Damian Lillard Says He’s the Best Basketball Player Who Raps

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Damian Lillard Says He’s the Best Basketball Player Who Raps; Talks New Music with Shaq, Q-Tip, Blxst

Damian Lillard Says He’s the Best Basketball Player Who Raps

Damian Lillard is presently in Tokyo as a feature of the US Olympic men’s ball group however they needed to manage an initial misfortune to France.

During the question and answer session, the 31-year-old Portland Trailblazers monitor, who is playing in his first Olympics, said that unfamiliar NBA players play preferable in the Olympics over in the NBA on the grounds that they’re given more opportunity on an Olympic court and are more acquainted with one another versus the NBA major parts in the USA.

He additionally called into the Ebro show on Apple Music on Monday to talk about the Olympics in addition to his job in Space Jam: A New Legacy, his forthcoming collection, being roused by Tupac and Mary J. Blige, and that’s only the tip of the iceberg. He uncovers that he has a tune with Shaq that the two began chipping away at however it hasn’t come out yet.

In the wake of guaranteeing that he’s the best b-ball player who raps, Dame D.O.L.L.A. uncovered that he’s chipping away at his new collection which will act naturally named. He further discloses to Ebro that he has commitments on it from Q-Tip and Blxst among others.

“It’s a self-named collection, the following one. I will drop it in August presumably, and on that I got Q-Tip on there, Blxst, Jane Hancock, I got my kid OG Tree from Oakland as well… I think this collection I went a lot further,” he said. “I went from making it fun, or attempting to have individuals like it, yet I went more into… like you said, I got more data now, and my comprehension of exactly how fruitful I am and having the experience that I have and coming from where I come from and why it’s important in the business that I’m in and why I can convey things thusly.”

“I’m a huge Tupac fan. So just.. his ability to paint a picture and for me to be able to see it… even though it wasn’t directly my situation. I always loved that about Tupac. So when I started to write music, a lot of my music was me expressing my struggles in my life and things that I went through and experienced and I enjoyed writing about that. That’s why I always loved Mary J. Blige too. My mom used to listen to Mary J. every single day and I got the same vibes from her, just that struggle and that pain, how she would put it in her music. I felt like I could see what she was going through.”