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'Time of our lives': Steelers, Chiefs fans celebrate holiday with tailgating before Chiefs stole Christmas | TribLIVE.com
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'Time of our lives': Steelers, Chiefs fans celebrate holiday with tailgating before Chiefs stole Christmas

Justin Vellucci
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Justin Vellucci | TribLive
University oif Pittsburgh alumna Heather Nordahl flew with her daughter, Logan, 16, from their hometown of Los Angeles to watch the Pittsburgh Steelers take on the Kansas City Chiefs at a Christmas Day game at Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh’s North Shore neighborhood on Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2024. Here, the pair poses outside the stadium with Steelers mascot Steely McBeam.
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Justin Vellucci | TribLive
Luke Fahey, 26, of Wheeling, W. Va., cooks up scrambled eggs on a hot grill as his family tailgates in a city parking lot. They trekked to Pittsburgh to see the Steelers take on the Kansas City Chiefs at a Christmas Day game at nearby Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh’s North Shore neighborhood on Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2024.
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Justin Vellucci | TribLive
Pittsburgh Steelers mascot Steely McBeam waves while having his picture taken with tailgaters before the Steelers take on the Kansas City Chiefs at a Christmas Day game at nearby Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh’s North Shore neighborhood on Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2024.
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Justin Vellucci | TribLive
Marcus George, 33, of Wheeling, W. Va., (on the right) dressed up as Santa Claus and spray-painted his beard white before tailgating in Pittsburgh’s North Shore neighborhood on Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2024. George, who is talking with (from left) Maddison Miller, 27, and Alyssa George, 29, trekked to Pittsburgh to see the Steelers take on the Kansas City Chiefs at a Christmas Day game at nearby Acrisure Stadium.
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Justin Vellucci | TribLive
Candy Fahey, 54, of Wheeling, W. Va., (on the left) tailgates with her husband Gene, 61, (second from left) a Kansas City Chiefs fan, in a city parking lot. They trekked to Pittsburgh to see the Steelers take on the Kansas City Chiefs at a Christmas Day game at nearby Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh’s North Shore neighborhood on Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2024.
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Justin Vellucci | TribLive
Pittsburgh Steelers fans tailgate in a parking lot next to the D.L. Clark Building before the Steelers take on the Kansas City Chiefs at a Christmas Day game at nearby Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh’s North Shore neighborhood on Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2024.
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Justin Vellucci | TribLive
Bob Dierker, 63, of South Fayette, who dressed as Santa Claus, tinkers with his cell phone near the D.L. Clark Building before the Pittsburgh Steelers take on the Kansas City Chiefs during a Christmas Day game at Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh’s North Shore neighborhood on Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2024. The Steelers fan on the right identified himself only as “Chappy,” 55, of South Fayette.
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Justin Vellucci | TribLive
A crossing guard directs game-day pedestrian traffic before the Pittsburgh Steelers take on the Kansas City Chiefs during a Christmas Day game at Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh’s North Shore neighborhood on Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2024.
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Justin Vellucci | TribLive
Motorists crawl down Tony Dorsett Drive as they wait to enter a parking garage before the Pittsburgh Steelers take on the Kansas City Chiefs during a Christmas Day game at Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh’s North Shore neighborhood on Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2024.
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Justin Vellucci | TribLive
A man dressed as The Grinch walks near the D.L. Clark Building, alongside a Pittsburgh Steelers fan, before the Steelers take on the Kansas City Chiefs during a Christmas Day game at Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh’s North Shore neighborhood on Wednesday, Dec. 25, 2024.

A giant, inflatable Santa Claus nursing a fake Yuengling beer bottle perched Wednesday morning above a sea of tailgaters on Pittsburgh’s North Side.

Scores of football fans wore red and white Santa Claus caps.

Others meandered through parking lots while donning holiday-themed pajamas.

And at least one man dressed up, head to toe, as the Grinch.

But, as Christians celebrated their savior’s birth Wednesday, many who turned out for the Pittsburgh Steelers’ Christmas Day matchup with the Kansas City Chiefs religiously observed a different set of traditions: those of the Black and Gold.

As it turned out, it wasn’t the Grinch but the Chiefs who stole Christmas for Steelers fans, 29-10.

But before the game, Steelers fans were in a festive mood as they tailgated in parking lots on the North Side.

Heather Nordahl, a University of Pittsburgh alumna, flew with her teenage daughter, Logan, from their hometown of Los Angeles to celebrate Christmas at Acrisure Stadium. It was Logan’s first time seeing the Steelers play in-person.

“I said, ‘What else could you do for Christmas then fly into Pittsburgh and watch a Steelers game?’” said Nordahl, 49, as the mother and daughter waited in line to take a photo with Steelers mascot Steely McBeam. “And, no offense to Taylor Swift, but we’re rooting for a Steelers win.”

Some tailgaters gossiped about whether Swift, the chart-topping chanteuse dating Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, would turn up in Pittsburgh to rally for her boyfriend’s team.

Others, though, shared their holiday wish list for the game, whose outcome was to shape the Steelers’ postseason agenda.

“It’s gonna be about who’s tougher,” said Craig Brophy, 51, of Lehighton, Carbon County, who said he hasn’t missed a Steelers home game in 17 years.

“I want to see Pat Mahomes get wrecked,” another fan shouted, hours before Mahomes & Co. did the wrecking.

Marcus George explicitly blended the holiday festivities with his passion for the NFL.

The Wheeling, W.Va., man spray-painted his beard white and donned a red and white Santa Claus suit before the Christmas Day game. But he also sported the jersey of Steelers running back Najee Harris.

He said he was trying to keep his expectations about the game in check.

“I was just hoping it wasn’t 15 degrees and snowing,” said George, 33. “I was here a couple years ago and it was cold. I was not fine.”

George tailgated with nearly a dozen family members — some rooting for the Steelers, some for the Chiefs.

Among them was Chiefs super-fan Gene Fahey, who has seen the Chiefs play in-person about 20 times.

“I’ve gone to a few Steelers playoff games. But, if the Chiefs are within five hours of Wheeling, I go,” said Fahey, 61, of Wheeling, a funeral home director who has rooted for the Chiefs for 50 years.

Fahey, who warmed his hands over a fire pit filled with glass pebbles, came equipped for victory. He planned to open his Chiefs-themed bottle of 360 Vodka only if his team emerged victorious.

As for Christmas, Fahey admitted his family’s festivities were a bit unorthodox this year.

“We had our Christmas on Tuesday,” he laughed. “And today, we’re having the time of our lives.”

Justin Vellucci is a TribLive reporter covering crime and public safety in Pittsburgh and Allegheny County. A longtime freelance journalist and former reporter for the Asbury Park (N.J.) Press, he worked as a general assignment reporter at the Trib from 2006 to 2009 and returned in 2022. He can be reached at jvellucci@triblive.com.

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