It’s amazing to me how much stuff and football stuff Snoop Dogg gets paid to do. He has no connection to football other than liking it and hasn’t had a hit song since like 2007.
Yeah, and he's kind of known more for being a pothead than for being a rapper. Every commercial he makes has a weed reference. Rap? Um no.
Mahomes gets a roughing the passer call drawn there if he gets hit like Carr. The Saints face back to back zero blitzes and don’t try a slant or crosser or anything? They opt for two bombs down the sideline?
Wikipedia says... Since 2005, Snoop Dogg has been operating a youth football league in the Los Angeles area.[195] He is a coach in the league, and one of the seasons he coached was documented in the Netflix documentary Coach Snoop. In 2005, Snoop Dogg founded the Snoop Youth Football League for at-risk youth in Southern California. In 2018, it was claimed to be the largest youth football organization in Southern California, with 50 teams and more than 1,500 players.[217][218] He has since claimed that at least 20 of his former pupils have gone on to play with the NFL.[219] Since 2017, he has also run a special-needs division called Snoop Special Stars for anyone 5 years or older with a physical, mental, or developmental disability.[220][219] Snoop is a certified football coach and has been head coach of his son Cordell's youth football teams.[185][186] Cordell played wide receiver and defensive back at Bishop Gorman High School in Las Vegas, Nevada, Cordell played on the 2014 state championship team, and received football scholarship offers from Southern California, UCLA, Washington, Cal, Oregon State, Duke, and Notre Dame.[187][188][189][190][191] Cordell committed and signed a letter of intent to play for UCLA on February 4, 2015.[192] On August 14, 2015, UCLA announced that Cordell had left the UCLA football team "to pursue other passions in his life".[193]