Former NFL quarterback McNair killed in Tennessee
NASHVILLE,
Tenn. (AP)—Former NFL quarterback Steve McNair,
who led
the famous Tennessee Titans
drive
that came a yard short of forcing overtime in the 2000 Super Bowl, was found
dead with a gunshot wound to the head Saturday in a downtown condominium.
Police said a pistol was discovered near the body of a woman also shot dead.
Nashville
police spokesman Don Aaron identified the woman as 20-year-old Sahel Kazemi,
whom he called a “friend” of McNair’s. She had a single gunshot wound to the
head.
Police
said the 36-year-old McNair was found on the sofa in the living room, and
Kazemi was very close to him on the floor. Aaron said the gun was not “readily
apparent” when police first arrived.
Autopsies
were planned for Sunday.
Aaron
said McNair’s wife, Mechelle, is “very distraught.”
“At this
juncture, we do not believe she is involved,” he said. “Nothing has been ruled out,
but as far as actively looking for a suspect tonight, the answer would be no.”
Fred
McNair, Steve McNair’s oldest brother, said some family members likely will
travel to Nashville on Monday to consult with Steve McNair’s wife.
“It’s
still kind of hard to believe,” Fred McNair said. “He was the greatest person
in the world. He gave back to the community. He loved kids and he wanted to be
a role model to kids.”
He said
he did not know who Kazemi was.
The
bodies were discovered Saturday afternoon by McNair’s longtime friend Wayne
Neeley, who said he rents the condo with McNair.
Aaron
said Neeley told authorities he went into the condo, saw McNair on the sofa and
Kazemi on the floor but walked first into the kitchen before going back into
the living room, where he saw the blood.
Neeley
then called a friend, who alerted authorities.
Police
said a witness saw McNair arrive at the condo in the upscale Rutledge Hill
neighborhood between 1:30 and 2 a.m. Saturday and that Kazemi’s vehicle was
already there. The condominium is located within walking distance of an area
filled with restaurants and nightspots, a few blocks from the Cumberland River
and within view of the Titans’ stadium.
Two days
ago, Nashville police arrested Kazemi on a DUI charge while driving a 2007
Escalade registered to her and McNair. McNair was in the front seat, but didn’t
break the law and was allowed to leave by taxi.
The
arrest affidavit said Kazemi had bloodshot eyes and the smell of alcohol on her
breath, but refused a breathalyzer test, saying “she was not drunk, she was
high.”
In June,
McNair opened a restaurant near the Tennessee State University campus. It was
closed Saturday evening, but had become a small memorial, where flowers,
candles and notes had been placed outside the door.
On the
restaurant’s windows were messages: “We will miss you Steve” and “We love you
Steve.”
A note
attached to a small blue teddy bear read, “We will never forget you, Steve.
Once a Titan, always a Titan.”
“We don’t
know the details, but it is a terrible tragedy and our hearts go out to the
families involved,” NFL commissioner Roger Goodell said in a statement.
McNair, a
four-time Pro Bowler, led the Titans within a yard of forcing overtime in the
2000 Super Bowl, which they lost 23-16 to the St. Louis Rams. He
also played for the Baltimore Ravens before
retiring in April 2008.
His most
noted drive, the last one in that Super Bowl, came when he led the Titans 87
yards in the final minute and 48 seconds, only to come up a yard short of the
tying touchdown. Kevin Dyson caught his 9-yard pass, but was tackled at the
1-yard line by the Rams’ Mike Jones.
McNair
accounted for all of Tennessee’s yards in that drive, throwing for 48 yards and
rushing for 14. The rest of the yardage came on penalties against the Rams.
Before that, he brought the Titans back from a 16-0 deficit to tie the game.
“If you
were going to draw a football player, the physical part, the mental part,
everything about being a professional, he is your guy,” former Ravens and
Titans teammate Samari Rolle )said. “I can’t even wrap my arms around it. It is a sad, sad day.
The world lost a great man today.”
McNair
became a nationally known college football star playing for Alcorn State, a
Division I-AA school in his home state. His performance in the Southwestern
Athletic Conference was so dominant, he became a Heisman Trophy contender and
national media flocked to the school in Lorman, Miss., to get look at “Air
McNair.” He still holds the Division I-AA (now known as Football Championship
Subdivision) records for career yards passing (14,496) and total offense
(16,823).
McNair
began his NFL career in 1995 with the Houston Oilers, who eventually became the
Titans, and finished with 31,304 yards passing and 174 touchdowns. McNair
played with pain for several years, and the injuries ultimately forced him to
retire.
“On the
field, there isn’t player that was as tough as him, especially at the
quarterback position,” the Ravens’ Derrick
Mason said. “What I have seen him play through on the field, and what he
dealt with during the week to get ready for a game, I have never known a better
teammate.”
During a
five-game stretch at the end of the 2002 season, McNair was so bruised he
couldn’t practice. But he started all five games and won them, leading the
Titans to an 11-5 finish and a berth in the AFC championship game for the
second time in four seasons.
McNair
played all 16 games in 2006, his first season in Baltimore, and guided the
Ravens to a 13-3 record. But he injured his groin during the season opener last
season and never regained the form that put him in those Pro Bowls.
“I am
deeply saddened to learn of today’s tragic news regarding the death of Steve
McNair. He was a player who I admired a great deal,” said New England Patriots senior
football adviser Floyd Reese, who was GM of the Titans when McNair played for
them. “He was a tremendous leader and an absolute warrior. He felt like it was
his responsibility to lead by working hard every day, no matter what.”
Titans
coach Jeff Fisher was out of the country, taking part in the first NFL-USO
coaches tour to Iraq.
Ozzie
Newsome, Ravens executive vice president and general manager, said he
immediately thought of McNair’s four sons.
“This is
so, so sad. We immediately think of his family, his boys. They are all in our
thoughts and prayers,” he said “What we admired most about Steve when we played
against him was his competitive spirit, and we were lucky enough to have that
with us for two years. He is one of the best players in the NFL over the last
20 years.”
No
funeral arrangements have been made.
Associated
Press Writer Emily Wagster Pettus in Mount Olive, Miss., AP Writers Randall
Paul Dickerson and Lucas L. Johnson II in Nashville, Tenn., and AP Sports
Writer Teresa Walker in Fort Walton Beach, Fla., contributed to this report.
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