Shooting unveils very different sides of McNair
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Steve McNair earned the respect of his fellow NFL players for shaking off defenders and injuries. That same blue-collar playing style won the love of fans amazed at how the quarterback kept showing up for work — and winning.
He endeared himself more with his charity work. Not just from the checks he handed out, but for throwing himself into the efforts, like he did when loading boxes onto tractor-trailers bound for Hurricane Katrina victims.
Publicly, McNair was a happily married man and proud father of four sons who split his time between his Mississippi farm and a home in Music City, where celebrities are cherished, not hassled.
But when he was found shot to death on the Fourth of July with his 20-year-old girlfriend dead nearby, a darker side of his private life was suddenly thrust into the spotlight.
"People have certain things that they do in life," said McNair's longtime friend Robert Gaddy, who called 911. "We don't need to look on the situation at this time (but) on the fact we just lost a great member of society."
Even McNair's longtime agent said he didn't know about the former quarterback's relationship with Saleh Kazemi until news broke of the deaths. Now police call 36-year-old McNair the victim of homicide, though they aren't yet ready to label Kazemi's death a suicide despite her single bullet wound to the head.
"As good as he was on the football field, that couldn't touch the person," agent Bus Cook said Sunday, still shaken by McNair's death. "I mean it just couldn't."
Hints of a problem with alcohol surfaced in May 2003 when a Nashville police officer pulled McNair over on suspicion of drunk driving. Police said the quarterback's blood alcohol content was .18 percent — well over Tennessee's legal limit. He also was charged with having a 9mm weapon with him, but all the charges were later dropped.
McNair was charged with drunken driving in 2007 because he let his brother-in-law drive his pickup truck. Those charges were later dropped when the DUI charge against the brother-in-law was reduced to reckless driving.
And McNair could have been charged again Thursday night when the same officer who arrested him in 2003 stopped a 2007 Cadillac Escalade driven by Kazemi and registered to both her and McNair. Kazemi was arrested on a DUI charge, and he was allowed to leave in a taxi.
Dr. Sherry Blake, a clinical psychologist who practices in the Atlanta area, has counseled athletes and entertainers about the temptations of easy drugs, alcohol and women. She talked Sunday about the challenges even for those with strong family ties, though not about the McNair case specifically.
Recent comments
Totally agree - how can you have a "girlfriend" when you're married?!...
S | July 6, 2009 at 1:45 p.m.
This is a terrible tragedy. But why do they insist on saying they...
J | July 6, 2009 at 12:51 p.m.
Soheyla Kazemi reacts at her home in Orange Park, Fla., Sunday as she talks about the death of her sister, Sahel Kazemi, 20, in Nashville, Tenn. Sahel Kazemi and former Tennessee Titans quarterback Steve McNair were found dead Saturday at a Nashville condominium that he rented with a friend.
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Hahaha. So it was all for charity, right. Is he still giving the 100k to...
What are you TEACHING????? ------- Your not a BYU Grad.
The only boycott that will have any effect is a boycott of sponsors. the BCS...
Hey, let's spend $2 trillion to push through a health care bill that the...
maybe the bcs purposefully set things up this so everyone gets mad but then...
When is he going to get off the blame game? Besides the dem's were in charge...
so in reality BYU is a "big boy" and Utah (more likly their fans) are...
Unsurprisingly, what he wants to do is illegal. Check it out.
Sound like a lot of Hate for those LOSERS. Maybe hating those that hate is...
It's all part of Obama's plan to destroy America. And that's the truth.
