PG article on Coach Priatko
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Great article, thanks, Swiss
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Bill Priatko salutes the crowd at Acrisure Stadium as the team celebrates its 90th anniversary at halftime of a game in October 2023.
10
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Former Steeler, 94, was proud to be ‘back in my hometown, wearing the Black and Gold’
Bill Priatko worked for many years at Kennywood and also played for North Braddock Scott High School and Pitt
On the surface, the Priatko family embodies the American dream. Their core values are faith, family, service and football.
"And friends," added Bill Priatko, 94, who is believed to be the second-oldest living player for the Pittsburgh Steelers.
A family rooted in North Braddock with summers spent at Kennywood, the Priatkos have weathered repeated trials and grown closer for it, strengthened by their belief.
"They're the perfect example of an American family," longtime Steelers defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau said.
Bill was the son of Ukrainian immigrants Andrew Priatko and Catherine (Pohlut) Priatko.
The family name was actually Pratko, but a stray vowel was shoved into their last name when they landed at Ellis Island. Bill's cousins, the Pratkos, use the original spelling. Four Pratkos have served in the military.
“We had such a close-knit community in North Braddock and on our street,” Priatko recalled, referencing Grant Street. “We probably had every type of ethnic background you can think of. Everybody got along.”
His father, a steelworker, died of pneumonia when Bill was 10.
“My dad was a tough man. He went out in the middle of winter — it was 30 degrees — in an undershirt, shoveling snow.”
His 29-year-old wife had to raise five children alone.
“She never remarried. She did a wonderful job with us,” Bill said.
He was expected to help support the family. At age 15, Bill sold popcorn and Cracker Jack at Kennywood.
He played football and excelled at North Braddock Scott High School and earned a scholarship to the University of Pittsburgh.
The call to service
When Bill was about 12, in the middle of a neighborhood basketball tournament, a car pulled up. Two fully dressed Marines stepped out and walked to the home of Mrs. Korbel, a Slovak widow whose son, Frankie, was fighting in the Pacific.
“We knew what that meant,” Priatko said, his voice heavy with the memory. “We literally froze. The game just halted.”
That moment planted a seed.
Priatko played at the Pitt from 1951 to 1953, starting at defensive tackle and guard at Pitt Stadium.
After Pitt, Priatko was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Air Force. He served in the Air Force Honor Guard and oversaw funerals at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.
“Over the almost three years that I served, I probably served over 1,500 funerals,” Priatko said.
At each one, as he presented the folded flag to a weeping widow, he “thought of Frankie Korbel and his mother,” Priatko said.
He went on to serve 17 years in the Air Force Reserve.
Green Bay to Pittsburgh
After his service, Priatko signed with the Green Bay Packers as a free agent. His salary was $7,500 and his signing bonus was $500.
“[My mother] says, ‘Billy, I've never seen that much money on a check in my life,’” Bill recalled. “$500 paid for my whole wedding. I remember I got a five-piece Polish band from Braddock for $25.”
Just as the season started, he was put on waivers. That's when fate — and the Steelers — intervened. The team picked him up in 1957.
“I felt blessed and honored that here I was back in my hometown, wearing the Black and Gold,” he said.
Head coach Buddy Parker, who was not fond of playing rookies, gave Priatko a chance because of his work ethic.
“I was blessed because he was pretty good with me. If you were doing the job and performing (the way) he expected, it didn't make any difference if you were a rookie.”
Priatko played two games in his only year with the Steelers.
The Steelers were not the winners today's Yinzers know and love. Parker, whom the Rooney family scooped up after he was fired by the Detroit Lions, coached the team for eight years, making him the longest-tenured coach in franchise history to that point.
Priatko later played for the Cleveland Browns, the Steelers' bitter rival. Legendary Steelers coach Chuck Noll also played for the Browns, and Priatko's roommate in Browns training camp was LeBeau.
“We're both Steelers,” LeBeau said. “The Steeler Nation thing is real. Bill is a special person.”
The two grew closer when LeBeau coached the Steelers, and they still talk almost every week.
Forged in faith and football
Bill and his wife, Helen, raised four children — Debbie, Dan, David and Kathy — anchored by their Orthodox Christian faith.
All four attended Norwin High School and all but Dan worked at Kennywood in the summers.
Debbie, the oldest, served in the band and color guard. Today, she works for UPMC.
Next was Dan, the class president and captain of the football team. He was a running back until a game during his junior year changed his trajectory. With Norwin trailing Latrobe, 6-0, the Knights scored on the final play. One problem: Their kicker had pulled a muscle.
Dan went in to kick the winning extra point. He went on to be a placekicker for Army, and the Priatkos’ sports prowess became known throughout the school district.
David followed in his brother’s footsteps, both on the football field and in his commitment to serve in the military.
Kathy played volleyball and now teaches in the Penn-Trafford School District.
With Bill in the Air Force Reserve, he used his two weeks of annual training as a catalyst for family vacations. Bill, Helen and the four kids packed into the family vehicle and traversed the eastern seaboard. While beaches and family games were the highlights for the kids, the parents made sure the trips were instructional, too. Bill, who was a history teacher, showed the family points of interest and historical sites.
“Of course with my dad's football background, we stopped off at every football stadium on the way, college or pro,” Debbie added. “It was just a fun, exciting time.”
Bill became a fixture in the Western Pennsylvania sports scene, serving as a coach, athletic director, WPIAL committee member, and a key uniter of coaching legends across the city. He also worked in the athletic department for Robert Morris University. He was inducted into the Western Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame in 2013, and is also enshrined in the Robert Morris Athletic Hall of Fame.
In 1985, Dan and Debbie were staying in West Point, N.Y., with family friends, shortly before Dan was to deploy to Europe for his first tour of duty.
As they set out to drive back to Pittsburgh that March afternoon, Western New York temperatures were in the 60s.
“It was like [Easter weekend],” Debbie recalled. “The temperature just plummeted.”
As Dan drove his two-door Cutlass through the winding hills of Pennsylvania, the conditions became deadly.
The phone rang back at home just after 5 p.m. Bill answered to the panicked voice of his daughter: “We've been in an accident, and the state trooper said Dan's fighting for his life.”
Dan was in a coma for eight months. Doctors gave the family little hope.
“They said he'd be 2% functional if he lived,” David recounted.
That stretch of highway was reported to have many accidents that day. The site of the crash is now protected by guardrails. The Cutlass had no airbags. The Hazleton hospital was not a trauma center.
So many things conspired against Dan, yet he and his family never gave up.
While Dan was transferred from Hazleton to Walter Reed Hospital to the Pittsburgh VA hospital and eventually a rehab center in Harmarville, the Priatkos were supported by an entire community. Friends offered places to stay, meals, transport help and prayers.
During that same time, Helen was diagnosed with breast cancer.
Slowly, Dan showed signs of improvement — many of which had seemed impossible.
His recovery became a family mission. A book was written about Dan's story, “Noble Knight: Dan Priatko's Story of Faith and Courage” by Scott Brown (Xulon Press, $35.49), and a documentary is currently being produced on the Priatko story.
“We never lost hope,” Debbie said. “We kept saying he'll come out of this.”
As Dan regained his strength, he inspired Helen to fight cancer, just as she inspired him to keep pushing through his traumatic brain injury.
Helen, who initially overcame cancer, became the family's caretaker, helping both Dan and Bill as he aged. When Helen’s cancer returned and she died in June 2014, Debbie stepped into that role.
Dan regained his speech and began speaking to youth groups. One letter he received years later, from an Army officer at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., read: “I was so moved by your story. I became an Army officer.”
Norwin was honored to help a Knight, allowing Dan to work on his walking — first in the halls of the high school, and eventually from goal line to goal line on the football field.
Legacy of service continues
David attended West Point, served four tours in Iraq, and retired as a lieutenant colonel, earning multiple Bronze Stars. His son, David Jr., and a son-in-law, Evan Eshbaugh, later chose Officer Candidate School, carrying the family tradition forward.
“It's just a wonderful feeling for us to see not only my two sons follow the career that their dad did, but now to see their son and son-in-law do the same thing,” Bill said, pride evident in his voice.
David, who is currently battling lymphoma that has spread to his brain and central nervous system, credits his father's example for his own strength.
“He always instilled mental toughness in my brother and I,” David said. “He always talked about being made of the firmer stuff. That served me very well in my life. I've had a lot of adversity and a lot of things I've had to overcome.”
David lives in Georgia now, but he's made sure his family still bleeds Black and Gold.
A simple joy at Kennywood
A little under 30 years ago, Bill received a message from Kennywood seeking alumni to come back and help out during the summers. He jumped at the chance to reprise his high school and college job, and did so until two years ago.
“People used to walk up to the refreshment stand and say, ‘We heard you played for the Steelers,’” Bill said with a laugh. “I said, ‘I haven't stolen anything since I was a kid.’”
His kids remember spending summer nights at the park, and they always closed out their visits with Bill's favorite ride, the merry-go-round, and a box of Cracker Jack.
Every morning, he'd sing the same song to his young coworkers, “Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin’”
“It set the tone."
Defined by the Steel City
Asked what makes Pittsburgh special, Bill is plainspoken: “It's something about the people, the atmosphere. It's an atmosphere in a town that you're just proud to be a part of.”
As the second-oldest living Steeler — a distinction he only realized when Jerome Bettis introduced him to a standing ovation at a Mel Blount charity event — Bill Priatko remains humble.
“I said, ‘It pays to get old, I guess,’” he joked. “I thank the good Lord every day that I'm still here.”
There was some confusion over his place among the oldest Steelers, but Steelers historian Richard Peterson confirmed that Lou Tepe, born a year before Bill, is the oldest living Steeler.
The Steelers have played a prominent role in the Priatkos’ history. Over the years, the team has involved Bill in celebrations, anniversaries, special events and grand openings. But the thing that means the most to him is the yearly letter from the Rooney family to Dan.
He has become close with many larger than life sports icons throughout his life, including Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski (a West Pointer himself), Bill Mazeroski, Franco Harris, Myron Cope, Brett Keisel and plenty more.
Priatko’s devotion to community led to the organizing of a yearly event at Grand View Golf Club, in North Braddock, of course. What started as a smaller gathering of coaches ballooned into a can’t miss experience, often including high-profile guests.
“My first impression was how cool this guy was, how kind he was and how compassionate he was and excited he was about football and coaches,” West Allegheny coach Bob Palko said. “He is just an unbelievable person to be around.”
Palko, who has won nine WPIAL titles, and Thomas Jefferson coach Bill Cherpak, who leads the WPIAL with 10 titles, were regulars at the Grand View events.
“I know me and Cherp were probably some of the youngest guys and, it'd be like, ‘What are we doing here? … Did they make a mistake by inviting us?’” Palko joked.
“It was just an honor and just such a good feeling to be there. When you walked in, the excitement, and then when you left, you just felt like we'd been to church. It was just really neat.”
And while football was discussed, Palko said it was more about “fellowship.” Over the years, guests have included LeBeau, Harris, Keisel and others.
Priatko recently had a sandwich named after him at the golf course’s restaurant, Asti's Italian Steakhouse.
Perspective and perseverance
With a legacy so defined by service, Priatko sees today’s climate through a unique lens.
“The tone today is a lot different than it was then, particularly with World War II,” he said. “There was a different unified spirit around the country. It's evident that there's a degree of politics that is a lot different today than it used to be years ago, and as a result, the country is not as unified today. There was a different degree of patriotism and respect for the Armed Forces.”
Today, Dan and Bill live with Debbie in North Huntingdon. Dan worked for years at senior homes, assisting the residents. Bill passed his Steelers season tickets down to Debbie.
Through illness, combat and recovery, the family leans on faith and community. Debbie recalls the words of their Orthodox priest during one of the darkest stretches: “Even Christ had to have somebody help him carry the cross.” She agreed, saying “We take life one day at a time.”
First Published: April 14, 2026, 4:00 a.m.
Updated: April 15, 2026, 11:47 a.m.
10
MORE
Former Steeler, 94, was proud to be ‘back in my hometown, wearing the Black and Gold’
Bill Priatko worked for many years at Kennywood and also played for North Braddock Scott High School and Pitt
On the surface, the Priatko family embodies the American dream. Their core values are faith, family, service and football.
"And friends," added Bill Priatko, 94, who is believed to be the second-oldest living player for the Pittsburgh Steelers.
A family rooted in North Braddock with summers spent at Kennywood, the Priatkos have weathered repeated trials and grown closer for it, strengthened by their belief.
"They're the perfect example of an American family," longtime Steelers defensive coordinator Dick LeBeau said.
Bill was the son of Ukrainian immigrants Andrew Priatko and Catherine (Pohlut) Priatko.
The family name was actually Pratko, but a stray vowel was shoved into their last name when they landed at Ellis Island. Bill's cousins, the Pratkos, use the original spelling. Four Pratkos have served in the military.
“We had such a close-knit community in North Braddock and on our street,” Priatko recalled, referencing Grant Street. “We probably had every type of ethnic background you can think of. Everybody got along.”
His father, a steelworker, died of pneumonia when Bill was 10.
“My dad was a tough man. He went out in the middle of winter — it was 30 degrees — in an undershirt, shoveling snow.”
His 29-year-old wife had to raise five children alone.
“She never remarried. She did a wonderful job with us,” Bill said.
He was expected to help support the family. At age 15, Bill sold popcorn and Cracker Jack at Kennywood.
He played football and excelled at North Braddock Scott High School and earned a scholarship to the University of Pittsburgh.
The call to service
When Bill was about 12, in the middle of a neighborhood basketball tournament, a car pulled up. Two fully dressed Marines stepped out and walked to the home of Mrs. Korbel, a Slovak widow whose son, Frankie, was fighting in the Pacific.
“We knew what that meant,” Priatko said, his voice heavy with the memory. “We literally froze. The game just halted.”
That moment planted a seed.
Priatko played at the Pitt from 1951 to 1953, starting at defensive tackle and guard at Pitt Stadium.
After Pitt, Priatko was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Air Force. He served in the Air Force Honor Guard and oversaw funerals at Arlington National Cemetery in Virginia.
“Over the almost three years that I served, I probably served over 1,500 funerals,” Priatko said.
At each one, as he presented the folded flag to a weeping widow, he “thought of Frankie Korbel and his mother,” Priatko said.
He went on to serve 17 years in the Air Force Reserve.
Green Bay to Pittsburgh
After his service, Priatko signed with the Green Bay Packers as a free agent. His salary was $7,500 and his signing bonus was $500.
“[My mother] says, ‘Billy, I've never seen that much money on a check in my life,’” Bill recalled. “$500 paid for my whole wedding. I remember I got a five-piece Polish band from Braddock for $25.”
Just as the season started, he was put on waivers. That's when fate — and the Steelers — intervened. The team picked him up in 1957.
“I felt blessed and honored that here I was back in my hometown, wearing the Black and Gold,” he said.
Head coach Buddy Parker, who was not fond of playing rookies, gave Priatko a chance because of his work ethic.
“I was blessed because he was pretty good with me. If you were doing the job and performing (the way) he expected, it didn't make any difference if you were a rookie.”
Priatko played two games in his only year with the Steelers.
The Steelers were not the winners today's Yinzers know and love. Parker, whom the Rooney family scooped up after he was fired by the Detroit Lions, coached the team for eight years, making him the longest-tenured coach in franchise history to that point.
Priatko later played for the Cleveland Browns, the Steelers' bitter rival. Legendary Steelers coach Chuck Noll also played for the Browns, and Priatko's roommate in Browns training camp was LeBeau.
“We're both Steelers,” LeBeau said. “The Steeler Nation thing is real. Bill is a special person.”
The two grew closer when LeBeau coached the Steelers, and they still talk almost every week.
Forged in faith and football
Bill and his wife, Helen, raised four children — Debbie, Dan, David and Kathy — anchored by their Orthodox Christian faith.
All four attended Norwin High School and all but Dan worked at Kennywood in the summers.
Debbie, the oldest, served in the band and color guard. Today, she works for UPMC.
Next was Dan, the class president and captain of the football team. He was a running back until a game during his junior year changed his trajectory. With Norwin trailing Latrobe, 6-0, the Knights scored on the final play. One problem: Their kicker had pulled a muscle.
Dan went in to kick the winning extra point. He went on to be a placekicker for Army, and the Priatkos’ sports prowess became known throughout the school district.
David followed in his brother’s footsteps, both on the football field and in his commitment to serve in the military.
Kathy played volleyball and now teaches in the Penn-Trafford School District.
With Bill in the Air Force Reserve, he used his two weeks of annual training as a catalyst for family vacations. Bill, Helen and the four kids packed into the family vehicle and traversed the eastern seaboard. While beaches and family games were the highlights for the kids, the parents made sure the trips were instructional, too. Bill, who was a history teacher, showed the family points of interest and historical sites.
“Of course with my dad's football background, we stopped off at every football stadium on the way, college or pro,” Debbie added. “It was just a fun, exciting time.”
Bill became a fixture in the Western Pennsylvania sports scene, serving as a coach, athletic director, WPIAL committee member, and a key uniter of coaching legends across the city. He also worked in the athletic department for Robert Morris University. He was inducted into the Western Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame in 2013, and is also enshrined in the Robert Morris Athletic Hall of Fame.
In 1985, Dan and Debbie were staying in West Point, N.Y., with family friends, shortly before Dan was to deploy to Europe for his first tour of duty.
As they set out to drive back to Pittsburgh that March afternoon, Western New York temperatures were in the 60s.
“It was like [Easter weekend],” Debbie recalled. “The temperature just plummeted.”
As Dan drove his two-door Cutlass through the winding hills of Pennsylvania, the conditions became deadly.
The phone rang back at home just after 5 p.m. Bill answered to the panicked voice of his daughter: “We've been in an accident, and the state trooper said Dan's fighting for his life.”
Dan was in a coma for eight months. Doctors gave the family little hope.
“They said he'd be 2% functional if he lived,” David recounted.
That stretch of highway was reported to have many accidents that day. The site of the crash is now protected by guardrails. The Cutlass had no airbags. The Hazleton hospital was not a trauma center.
So many things conspired against Dan, yet he and his family never gave up.
While Dan was transferred from Hazleton to Walter Reed Hospital to the Pittsburgh VA hospital and eventually a rehab center in Harmarville, the Priatkos were supported by an entire community. Friends offered places to stay, meals, transport help and prayers.
During that same time, Helen was diagnosed with breast cancer.
Slowly, Dan showed signs of improvement — many of which had seemed impossible.
His recovery became a family mission. A book was written about Dan's story, “Noble Knight: Dan Priatko's Story of Faith and Courage” by Scott Brown (Xulon Press, $35.49), and a documentary is currently being produced on the Priatko story.
“We never lost hope,” Debbie said. “We kept saying he'll come out of this.”
As Dan regained his strength, he inspired Helen to fight cancer, just as she inspired him to keep pushing through his traumatic brain injury.
Helen, who initially overcame cancer, became the family's caretaker, helping both Dan and Bill as he aged. When Helen’s cancer returned and she died in June 2014, Debbie stepped into that role.
Dan regained his speech and began speaking to youth groups. One letter he received years later, from an Army officer at Fort Leavenworth, Kan., read: “I was so moved by your story. I became an Army officer.”
Norwin was honored to help a Knight, allowing Dan to work on his walking — first in the halls of the high school, and eventually from goal line to goal line on the football field.
Legacy of service continues
David attended West Point, served four tours in Iraq, and retired as a lieutenant colonel, earning multiple Bronze Stars. His son, David Jr., and a son-in-law, Evan Eshbaugh, later chose Officer Candidate School, carrying the family tradition forward.
“It's just a wonderful feeling for us to see not only my two sons follow the career that their dad did, but now to see their son and son-in-law do the same thing,” Bill said, pride evident in his voice.
David, who is currently battling lymphoma that has spread to his brain and central nervous system, credits his father's example for his own strength.
“He always instilled mental toughness in my brother and I,” David said. “He always talked about being made of the firmer stuff. That served me very well in my life. I've had a lot of adversity and a lot of things I've had to overcome.”
David lives in Georgia now, but he's made sure his family still bleeds Black and Gold.
A simple joy at Kennywood
A little under 30 years ago, Bill received a message from Kennywood seeking alumni to come back and help out during the summers. He jumped at the chance to reprise his high school and college job, and did so until two years ago.
“People used to walk up to the refreshment stand and say, ‘We heard you played for the Steelers,’” Bill said with a laugh. “I said, ‘I haven't stolen anything since I was a kid.’”
His kids remember spending summer nights at the park, and they always closed out their visits with Bill's favorite ride, the merry-go-round, and a box of Cracker Jack.
Every morning, he'd sing the same song to his young coworkers, “Oh, What a Beautiful Mornin’”
“It set the tone."
Defined by the Steel City
Asked what makes Pittsburgh special, Bill is plainspoken: “It's something about the people, the atmosphere. It's an atmosphere in a town that you're just proud to be a part of.”
As the second-oldest living Steeler — a distinction he only realized when Jerome Bettis introduced him to a standing ovation at a Mel Blount charity event — Bill Priatko remains humble.
“I said, ‘It pays to get old, I guess,’” he joked. “I thank the good Lord every day that I'm still here.”
There was some confusion over his place among the oldest Steelers, but Steelers historian Richard Peterson confirmed that Lou Tepe, born a year before Bill, is the oldest living Steeler.
The Steelers have played a prominent role in the Priatkos’ history. Over the years, the team has involved Bill in celebrations, anniversaries, special events and grand openings. But the thing that means the most to him is the yearly letter from the Rooney family to Dan.
He has become close with many larger than life sports icons throughout his life, including Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski (a West Pointer himself), Bill Mazeroski, Franco Harris, Myron Cope, Brett Keisel and plenty more.
Priatko’s devotion to community led to the organizing of a yearly event at Grand View Golf Club, in North Braddock, of course. What started as a smaller gathering of coaches ballooned into a can’t miss experience, often including high-profile guests.
“My first impression was how cool this guy was, how kind he was and how compassionate he was and excited he was about football and coaches,” West Allegheny coach Bob Palko said. “He is just an unbelievable person to be around.”
Palko, who has won nine WPIAL titles, and Thomas Jefferson coach Bill Cherpak, who leads the WPIAL with 10 titles, were regulars at the Grand View events.
“I know me and Cherp were probably some of the youngest guys and, it'd be like, ‘What are we doing here? … Did they make a mistake by inviting us?’” Palko joked.
“It was just an honor and just such a good feeling to be there. When you walked in, the excitement, and then when you left, you just felt like we'd been to church. It was just really neat.”
And while football was discussed, Palko said it was more about “fellowship.” Over the years, guests have included LeBeau, Harris, Keisel and others.
Priatko recently had a sandwich named after him at the golf course’s restaurant, Asti's Italian Steakhouse.
Perspective and perseverance
With a legacy so defined by service, Priatko sees today’s climate through a unique lens.
“The tone today is a lot different than it was then, particularly with World War II,” he said. “There was a different unified spirit around the country. It's evident that there's a degree of politics that is a lot different today than it used to be years ago, and as a result, the country is not as unified today. There was a different degree of patriotism and respect for the Armed Forces.”
Today, Dan and Bill live with Debbie in North Huntingdon. Dan worked for years at senior homes, assisting the residents. Bill passed his Steelers season tickets down to Debbie.
Through illness, combat and recovery, the family leans on faith and community. Debbie recalls the words of their Orthodox priest during one of the darkest stretches: “Even Christ had to have somebody help him carry the cross.” She agreed, saying “We take life one day at a time.”
First Published: April 14, 2026, 4:00 a.m.
Updated: April 15, 2026, 11:47 a.m.
“We are the stupidest fucking franchise ever.” — Smithessmokin
-
swissvale72
- Posts: 2935
- Joined: Wed Sep 25, 2019 1:43 am
2 others liked this
Thanks for posting, Wil. VERY much appreciated!!
Agreed, thanks, B2B. Everyone here should have a chance to read this. Tip of the cap to Coach Priatko.
What an awesome man
