mansfield
PITTSBURGH — Arizona resident Dave Kruper remembers rooting for the Dallas Cowboys when he was a kid growing up in the 1970s and 1980s.
Kruper was born in Brownsville, and lived there until his parents moved to Phoenix when he was 3 years old.
“We moved to Arizona in the ’60s and the Steelers weren’t very good, and they were never on TV on the West Coast,” explained Kruper. “When I was 8 or 9 years old and started watching football, and the Arizona Cardinals were still in St. Louis, the only teams we got on TV were the Rams and the Cowboys. I liked the star on the Cowboys’ uniforms, and I liked their quarterback, Roger Staubach, the way he played and carried himself.”
From then on, said Kruper, he was a fan.
“My family remained Steelers fans, but I always rooted for the Cowboys,” he said.

Fans from world over descend on the Steel City for the NFL Draft. More than 500,000 visitors are expected to fill the ’Burgh during the three-day event. Observer-Reporter photo
Until this week, Kruper had never been to Acrisure Stadium and had visited Pittsburgh only once. But on Tuesday, he and a buddy, John Klatz, landed in Columbus, Ohio, and drove to a hotel in Delmont, about 25 miles east of Pittsburgh. The friends plan to attend all three days of the NFL Draft.
Klatz, it turns out, grew up in Binghamton, N.Y., but is a diehard Pittsburgh Steelers fan — he does not root for the Buffalo Bills or the New York Giants or Jets, which are closer geographically.
“When I was old enough to start watching football, it was in the 1970s when the Steelers were doing well and winning Super Bowls,” said Klatz. “Originally, I loved their uniforms — they looked like a bunch of bumble bees out there — and then I idolized the ball players. I’d play football in the back yard and we’d play as Franco Harris or Lynn Swann or Joe Greene.”
Kruper and Klatz were out and about near Acrisure Stadium and Point State Park on Thursday morning ahead of the first night of the NFL Draft.
They were not alone.

Pittsburgh Steelers’ International Fan of the Year Tom McCormack came from Dublin, Ireland, to watch the NFL Draft. McCormack announced the Steelers’ sixth round draft pick last year — Ohio State quarterback Will Howard. Observer-Reporter photo by Karen Mansfield
Hundreds of football fans from across the country — the globe, actually — roamed the streets around Acrisure Stadium and Pittsburgh, hours before the NFL Draft campus opened to the public.
Greg Powell and his friend, Wallace Watts, a retired airline captain affectionately known as “Captain Seahawk,” made the trip from Seattle to Pittsburgh — it is Powell’s sixth consecutive NFL Draft — and they plan to be inside the NFL Draft Stage area to watch their Super Bowl champion Seahawks and the 31 other NFL teams select the best eligible college football players in the country for their rosters.
Powell has visited the Steel City five times, to watch the Seattle Seahawks and Seattle Mariners play the Steelers and Pirates.
“I love Pittsburgh. It’s beautiful, clean and safe, and it’s a great city,” Powell said.
For five friends who graduated from Keystone Oaks High School and now are college students, the NFL Draft “is a once-in-a-lifetime experience.”
“As soon as we heard the draft was going to be in Pittsburgh, it was a must-go-to event for us,” said Jacob Wagner, who, along with his friends, was clad in a Pittsburgh Steelers jersey.
Said his friend Hayden Kenny, “I am so ready for the energy the draft is going to bring. We’re excited to watch the draft with Pittsburghers.”
Football fans were plenty busy Thursday, listening to musical performances and engaging in a variety of football-themed activities — kicking field goals and testing their vertical jump, posing with the Lombardi Trophy and giant-sized NFL helmets, scoring autographs from current NFL players and Steelers legends, sampling traditional Pittsburgh food — pierogies and Primanti’s — and other cuisine and beverages.
Tony Morano drove 4.5 hours from his hometown of Windsor, Canada, near Detroit, but he is a New York Giants fan because he shares a birthday — Feb. 4 — with NFL Hall of Fame linebacker Lawrence Taylor.
Morano, who brought a Steelers NFL jersey that he planned to get autographed, said the NFL couldn’t have picked a better place to host the draft.
“This is gorgeous, it’s stunning,” said Morano, pointing to the Pittsburgh skyline. “I’ve never been to Pittsburgh, but I would come back here. I just can’t ride the incline without my wife while I’m here. Also, I’ve met fans from all over the place, and that’s been a lot of fun. It’s a very good vibe.”
At least 500,000 fans are expected to pour into Pittsburgh for the three-day Draft Experience — enough to fill seven Acrisure stadiums, and almost double the city’s population of about 307,000 residents.
“I love this craziness,” said Don Zadach, aka Pope Yinzer, who was dressed in Steelers-
themed papal garb.
The Finleyville, Washington County, resident was strolling with his friend, Sean “Steeler Jesus” Steinmetz of North Hills, while a steady stream of football fans approached them to pose for a photo.
The pair attend all home Steelers games, and plan to be near the Draft Stage when the Steelers make their selection with the 21st pick.
“It’s amazing, all the stuff that’s going on, and that’s why we’re down here. We love meeting people, we love talking to people and talking about football. It’s the best,” said Zadach, as he and Steinmetz paused to take a photo with three Steelers fans from Huntington Beach, Calif., who have rooted for the Black-and-Gold since 1994, when the former Los Angeles Rams left Orange County to move to St. Louis.
Harrisburg residents Zoran and Angelina Hernandez, who moved from Miami, Fla., more than 20 years ago, were decked out in Miami teal-and-orange shirts and jewelry and took the 6:15 a.m. “T” from South Hills Village to Acrisure Stadium to make sure they arrived before the crowds showed up.
It is the first NFL Draft the football fans have attended, and they figured the event was their best chance to attend a major NFL event in person. Pittsburgh is likely too cold to host a Super Bowl — although, fans point out happily, the Pittsburgh Steelers have won six Lombardi trophies.
“When we found out it was going to be in Pittsburgh, we thought it was close enough that we had to drive here,” said Zoran Hernandez, a fan of Plum native and former NFL kicker Pat McAfee, who hosts a popular sports show. Hernandez said he was eager to try a Primanti’s sandwich while in town.
Also taking in the draft activities was Elise Robinson, a U.S. Army veteran from Seattle, Wash., who is a 2025 NFL Fan of the Year and president of the Sea Hawkers Booster Club. She has attended NFL Drafts since 2018.
For Robinson, football fosters camaraderie and a strong sense of community among fans of all teams, and she struck up conversations with other fans at the draft — including a Minnesota Viking fan who joked that Robinson should thank the Vikings for letting Super Bowl-winning quarterback Sam Darnold walk away from her team and sign with the Seahawks.
It wasn’t Robinson’s first visit to Acrisure. She has flown in to watch the Seahawks play the Steelers.
“It’s a great venue, but I do want to note that they do not have many sweets at the stadium,” said Robinson, laughing. “I walked all over and I found a good chocolate shake, but you need more sweets.”
By the afternoon, thousands of fans had filled the grounds around the stadium and strolled around Point Park. It was sunny, the temperature was in the 70s, and the mood was festive. A majority of fans were wearing jerseys, hats or colored clothing in homage to their favorite teams.
“This is like our bucket list,” said Kruper. “It’s one of those bucket list things that I’ve always wanted to do. I’m so glad we’re doing it. You just gotta do stuff. When you have the chance, do it.”





