Tuesday, July 7, 2009

The Death of Steve McNair


All the different articles on the death of Steve McNair on one site, so you don't have to jump around on the net!! Good man caught in a love fest with a young woman who probably shot him, then herself!!



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 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 for 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.

“Individuals can’t get enough of the limelight. It’s easy to have people telling you how great and wonderful you are rather than otherwise,” Blake said.
“The sad part is many times the public likes to be close to you not because of who you are but what you do.”

On the football field, he simply was “Air McNair,” a winner.

McNair still holds the NCAA’s Football Championship Series (formerly Division I-AA) records for career yards passing (14,496) and total offense (16,823) from his days at tiny Alcorn State in Mississippi.

He played 13 NFL seasons starting with the then-Houston Oilers, led Tennessee to its famous last-second 2000 Super Bowl loss to the St. Louis Rams. He ended his career in Baltimore last season, after being traded away by the Titans after they drafted Vince Young as a replacement to the aching and expensive veteran.
A four-time Pro Bowler, he shared the NFL’s MVP award with Peyton Manning in 2003.

“Many of our defensive players talked about what a huge challenge it was playing against him,” Manning said in a statement. “He and I had some great battles against each other.”
McNair never acknowledged any of his numerous injuries on the field, even in one game when the painkilling shot wore off before he drove the Titans to a touchdown and ran in for the tying 2-point conversion. Then he led them to the winning field goal.
Young called McNair, a father figure since Young was a teenager, “Pops.”

“I hear his advice in my head with everything I do. Life will be very different without him,” Young said in a statement.

McNair’s friends want the quarterback to be remembered for his generosity. He gave away turkeys and checks in Tennessee, toys in Baltimore and paid for three football camps himself this year. Cook talked to someone Saturday who saw McNair cleaning up the field after one camp at Southern Mississippi.
“That was Steve McNair. That’s who he is. And who he was,” an emotional Cook recalled.

Cook described Mechelle, who married McNair in 1997, as “very upset, very distraught.” Funeral arrangements could be completed Monday with some of McNair’s family coming to Nashville to assist planning.

Nashville courts had no record of a McNair divorce case, but a home he owned in Nashville is on the market for $3 million.

The real estate agent declined to comment. Her online listing for property described it as a “gigantic house” of more than 14,000 square feet and photos showed a pool, home theater, baby grand piano and ornate furnishings throughout.

Kimberly Hardy visited a restaurant McNair recently opened near Tennessee State University to provide healthy, affordable food for college students. The Nashville woman said McNair had been nice to her the handful of times she met him. She said she hated what had happened to him.

“But I do think that all the greatness he accomplished will endure forever,” Hardy said.




Report: McNair's Wife Didn't Know About Girlfriend

Though there has been a vague presumption that the wife of slain NFL quarterback Steve McNair was aware that he had a girlfriend, a report in the New York Daily News indicates that this simply wasn't the case.

Tim Ghianni and Jonathan Lemire of the Daily News report that Mechelle McNair didn't know that her late husband was dating 20-year-old Sahel Kazemi.

"She's blindsided by this," one source said. "She's crushed. Her whole world is shattered."

The fact that Mechelle McNair didn't know combined with a claim from Kazemi's family that McNair would soon be divorcing his wife could point to a set of facts in which McNair was trying to break things off with Kazemi, who while under the influence of alcohol (or something else) might have reacted irrationally -- and violently -- to the news.

But where did the gun come from? It possibly belonged to McNair, who might have left the thing laying around without ever considering that the girl he was dating would use it on him.

Regardless of how this all shakes out, 15 years after a former NFL star found himself accused of killing his ex-wife and her friend, a former NFL star is the victim in a murder mystery that might be as simple as it all seems, or that might end up being a lot more complex.



Cops say Kazemi bought gun
NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- Police say the gun found at the scene where former NFL star Steve McNair died was bought by his girlfriend less than two days before the two were shot to death.

Nashville police spokesman Don Aaron said Monday that 20-year-old Sahel Kazemi bought the semiautomatic handgun Thursday evening from a person he didn't name.


An autopsy showed that McNair and Kazemi died early Saturday. He was shot four times and his death has been ruled a homicide. She was shot once and Aaron said police are still waiting for ballistics and gunpowder-residue tests before deciding if she was slain or committed suicide.

Their bodies were found in a Nashville condominium that overlooks the Tennessee Titans' stadium and was leased by McNair, who was 36.

Aaron said that as far as he knows McNair was not with Kazemi when she got the gun.

Farzin Abdi, a nephew of Kazemi, said earlier Monday he does not believe Kazemi would have killed former Titans quarterback McNair and herself.

"There was no way she was depressed and wanting to do this," he said. "She was so happy. ... She just had it made, you know, [with] this guy taking care of everything."

Abdi said Kazemi had no motive to kill McNair.

Aaron said a solution to the case may not be as neatly resolved as people would like.

"It may be we'll never know exactly why this happened," he said.

McNair had been dating Kazemi for several months. They were found dead by McNair's friend Wayne Neeley, who had rented the condo along with McNair. Neeley then called a friend, Robert Gaddy, who played at Alcorn State with McNair. Gaddy dialed 911.

Aaron said Sunday that a semiautomatic pistol was found under Kazemi's body. She was shot in the head. McNair was discovered in a seated position on a sofa in the living room, shot twice in the head and two more times in the chest.

Abdi said Kazemi believed McNair was divorcing his wife and Kazemi was preparing to sell her furniture to move in with him.

"I think she had already put her stuff up for sale on Craigslist," Abdi said.

Appearing at a news conference Monday at Titans headquarters, a somber coach Jeff Fisher said, "The Steve McNair I knew would want me to say, 'Celebrate my life, for what I did on the field, for what I did in the community, for the kind of teammate that I was.' That's what the Steve I knew would want me to say."

Fisher had been in Iraq as part of an NFL trip last week to visit the military. His cell phone service resumed after the group landed in Kuwait, and Fisher noticed a string of calls had come in when Eddie George called and wound up informing the coach of McNair's death.

Fisher said he's still shocked by McNair's death at 36.

"This is hard. This is hard on everybody. This is not an easy thing. There will be a void. Again, I'll fill that void with those memories. That's what we have to do," Fisher said.

A public memorial and viewings are scheduled later this week for McNair. The public will have a couple of opportunities to attend viewings in Nashville on Thursday and a memorial will be held later that evening at Mount Zion Baptist Church.

A second memorial service will be held Saturday at Reed Green Coliseum in Hattiesburg, Miss., on the campus of the University of Southern Mississippi. McNair, 36, was from Mount Olive, a small town nearby.

Investigators weren't looking for a suspect but were questioning friends of the couple as well as Kazemi's ex-boyfriend. They were also waiting for results of drug and other laboratory tests before deciding whether McNair was killed in a lovers' quarrel.

"That's a very important part of the investigation as we work to ultimately classify Miss Kazemi's death," Aaron said.

The details surfacing after McNair's death stand in stark contrast to the public persona he enjoyed during his career.

McNair repeatedly played through serious injuries and pain to win, though he came up a yard short of forcing overtime on the Titans' famous drive to lose the 2000 Super Bowl.

Generous, he frequently took part in charity work for both the Titans and later the Baltimore Ravens after a 2006 trade. McNair even helped load donated food, water and clothes onto tractor-trailers that he had arranged for Hurricane Katrina victims, and paid for three football camps for children himself this year.

Mechelle McNair, his wife of 12 years and mother of two of his four sons born between 1991 and 2004, has been described by police as very distraught about his death and has not commented on it.

Some close to McNair -- his brother Fred and his agent, Bus Cook -- have said they knew nothing of Kazemi before the shootings. Fisher said Monday, "The Steve that I knew, if he were here right now, would want to say, 'Mechelle, I love you.'"

According to the New York Daily News, which cited unnamed sources close to McNair, his wife may have been unaware of the affair until learning of the circumstances of his death.

"She's blindsided by this," the newspaper quoted a source as saying of Mechelle McNair. "She's crushed. Her whole world is shattered."

Cook said Mechelle was "in and out of it." He said she had no comment after the police called his death a homicide.

No court records of divorce proceedings have surfaced so far. The strongest public evidence that the McNairs might have been estranged is that their 14,000-square-foot Nashville home has been up for sale recently, listed at $3 million.

McNair split his time between Nashville and his farm in Mount Olive. He recently opened a restaurant near Tennessee State University that was aimed at serving healthy, affordable food to college students.

In retirement, McNair had opened Gridiron9 near the Tennessee State University campus. It sells deep-fried hot dogs for $3.50, Cajun catfish sandwiches for $6.50 and Southern-style chicken strips for $6.75.

Television news footage showed McNair putting used trays away inside the eatery after dumping scraps in a trash can.

"He had a sweet spirit," Kimberly Hardy, a 25-year-old McNair admirer, said outside the restaurant, where mourners have been gathering and leaving flowers and writing notes on the front window.

The night before he died, McNair went alone to the Blue Moon Lagoon Restaurant where he met another couple around 10:30 p.m. and then left by himself about 1 a.m., said James Weathers, manager of the restaurant.

Weathers said McNair visited there occasionally and "was always alone, but he'd meet a group of friends." The manager described McNair as always friendly, "never a big drinker," gracious with constant photo-seekers.

McNair met Kazemi when his family ate often at the Dave & Buster's restaurant she worked at as a server, and the two began dating in a relationship that included a vacation with parasailing. Photos posted on TMZ.com showed McNair gazing and smiling at the young Kazemi.

McNair was also seen so often at Kazemi's apartment that a neighbor thought he lived there.

"She pretty obviously got mixed up way over her head with folks," said Reagan Howard, one of Kazemi's neighbors.

Earlier this year, Kazemi and McNair took trips to Los Angeles, Las Vegas, Key West, Fla., and Mississippi, said Abdi, the nephew. McNair had been seen at Kazemi's Nashville apartment two to three times a week.

"They were together all the time unless he was taking his kids on vacation," Abdi said.

Kazemi was born in Iran but left in 2000, fleeing religious persecution for her family's Baha'i faith, Abdi said. They spent 2½ years in Turkey before moving to Florida. Later Kazemi dropped out of high school and, at age 17, moved with a boyfriend to Nashville, where she sometimes worked two or three jobs to support herself.

She liked not depending on anyone for money, and she told her nephew that McNair admired her independent nature.

"He liked her so much because they would go shopping and stuff and she would want to spend her own money," Abdi said. "The reason he said he loves her is because she's not trying to use him like other girls. She was different from other girls he had been with."




Woman with McNair bought gun, was likely shooter, police say

NASHVILLE, Tenn. -- Police say the gun found at the scene where former NFL star Steve McNair died was bought by his girlfriend less than two days before the two were shot to death.

Nashville police spokesman Don Aaron said Monday that 20-year-old Sahel Kazemi bought the semiautomatic handgun Thursday evening from a person he didn't name.

An autopsy showed that McNair and Kazemi died early Saturday. He was shot four times and his death has been ruled a homicide. She was shot once and Aaron said police are still waiting for ballistic and gunpowder residue tests before deciding if she was slain or committed suicide.

Their bodies were found in a Nashville condominium leased by McNair, who was 36.

Aaron said that as far as he knows McNair was not with Kazemi when she got the gun.

Kazemi's relative, Farzin Abdi, said police told him they are almost sure Kazemi was the shooter, but the 27-year-old nephew said he doesn't believe she would do it.

"There was no way she was depressed and wanting to do this," he said. "She was so happy. ... She just had it made, you know, [with] this guy taking care of everything."

Nashville police didn't immediately have a response to Abdi's comments.

Abdi said Kazemi believed McNair was divorcing his wife and she was preparing to sell her furniture to move in with him.

Nashville courts had no record of a McNair divorce case, but a 14,000-square-foot home he owned in Nashville is on the market for $3 million.

Mechelle McNair has been described as very distraught about her husband's death and has not commented on it.
Before their deaths, the public knew nothing of Kazemi's relationship with McNair, a star who had earned the respect of his fellow NFL players for shaking off defenders and injuries and the love of fans amazed at how the quarterback kept showing up for work -- and winning.

He endeared himself further 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.

His death, however, thrust a darker side of his private life 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 Kazemi.

"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 0.18 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.

Police labeled his death a homicide Sunday, revealing McNair had been shot four times -- twice in the head, twice in the chest -- when found in a rented condominium he shared with a longtime friend, Wayne Neeley. Police found a semiautomatic pistol under Kazemi's body.

But police spokesman Don Aaron said they were reviewing every possibility, interviewing friends of both and an ex-boyfriend before labeling Kazemi's death.

On the football field, he simply was "Air McNair," a winner.

McNair still holds the NCAA's Football Championship Series (formerly Division I-AA) records for career yards passing (14,496) and total offense (16,823) from his days at tiny Alcorn State in Mississippi.

He played 13 NFL seasons, starting with the then-Houston Oilers, and led Tennessee to its famous last-second 2000 Super Bowl loss to the St. Louis Rams. He ended his career in Baltimore last season, after being traded away by the Titans after they drafted Vince Young as a replacement to the aching and expensive veteran.

McNair's friends want the quarterback to be remembered for his generosity. He gave away turkeys and checks in Tennessee, toys in Baltimore and paid for three football camps himself this year. Cook talked to someone Saturday who saw McNair cleaning up the field after one camp at Southern Mississippi.

"That was Steve McNair. That's who he is. And who he was," an emotional Cook recalled.

A viewing will be held Thursday at a Nashville funeral home, followed by another viewing at Mount Zion Baptist Church with a memorial service Thursday night. A funeral service will be held Saturday in Mississippi, but final details were not set.

McNair met Kazemi at the Dave & Buster's restaurant where she worked as a server and where his family ate often. The two began dating a few months ago in a relationship that included a vacation with parasailing. Photos posted on TMZ.com showed McNair gazing and smiling at the young Kazemi.

Monday, July 6, 2009

Tiger Woods PGA Tour 10 Review and Cheats





These reviews are for the PS3 version of the game from gamespot.com and ign.com

I have to admit this is a good game. I rented it because I was skeptical about it cause I did not care for the previous versions. I will be purchasing this when I take the rented one back. Excellent controls and if you don't like the new putting feature, you can switch back to the old version. If you can get online, then you will love this game. You can follow the pros scores and try to beat them during the same time as they are playing. Def. worth getting!!!!

Tiger Woods PGA Tour 10 Review
No matter what you're looking for in a golf game, Tiger Woods 10 almost certainly has you covered.
The GoodFeatures 16 of the world's best golf courses Four difficulty levels that cater to everyone Lots of different online and offline modes Great controls, especially the new precision putting. The BadCommentary is so bad you'll almost certainly mute it Not all difficulty levels are supported online.
Mark Twain once described golf as "a good walk ruined." Perhaps he'd have been a little more forgiving of the sport if he'd had an opportunity to spend some time with Tiger Woods PGA Tour 10. EA Sports' latest hit-the-ball-at-the-hole simulator doesn't reinvent the genre, nor does it represent a huge leap forward over its predecessor, but there are plenty of new features and refinements on its scorecard to make it a winner for newcomers and veterans alike.
Tiger Woods 10 is a golf game that seems designed to be all things for all people. For purists, there are 16 of the world's finest courses, club tuning options, US Golf Association rules, and a Tournament Challenge mode in which you can relive memorable achievements alongside pros. There are also live tournaments that take place alongside real-world events, such as the US Open, and let you compete with pros on the same leaderboard and in similar weather. For those whose knowledge of golf is limited to having seen Adam Sandler's Happy Gilmore, on the other hand, there are items of clothing that dramatically improve your attributes, an extremely forgiving default difficulty level, and wacky customization options that include a pink rabbit suit and a biker jacket. There are also laughable unlockable golfer animations and the ability to hit the ball significantly farther than any real-life pro--much like the hero of the aforementioned movie. Tiger Woods 10 is a game that anyone with even a passing interest in golf can enjoy, but it's unfortunate that its serious side and its Sandler side don't always play well together.

The game's biggest problem is that while new game-changing weather, the great new (optional) putting system, and the quality of your analog or three-click swing are factors that affect your performance on the course, all too often, it's your choice of golfer that has the biggest impact on how well you do. There are more than 30 pro and novelty golfers to choose from, but unless you're deliberately looking to handicap yourself, there's really no reason to play as anybody but Tiger Woods. There are a handful of characters with slightly better ratings for accuracy, but none that come close to matching Tiger's near-perfect ratings for all three of the remaining attributes: power, short game, and putting. None, save for the countless superhuman player-created golfers online who, after several hours of play, can make a trip to the pro shop and purchase a "max attributes" outfit.

Initially, creating and playing as a custom golfer can be very satisfying. You have the option to use digital photos uploaded to an EA Web site or your console's camera to put something vaguely resembling your face into the game; you play a few shots to determine your starting attributes; and, for a few rounds, you really have to play well to keep up with the pros. Your attributes will improve (or occasionally worsen) after every round based on your performance, and you're given opportunities to work on aspects of your game by replaying shots from your previous round in simple exercises presented by your in-game coach. That's all well and good, but your golfer improves so rapidly that by the time you reach your second or third Career mode tournament, it's relatively easy for you to win every competition thereafter--at least playing on the default difficulty.
Switching among Tiger 10's four difficulty modes doesn't impact which tees you play from or the inconsistent AI of the pro players. Rather, it determines how forgiving the controls are and which player aids you get to use. For example, on the default amateur difficulty, moving the analog stick down and then up to perform a swing determines the power of your shot but has very little impact on its direction. However, on pro difficulty, anything other than a perfectly vertical movement of the stick will result in a hook or a slice. If you ramp up the difficulty to the most challenging tour pro setting, you can no longer use power boosts, which you trigger by tapping a button during your swing; you can no longer add spin to the ball after striking it, which is done in much the same way; and, you don't get to use the putt preview, which gives you a second chance to line up shots on the green by showing you what your first attempt will look like without actually having to play it.
Given that the beginner and amateur difficulty settings are unrealistically easy (scores of 20 under par for a single round aren't uncommon) and that the tour pro difficulty is very challenging (expect scores closer to 20 over par to begin with), the pro difficulty is likely to be the sweet spot for anyone looking to realistically compete with the household name players. Unfortunately, the only time you can use pro difficulty online is when you're competing in one of the slickly implemented daily or weekly tournaments that force all players to use the same settings. Only the amateur and tour pro settings are available in the remaining multiplayer modes. While such games as best ball, four ball, and skins are great additions to the requisite stroke play and match play options, it's unfortunate and baffling that they only support two of the four difficulty settings. Regardless, online play is a lot of fun, and the Simultaneous Strokes mode in which four players take their shots at the same time and can see their opponents' efforts represented by ball-tracing colored lines is a great way to go head-to-head without having to sit and watch other players while waiting for your turn.
Even if you're not playing online, being connected to EA's servers improves the Tiger Woods 10 experience. You'll see a handful of advertisements that don't appear when you play offline, but the payoff is that you get to see news feeds of sports results and the like. You can also opt to play any course with "live" weather conditions courtesy of The Weather Channel. Weather is undoubtedly one of the most significant additions to this year's game because rain has just as big of an impact as wind, which has been a staple of golf games since day one, on how a course plays. GamerNet challenges are another benefit of playing while connected: Any time you play a particularly impressive shot, you have the option to upload it as a challenge for other players to beat during their regular play, and, of course, you can expect to be presented with plenty of them when you're playing yourself. It's possible to set up quite elaborate challenges, but for the most part, you're judged either on the length of your drive or how close you get to the hole with an approach shot. The latter are always possible to better, but the former are dependent on both your character's skills and the weather--being challenged to drive a ball almost 500 yards just isn't possible unless you're maxed out and have the wind at your back.

Other forms of player competition include a large selection of minigames and modes that use the mechanics of golf in some inventive ways. There are three modes that employ archery-style targets, including one titled Capture the Flag in which you can claim targets by hitting their bull's-eyes; you can play H.O.R.S.E., which here is known as T.I.G.E.R.; and if you're feeling extra competitive, you can challenge a friend to a game of Battle Golf, in which winning a hole entitles you to remove a club form your opponent's bag or return one to your own. In short, Tiger Woods 10 has plenty of variety, regardless of whether you're looking for a traditional golf experience, less conventional games to enjoy with friends, or both.

There's no guarantee that your custom golfer will be instantly recognizable as you, but for the most part, Tiger Woods 10 is a good-looking game. Professional players are instantly recognizable, and if you've ever visited such courses as St. Andrews and Torrey Pines, or even just seen them on television, you'll find that they are as well. Details, such as bunkers and expanses of water, look great in this year's game, and when you see waves rolling in on the rocks alongside the 18th at Pebble Beach, you'll understand why it's one of the most celebrated holes in golf. Crowds made up of emotionless doppelgangers that form to watch your tee shots and putts detract from rather than enhance the experience, but at least they're easy to ignore. The same, unfortunately, can't be said for the commentary team of Scott Van Pelt and Kelly Tilghman.
Commentary is generally something that greatly enhances the TV-style presentation of a sports game, but in Tiger Woods 10, the option to mute the commentary is definitely a welcome one. One will frequently correct the other after he or she wrongly predicts where your ball is going to land, they'll tell you that they've never seen worse putting after you miss a giant putt by only the tiniest of margins, and Van Pelt regularly states that he has no idea who's at the top of a competition leaderboard--even when you're winning by an unrealistic 20-plus strokes. Neither commentator's delivery is great, but ultimately, it's the quality of the writing and its implementation in the game that brings it down.

As golf games go, Tiger Woods PGA Tour 10 is tough to beat. There really is something for everyone with even a passing interest in golf in this sizeable package, and although there's clearly still some room for improvement, it's well worth a look even if you already own last year's game.



Tiger Woods 2010
June 9, 2009 - Videogame golf has been a long-standing staple of our industry. Whether on PC or console, hacking away at that little white ball is a mainstay of our favorite pastime. For the last several years the only serious (read: simulation) game in town has been Tiger Woods PGA Tour from EA Sports. This year Tiger brings us some new online modes, a new challenge mode that replaces Tiger Challenge from the last few years, and some needed gameplay tweaks to help ease players into the virtual golfing experience.

There's no doubt that Tiger Woods 10 is missing one major feature addition for EA Sports to hang its marketing hat on, but that doesn't mean that golf fans won't find plenty to enjoy. There are small things like the new Tournament Challenge that lets you take on real-world tourney situations from years past and Live Online Tournaments – my personal favorite of the new features – that allow you to record scores against other living players or real pros currently on the course. Still, none of these features are mind-blowing, and none will change the way you fundamentally think about Tiger Woods Golf. If you can get by that fact, then you'll find a golf title that's easy to enjoy.

With new tournament modes to toy around with (the aforementioned Tournament Challenge and Live Tournaments to go along with the standard PGA Season) EA Sports made the wise choice of trying to up the emotion of the game of golf. You'll hear fans in the distance cheer as your opponent sinks a critical putt, Kelly Tilghman and Scott Van Pelt will spout quips about movement on the leaderboards, and you'll get visual cues as players make and miss putts elsewhere on the course.

Even with those appreciated changes, I still can't help but feel like the real emotion of the Tour is held back. Sit down and watch the final round of one of Tiger's famous comebacks or see him drill a 20-foot putt on 17 or 18 and you'll hear what the crowd in Tiger Woods Golf should sound like. Likewise, Van Pelt and Tilghman don't bring the excitement that they would during a real Sunday afternoon on the links.
The game modes themselves, however, are well designed and fun to play. My favorite is easily the Play the Pros option within the Live Tournaments. It allows you to play side-by-side against the leaderboards from any real golf tournament. If Phil "Lefty" Mickelson drains a put on 16 to pull one-ahead of you on the leaderboard, you'll see that reflected in-game. It's simple but very fun. Likewise, the new Tournament Challenge uses GamerNet technology and forces you to hit exactly the same shots as some of golf's biggest names. Like all of the new features, it's nothing spectacular or overly imaginative, but it's a fun and welcome addition nonetheless.

Live Weather is another small addition to Tiger Woods that has actually been seen in other EA Sports games like NCAA Football the last few years. The feature is supposed to add real weather updates to the course you're playing on, and while the visual representations of these acts of nature comes through just fine, the changes to gameplay aren't quite there. During a downpour you'll see things like gusting wind that knocks the ball down and fairways that soften up for decreased roll distance, but as soon as the deluge stops, I found that conditions returned to normal too quickly. I'd like to see fairways stay sopping wet with puddles splashing even after the weather returns to normal.
On the course Tiger Woods PGA Tour 10 is almost exactly as you remember. You can still swing with either the analog stick or the three-click mechanic. If you crank up the power enough you'll still see the over-exaggerated "power shot" montage, but this year the ball has a cheesy looking cartoon vapor trail streaming out of the back. I understand that I just hit a golf ball very hard, I don't need to see a cartoon representation.

One tiny addition that I really did appreciate is the new ability to A or X your way through the annoying camera angles that occasionally constrict your view of where the ball is going.

The most substantive change to the core gameplay mechanic is the new Precision Putting. Instead of carrying multiple putters in your bag as you've been forced to do in the past, you now have one putter for all distances. You pick a spot on the green and the putter adjusts to show you how far you need to bring it back before releasing it forward. It's a well-crafted putting mechanic and emulates real-life golf better than it has in the past.
Most of your time on the course will be spent developing your created character. You design his or her look just as you have in the past (or with Photo GameFace) and then toss him onto the course. Attribute progression is organic as you'll advance in certain areas or regress in others depending on your performance. You'll also have the opportunity to practice shots that your coach recommends after a round is completed. Progression in Tiger Woods 10 feels much better than it has in the past. You no longer assign points to improve in certain areas. Instead, all of that is determined by your play on the course.

While you're hacking away at that dastardly little white ball you'll notice that Tiger has undergone some slight visual changes, though nothing that is as important as I would have liked. Little things like water and lighting in certain situations look improved over last year's game, but I was really hoping to see greater detail in the character models. We haven't seen the game progress in this manner since it landed on Xbox 360 years ago. The same goes for animations – both celebratory and standard striking – which are identical to what I've seen before.
The audio does get a bit of a bump thanks to Scott Van Pelt. He provides quips like "Get some!" when you nail a putt and other blurbs that definitely add to the personality of the overall package. Kelly Tilghman doesn't bring a lot of spice to the equation, and she essentially has zero direct interaction with Van Pelt – something I hope changes in the future. Not only that, but the commentary doesn't reference itself enough. I'd like to see Scott mention a poor call Kelly made a few holes ago and I'd like to see both of them get more excited over the drama that they're witnessing.

Closing Comments
The question of whether to go out and drop your hard-earned 60 bucks on Tiger Woods PGA Tour 10 should be decided by determining whether or not you’re a hardcore golf fan. If you’re someone who watches every second of every major tourney then you’ll enjoy the inclusion of the US Open and USGA Championship, you’ll dig the Live Tournaments, and you’ll appreciate the new putting.

On the flipside, if you’re just waking up on Monday morning to check out the results on SportsCenter and you only occasionally dust off your copy of Tiger Woods PGA Tour 09, you’ll likely be disappointed by the general lack of show-stopping features and gameplay innovations.



CHEATS for the GAME

Unlockable: TW Items
Enter this code at the cheats menu to unlock the TW Golf items in the pro shop: eltigre

I WILL BE ADDING MORE AS I FIND THEM!!!!!

Friday, July 3, 2009

Top Pictures from the Week


This probably my favorite of the week! You can probably take it to mean he is cocky, or he is trying to be funny about something. Any comments on this one or any of the pictures?





The King of Pop had a bigger impact on sports than most give him credit for. He single-handedly changed the Super Bowl halftime show from a bathroom break into a megaevent. Before Jackson's memorable performance at Super Bowl XXVII, the NFL had such forgettable acts as marching bands, the Rockettes, Elvis Presto and Disney characters. The year before, the halftime show featured former Olympic champions Brian Boitano and Dorothy Hamill skating on sheets of Teflon. His sister Janet may have had the most controversial performance, but we can always thank Michael for saving us from watching Mickey Mouse run around the field during halftime of the Super Bowl again.




The Big Cavalier is moving to Cleveland to team up with LeBron James and play in a cold-weather city for the first time in his career. Something tells us this marriage won't result in a championship, but it will give us the most entertaining introductions and sideline celebrations in NBA history.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

2009 NBA Draft Results

Complete 1st Round NBA Draft Picks
1
Blake Griffin - Los Angeles Clippers - PF

Oklahoma - HT: 6'10" WT: 251 - SI GRADE: 10
The pick was the easy and obvious call for the Clippers. The challenge is sorting through Griffin and Zach Randolph at power forward and Marcus Camby and Chris Kaman at center to get a big-man rotation and make sure Griffin gets the minutes to blossom.
2
Hasheem Thabeet - Memphis Grizzlies - C

Connecticut - HT: 7'3" WT: 263 - SI GRADE: 9
Once lacking a center, the Grizzlies now have options. Marc Gasol is coming off an encouraging rookie season and Thabeet is a potential impact player on defense and easily the best prospect at the position in the draft. His progression on offense will bear watching.
3
James Harden - Oklahoma City Thunder - SG

Arizona State - HT: 6'5" WT: 218 - SI GRADE: 9
The Thunder add one of the most well-rounded, NBA-ready players on the board, a standing undiminished by disappointing NCAA tournament showings. Harden has a pro body for a shooting guard and the ability to score and handle the ball. He joins a promising nucleus of Russell Westbrook, Kevin Durant and Jeff Green.
4
Tyreke Evans - Sacramento Kings - PG/SG

Memphis - HT: 6'6" WT: 219 - SI GRADE: 9
The Kings love his physical presence as a big point guard with the ability to barrel into the lane. If he can turn his jump shot into a weapon, defenses will really have their hands full.
5
Ricky Rubio - Minnesota Timberwolves - PG

Spain - HT: 6'3" WT: 180 - SI GRADE: 9
A lot of teams rate Rubio the second-best prospect in the draft, but a difficult buyout with his Spanish team and worries about poor shooting and a lack of athleticism led to the drop. The Timberwolves hope they have finally solved their point guard woes.
6
Jonny Flynn - Minnesota Timberwolves - PG

Syracuse - HT: 6'0" WT: 185 - SI GRADE: 9
Speaking of solving their point guard woes: New Minnesota president David Kahn pulls a surprise by taking true ball handlers with back-to-back picks and passing on a scorer like Stephen Curry for the backcourt. If Rubio's arrival hits a snag, Minnesota has another option with Flynn.
7
Stephen Curry - Golden State Warriors - PG/SG

Davidson - HT: 6'3" WT: 185 - SI GRADE: 9
Is the selection of a duplicate player a statement on the future of Monta Ellis in Golden State? Even Don Nelson can't be thinking about using two undersized guards together with neither being a natural playmaker. No wonder Curry is rumored to be part of a potential trade for the Suns' Amar'e Stoudemire.
8
Jordan Hill - New York Knicks - PF

Arizona - HT: 6'10" WT: 235 - SI GRADE: 9
A big man who runs the court really well is a natural fit for Mike D'Antoni's offense. Hill went from an intriguing prospect a year ago to a lottery pick after a breakout season in 2008-09.
9
DeMar DeRozan - Toronto Raptors - SG

USC - HT: 6'7" WT: 220 - SI GRADE: 9
DeRozan is an athletic specimen with great potential who will succeed in the open court. If he develops a perimeter game (the swingman shot 16.7 percent from the college three-point line), he becomes a star and a steal at No. 9.
10
Brandon Jennings - Milwaukee Bucks - PG

Italy - HT: 6'1" WT: 170 - SI GRADE: 8
Jennings could get the chance to play immediately, depending on whether Ramon Sessions leaves as a free agent. He has great quickness but will have to develop his jump shot and leadership qualities. Jennings will have help with the latter from coach Scott Skiles, a former NBA point guard.
11
Terrence Williams - New Jersey Nets - SG/SF

Louisville - HT: 6'6" WT: 220 - SI GRADE: 6
Projected as a small forward, Williams is probably the best perimeter defender in the draft, with the ability to check both guard positions as well as small forward. He is also a good rebounder and handles the ball well enough to get time as a point forward. The Nets' trade of Vince Carter created a big opening on the wing.
12
Gerald Henderson - Charlotte Bobcats - SG/SF

Duke - HT: 6'4" WT: 215 - SI GRADE: 8
Charlotte stays in-state for the athletic swingman who made big improvements while at Duke. The Bobcats need a long-term prospect and more scoring punch at shooting guard. They liked Terrence Williams, too.
13
Tyler Hansbrough - Indiana Pacers - PF

North Carolina - HT: 6'9" WT: 250 - SI GRADE: 7
The Pacers spent a lottery pick on a player projected by many teams to be a role player and maybe even a career-long reserve. The upside is that Hansbrough will be nonstop, hard-hat energy. He's a known quantity after four productive years with the Tar Heels.
14
Earl Clark - Phoenix Suns - SF/PF

Louisville - HT: 6'9" WT: 225 - SI GRADE: 8
The combo forward can score inside and out and will defend. To really fulfill his potential, he will have to play with better focus and intensity. Will he be playing with Amar'e Stoudemire or attempting to help replace him?
15
Austin Daye - Detroit Pistons - SF

Gonzaga - HT: 6'11" WT: 192 - SI GRADE: 7
A skilled offensive player with shooting range and ball-handling skills at 6-10, he will be a tough matchup. But Daye weighs just 192 pounds (he has a similar build to Pistons forward Tayshaun Prince) and struggled to be consistent in college.
16
James Johnson - Chicago Bulls - SF

Wake Forest - HT: 6'9" WT: 245 - SI GRADE: 7
Johnson will play power forward and small forward, and be able to handle both on defense as well as offense. He hurt his stock by putting on weight before hitting the workout circuit, but the skill set and toughness are undeniable.
17
Jrue Holiday - Philadelphia 76ers - PG/SG

UCLA - HT: 6'3" WT: 180 - SI GRADE: 9
Finally. Holiday went 17th when most teams figured him for the lottery. Like a few guards picked before him, he'll need time to figure out the point position. The 76ers could have a big need there if they do not re-sign free agent Andre Miller.
18
Ty Lawson - Minnesota Timberwolves - PG

traded to Nuggets
North Carolina - HT: 5'11" WT: 195 - SI GRADE: 7
With this pick from Minnesota, Denver secures an immediate backup for Chauncey Billups. Lawson is tremendous in transition and not bad in half-court sets, either. Anthony Carter, last season's backup point guard, is a free agent.
19
Jeff Teague - Atlanta Hawks - PG

Wake Forest - HT: 6'2" WT: 180 - SI GRADE: 7
The Hawks are loading up on point guards, trading for combo guard Jamal Crawford and drafting Teague, who can get in the lane and score. Are they preparing to lose free agent Mike Bibby?
20
Eric Maynor - Utah Jazz - PG

Virginia Commonwealth - HT: 6'3" WT: 175 - SI GRADE: 7
Utah's next new hope to give Deron Williams a dependable backup. Maynor loves the pressure moments and has great feel for the position.
21
Darren Collison - New Orleans Hornets - PG

UCLA - HT: 6'0" WT: 160 - SI GRADE: 6
The run on backup point guards continues with one of the best defensive guards in the draft. Collison's extensive experience playing deep into NCAA tournaments prepares him him for the big stage. He'll pick up a thing or two from Chris Paul.
22
Victor Claver - Portland Trail Blazers - SF

Spain - HT: 6'10" WT: 236 - SI GRADE: 5
The Spanish small forward is expected to join Joel Freeland (2006) and Petteri Koponen (2007, in a trade with the 76ers) as Trail Blazers picks who remain overseas to develop.
23
Omri Casspi - Sacramento Kings - SF

Israel - HT: 6'8" WT: 225 - SI GRADE: 6
The Israeli small forward has already said he's willing to spend another season playing in his native country. The Kings, looking to save money, will probably take him up on it.
24
B.J. Mullens - Dallas Mavericks - C

traded to Thunder
Ohio State - HT: 7'0" WT: 275 - SI GRADE: 7
Oklahoma City has acquired this pick. There are real issues about Mullens' desire to play and get better, but his potential is unquestioned. One GM said Mullens has the talent to be a top-five pick. He's the second center of the first round, long after Hasheem Thabeet went second to Memphis.
25
Rodrigue Beaubois - Oklahoma City Thunder - PG

traded to Mavericks
France - HT: 6'2" WT: 182 - SI GRADE: 5
Beaubois, acquired by Dallas, is an athletic point guard who has a similar build to Boston's Rajon Rondo. Ideally, Beaubois grows into a starting floor leader in a few years. In the meantime, the Mavs hope he'll have free agent Jason Kidd around as a mentor.
26
Taj Gibson - Chicago Bulls - PF

USC - HT: 6'9" WT: 225 - SI GRADE: 2
The Pac-10 Conference Defensive Player of the Year is a thin shot-blocker with long arms. He's also 24 years old, a plus for his maturity but a drawback in terms of upside.
27
DeMarre Carroll - Memphis Grizzlies - PF

Missouri - HT: 6'8" WT: 225 - SI GRADE: 4
Scrappy, energy player who rebounds well has the chance to contribute off the bench.
28
Wayne Ellington - Minnesota Timberwolves - SG

North Carolina - HT: 6'4" WT: 200 - SI GRADE: 6
The third first-round pick from North Carolina's national-championship team can score from the perimeter or off the dribble. In Ricky Rubio, Jonny Flynn and Ellington (Ty Lawson reportedly will be traded), the Timberwolves hope they collected the backcourt of the future in one night.
29
Toney Douglas - Los Angeles Lakers - PG/SG

traded to Knicks
Florida State - HT: 6'2" WT: 205 - SI GRADE: 4
The pick is for the Knicks as part of a trade that will become official later. Douglas has a chance to become a defensive presence in the backcourt. The deep-shooting threat also averaged 21.5 points last season.
30
Christian Eyenga - Cleveland Cavaliers - SF

Republic of Congo - HT: 6'6" WT: 210 - SI GRADE:
Like anyone in Cleveland was going to notice the pick even if they'd heard of him. The Shaquille O'Neal trade is the news that blots out everything else. Anyone outside a few front offices who said they saw this one coming is a liar of lottery-pick proportions.