
On a Saturday afternoon in the fall of 2004, in a stadium in suburban Los Angeles, a Pop Warner youth football team called the Rowland Heights Raiders was losing badly.
The team was made up of boys aged eight to twelve. Most of them were from families that could barely afford the registration fees. Some of them had been brought to the games that season by neighbors because their own parents could not get the time off work. They were practicing on a field with chalk lines that washed away when it rained. Their helmets were secondhand. Their uniforms had been donated by a hardware store.
Their head coach was a thirty-three-year-old rapper named Calvin Cordozar Broadus Jr. The boys called him Coach Snoop.
He had taken the job two seasons earlier because his eldest son, Cordé, had wanted to play. Snoop Dogg, by then, had been one of the most famous rappers in the world for over a decade. He had sold tens of millions of records. He could have hired any youth football program in the country to coach his son. Instead, when he showed up to the league he had signed Cordé up for, he had noticed that almost none of the boys on the team had fathers there at practice.
So he had volunteered to coach.
He had been coaching for two years on that Saturday in 2004 when he realized something was bothering him about how Pop Warner football was being run in his city. Boys who were good enough were being scouted away to private clubs in wealthier suburbs. Boys whose families could not afford the equipment fees were being told to sit on the bench. The grass-roots leagues in South Los Angeles and Compton were drying up because the families could not pay.
By the end of that season, he had made a decision.
He was going to build his own league.
In 2005, he founded the Snoop Youth Football League, a free league open to boys aged five to thirteen from inner-city Los Angeles. He would pay for the equipment. He would pay for the uniforms. He would pay for the buses to away games. He would pay for the trophies. He would, in many cases, personally pay the registration fees of the boys whose families could not.
The league was free.
Every boy who showed up was on the team. Nobody was cut. Nobody was told their family could not afford to be there. The only requirements were that the boys maintain their grades and that they show up to practice on time.
Snoop coached the teams himself for the first seasons. He stood on the sidelines in shorts and a whistle on the weekends, screaming at twelve-year-olds about footwork. He drove his own car to the games. He brought oranges. He yelled at parents who did not show up for their kids. He yelled, more gently, at the kids whose parents could not show up no matter how much yelling he did, and he became those kids’ father-figure during the hours that they were in his care.
He paid the bills out of his own pocket for the first several years. The league cost him over a million dollars a year by some estimates. He covered it.
Then the kids started growing up.
The first thing people noticed was that the boys who came through the Snoop Youth Football League kept making it into high school football. Then they kept making it into college football. Then they kept getting drafted.
By 2024, twelve former Snoop Youth Football League alumni had played in the National Football League.
The most famous of them was a boy named Najee Harris. Harris had come through the league as a child whose family had been homeless for years, moving between motels and shelters in the Bay Area before settling in Antioch, California. Snoop had paid for his football equipment. He had told the boy, repeatedly, that he was going to be a great football player. Harris was drafted by the Pittsburgh Steelers in the first round in 2021. He has since rushed for over five thousand yards in the NFL. Harris has said publicly, on multiple occasions, that without Coach Snoop he would not have made it through high school.
Another was John Ross, who became a first-round draft pick of the Cincinnati Bengals and ran the fastest forty-yard dash in NFL Combine history. Another was DeMarcus Robinson, who has won two Super Bowls. Another was a boy named Cordell Broadus, Snoop’s own second son, who played college football at UCLA before walking away from football to pursue filmmaking — a decision Snoop fully supported, saying that the point of the league was never to make NFL players. The point was to give boys a path.
There are now also dozens of league alumni in college football scholarships. There are alumni who became doctors, accountants, teachers, firefighters, contractors. The league has, since 2005, served over two thousand boys per season. It has expanded into ten states. It has continued to be free for every child who shows up.
Snoop Dogg has continued, over twenty years, to fund a significant portion of it himself.
He has also, in his spare time, paid for the funerals of league alumni who did not make it out of their neighborhoods. He has paid for the college tuitions of league alumni whose football careers did not pan out but who needed help finishing school. He has hired league alumni to work on his own businesses. He has flown to the funerals of the mothers of league alumni and stood at the back of the church so nobody would look at him.
In a 2024 interview, he was asked why he spent so much of his own money keeping the league going.
He answered with one of the most quoted lines he has ever given.
“My job,” he said, “is to be the man for the boys whose man ain’t there.”
He turned fifty-four years old in October 2025. He has now been coaching boys whose fathers were absent for over twenty years. The league he built in 2005 has, in the years since, raised an entire generation of inner-city Los Angeles boys to manhood. Some of them are now coaches in the league themselves. Some of them are now bringing their own sons.
He is one of the most globally recognized music artists alive. He has, in recent years, become a beloved figure to audiences who would never have listened to a Snoop Dogg album in 1993 — a billion people watched him commentate at the Paris Olympics in 2024 alongside Martha Stewart. He has hosted talk shows, cooking shows, game shows. He has become, somehow, the favorite uncle of America.
But the work that has lasted the longest, the work he has put the most of his own money into, the work he refuses to talk about except when reporters force him to, is the work he has been doing on Saturday mornings in Compton, on fields that nobody is filming, for boys whose fathers are not coming.
He has stood on those sidelines for twenty years.
He has bought the equipment.
He has paid the bills.
He has yelled at the parents.
He has shown up.
He has been the man for the boys whose man wasn’t there.









