Miami Herald

Redskins ‘retired,’ new nickname to be determined

- From Miami Herald Wire Services

The Washington NFL franchise announced Monday it is dropping the “Redskins” name and Indian head logo, bowing to recent pressure from sponsors and decades of criticism that they are offensive to Native Americans.

A new name must still be selected for one of the oldest and most storied teams in the National Football League, and it was unclear how soon that will happen. But for now, arguably the most polarizing name in North American profession­al sports is gone at a time of reckoning over racial injustice, iconograph­y and racism in the U.S.

The move came less than two weeks after owner

Dan Snyder, a boyhood fan of the team who once declared he would never get rid of the name, launched a “thorough review” amid pressure from sponsors. FedEx, Nike, Pepsi and Bank of America all lined up against the name, which was given to the franchise in 1933 when the team was still based in Boston.

“The NFL and Dan Snyder, we have to commend them on making the right call to change the name,” said Oneida Indian Nation Representa­tive Ray Halbritter, leader of the “Change the Mascot” campaign. “Dan Snyder won today because now he has a legacy that will be different from the racial slur that was the team name. I know that’s not an easy thing to do, but it was the right thing to do.”

The team said it is “retiring” the name and logo and that Snyder and coach Ron Rivera are working closely to develop a new moniker and design. The announceme­nt came on the old letterhead with the Redskins name because the team technicall­y retains it until a new one is chosen and approved.

Native American advocates and experts have long criticized the name they call a “dictionary­defined racial slur.” Over a dozen Native leaders and organizati­ons wrote to NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell last week demanding an immediate end to Washington’s use of the name. Goodell, who has fielded questions on the topic for years, said he supported the review.

Protests against the name predate Snyder buying the team in 1999, and, until now, he had shown no willingnes­s to consider a change. Strong words from sponsors — including a company run by a minority stakeholde­r of the team — changed the equation.

The team recently started cutting ties with racist founder George Preston Marshall, removing his name from the Ring of Fame and renaming the lower bowl at FedEx Field for the team’s first Black player, late Hall of Famer Bobby Mitchell. Marshall, who renamed the Boston Braves the Redskins in

1933 and moved the team to D.C. four years later, was a segregatio­nist and the last NFL owner to integrate his team.

Major League Baseball’s Atlanta Braves and the National Hockey League’s Chicago Blackhawks have said they have no inclinatio­n to change their names. Some advocates would like to see all Native American names, mascots and imagery out of sports.

“Our fight continues,” Crystal Echo Hawk of the Native American advocacy group IllumiNati­ve said in a statement. “We will not rest until the offensive use of Native imagery, logos and names are eradicated from profession­al, collegiate and (other school) sports.

“The time is now to stand in solidarity and declare that racism will not be tolerated.”

Halbritter said it was important to note those other names are not a slur, but he hopes a “broader discussion” can be had. He pointed out that Florida State spoke with the Seminole tribe about its name, the same thing a minor league baseball team in Spokane, Washington, did with local Native Americans.

FACE SHIELDS IN WORKS

With NFL training camps approachin­g, the league believes it is closer to one answer when it comes to player safety amid the coronaviru­s pandemic: face shields for the players’ helmets.

The NFL and the players’ union agreed to several protocols in a 42-page document last week, including team travel, media and treatment response.

However, the two sides haven’t agreed on testing and screening protocols.

One idea suggested by the union’s medical director, Dr. Thom Mayer ,to help control the spread of the virus was to have players wear face masks. The league’s engineers and a sports equipment company tested prototypes for the masks, but players shot it down.

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