Reggie Stephens
No. 46, 28, 29, 34
Position:Cornerback
Personal information
Born:(1975-02-21)February 21, 1975
Shreveport, LA
Height:5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)
Weight:200 lb (91 kg)
Career information
High school:Santa Cruz
College:Rutgers
Undrafted:1999
Career history
 * Offseason and/or practice squad member only

Reggie Stephens (born February 21, 1975 in Shreveport, LA) is a former American football cornerback in the National Football League and in the Arena Football League. Also, a rapper, music producer, and founder of the Reggie Stephens Foundation.

Early life

Stephens was born in Shreveport, Louisiana, and at age 15 moved to Santa Cruz, California. Stephens attended and played High school football at Santa Cruz High School with Brendan Ayanbadejo. Stephens also competed in the boy's 100 and 200-meter dash, long jump, and 400-meter relay at Santa Cruz High. Stephens is now listed in the Santa Cruz High School Athletics Hall of Fame for his achievements in these sports.

College career

Stephens graduated from Santa Cruz High, and went on to play football at Cabrillo Junior College in Aptos, California. Stephens then got accepted to Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey. Stephens won the Homer Hazel MVP Award, in 1998 his senior year at Rutgers University. Reggie was also 1st Team All-Big East Sporting News, and played in the East-West Shrine Game in 1998 at Stanford Stadium.

Professional career

Stephens played for the NFL's New York Giants between 1999 and 2003 in his 2nd year he recored 3 interceptions and was a standout special teams player, which helped the giants reach Super Bowl XXXV where the Baltimore Ravens defeated the New York Giants 34-7, January 28, 2001 at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida.

Coaching

Stephens coaches High School Varsity Football for the Scott's Valley Falcons. He specializes in coaching Wide Receivers, Cornerbacks, and Defensive Backs alongside head coach Louie Walters. Reggie has coached the Falcons to win the SCCAL four years in a row, 2006-2009.

Reggie Stephens Foundation

Stephens created a non-profit organization, named the Reggie Stephens Foundation, dedicated to helping the youth of Santa Cruz and the Central Coast of California, based on his own childhood experiences. The RSF (Reggie Stephens Foundation) mission statement says "a strong work ethic, hard work, good grades, good sportsmanship, and a positive attitude can get you far in life." RSF seeks volunteering and funding, to help kids get involved in sports, arts and crafts, and entertainment. Louie Walters, head coach of the Scott's Valley Falcons, is on the board of directors for the RSF. The RSF also hosts an annual golf tournament at Spring Hills Golf Course.

Music career

Stephens is also a talented vocalist/rapper, songwriter, producer, and founder of the Reggie Stephens Foundation. Given his talents, Reggie gained notoriety for being the first to legally sample a Bon Jovi song on a hip-hop track, "Bad Name," - from his debut solo album, "Ghetto Passport." In addition to Bon Jovi, Reggie has worked with music industry veterans such as Bill Summers, The Headhunters, Forward Back, One Drop Scott, Anita Dixon, Omar Sosa, David Huff, Donald Harrison, Efya, Dave Pensado, Dylan Dresdow, Ariel Chaboz, Jason Joshua, Taj from SWV, Dj Montay, Billy Cook, Rankin Scroo, Cozmo, The Legion, Prohoezak, Nipsey Hussle, Greg Landau, Grammy Award Winners Los Cojolites, Lemo Live, Chris Rene, Lil Buck, Sonivore Studio, DJ Unk, E-40, Bun-B, John Greenham, Greg Landau, Donald Harrison, Glasses Malone, and Cruzmatik with business partner Jason Williams.

Currently, he is collaborating with Grammy-nominated Mexican folk artists, Los Cojolites and producer Greg Landau, on a new Afro-Mexican Futurist project that pushes the Son Jarocho genre in new directions.

Personal life

Reggie Stephens now lives in Santa Cruz, California. He has two kids, Kaijae yee - Stephens and Deijah Stephens.

https://www.footballdb.com/players/reggie-stephens-stephre01

https://playerstrust.com/spotlights/reggie-stephens

https://www.santacruzsentinel.com/2020/10/14/scpd-santa-cruz-warriors-meet-to-discuss-race-policing-and-social-justice

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