Albuquerque Journal

Redskins retire Mitchell’s jersey, rename stadium level

Washington again facing challenges to change its name

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The Washington Redskins will retire the jersey of Hall of Famer Bobby Mitchell. They will also rename the lower level of FedEx Field for him, replacing the section named for former owner George Preston Marshall.

The team, which is under pressure to change its name during the ongoing national reckoning over racism, said Saturday that Mitchell’s No. 49 will become only the second jersey in the franchise’s 88-year history to be retired. The other is the No. 33 of Hall of Famer Sammy Baugh.

Mitchell, Washington’s first African American player, died in April. The Redskins were the last NFL team to integrate the roster.

Significan­tly, dropping Marshall’s name from the lower bowl of the stadium follows by one day the removal of his statue at RFK Stadium, the team’s former home. Marshall moved the team from Boston to Washington and resisted integratin­g the roster with Black players until “forced to do so” in 1962.

The team’s announceme­nt of the change did not mention Marshall, who was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1963 and died in 1969.

Events DC officials who oversee RFK Stadium in Washington — FedEx Field is in Landover, Maryland — called the removal a “small and overdue step on the road to lasting equality and justice.”

Calls for the team to change its nickname have ramped up, too, and the Washington Post’s editorial board on Friday called on Redskins owner Daniel Snyder to do so.

Mitchell, who played running back and receiver, not only was one of Washington’s greatest players, but a trailblaze­r.

“Bobby was our Jackie Robinson,” said Brig Owens, an outstandin­g safety for the team. “He had to handle the pressure of being the first African American football player to integrate the Washington Redskins. … In the face of great adversity, he served as a role model for the Washington, D.C. community, the Redskins, its fan base and the NFL. He was committed to the National Leukemia Society and the Shaw Food Committee where for 40 years they fed over 500 families at Thanksgivi­ng. He was more than an exceptiona­l football player and athlete, he was an exceptiona­l human being. He was like a brother to me.”

KIICK DIES: Jim Kiick, the versatile running back who helped the Miami Dolphins achieve the NFL’s only perfect season in 1972, has died at 73, the team announced Saturday.

Kiick battled memory issues in recent years and lived in an assisted living home.

The former University of Wyoming star was part of a formidable backfield that included his best friend, Pro Football Hall of Fame fullback Larry Csonka. They earned the nicknames Butch and Sundance, inspired by the popular 1969 movie “Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid.”

Kiick (“Butch”) made the American Football League All-Star team in his first two seasons and played for the Dolphins’ back-to-back Super Bowl championsh­ip teams in 1972-73. He scored in the Super Bowl victory that capped their 17-0 season under Pro Football Hall of Fame coach Don Shula.

Shula died May 4 at age 90.

 ?? FRED WATERS/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Washington Redskin running back and receiver Bobby Mitchell jumps to catch a pass from quarterbac­k Norman Snead in a game in St. Louis on Oct. 15, 1962.
FRED WATERS/ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Washington Redskin running back and receiver Bobby Mitchell jumps to catch a pass from quarterbac­k Norman Snead in a game in St. Louis on Oct. 15, 1962.
 ??  ?? Bobby Mitchell
Bobby Mitchell

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