The Denver Post

Finally gone?

Redskins nickname undergoing a thorough review after sponsors speak up

- By Kevin Draper

By the time they take the field this fall — that’s assuming there is a season given the coronaviru­s pandemic — the NFL team in Washington, D.C., might have a new nickname. “In light of recent events around our country and feedback from our community, the Washington Redskins are announcing the team will undergo a thorough review of the team’s name,” the team said in a statement Friday morning. The brief statement, which itself included the word “redskins” seven times, also said the team had been discussing its name with the NFL for weeks.

That a day could come when the team would change its name, which many consider to be a racist slur against Native Americans, has long seemed unfathomab­le. “We’ll never change the name,” Dan Snyder, the team’s owner, said in 2013. “It’s that simple. Never — you can use caps.”

The change to that ironclad stance came just one day after two prominent corporate sponsors, FedEx and Nike, began backing away from the team’s name, which quickly prompted others to follow suit Friday.

Snyder has been steadfast in his insistence to keep the name, even in the face of government­al and activist pressure to change it. The one entity with enough influence to force the issue, the NFL, has always backed Snyder. Two years ago, NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell said that the team’s name should remain and that the league would not make him change it.

But in the last month, the ground underneath their feet has shifted. American society is undergoing a wide uprising over police brutality and systemic racism that flared after the killing of George Floyd in police custody, a widespread movement that has led to a reconsider­ation of statues, flags, symbols and mascots considered to be racist or celebratin­g racist history.

On Friday, Goodell indicated the league has been discussing a change with Washington. “In the last few weeks we have had ongoing discussion­s with Dan and we are supportive of this important step,” he said in a statement.

According to a league spokesman, changing the name

“We’ll never change the name. It’s that simple. Never — you can use caps.” Dan Snyder, the Redskins team owner, in 2013.

does not require a vote by the league’s owners, and ultimately the decision is up to Snyder. In the past, he had the support of Goodell, not to mention team and league sponsors that collective­ly pay billions annually, in rejecting calls for change. This time, however, Snyder might find his position more lonely.

Already, the team has shifted itself in how it celebrates a racist past.

Last month, Washington said it would remove the name of George Preston Marshall from the team’s Ring of Fame and its history wall, and a statue of him was removed from outside RFK Stadium, where the team used to play in Washington. Marshall founded the team and moved them to Washington in the 1930s, and was the last NFL owner to integrate his team.

When the team changed its name in 1933 from the Braves, Marshall told team members to wear face paint and the coach to wear feathers on the sideline. He also had an Indian-head logo printed across player uniforms and used a halftime band that wore tribal regalia.

Still, there was little indication that the team’s considerat­ion of its name could follow closely behind its distancing from Marshall. As recently as Monday, Ron Rivera, the team’s new coach, said during a radio interview that talking about the team’s name was “a discussion for another time” and that he was “just somebody that’s from a different era when football wasn’t such a big part of the political scene.”

On Friday, he was quoted in Washington’s statement saying “this issue is of personal importance to me.”

What has changed in the past four days? Perhaps the cost of keeping the name, as sponsors began to speak up.

In a short but pointed statement Thursday that did not use the team’s name, shipping company FedEx said it had asked for the name to be changed. “We have communicat­ed to the team in Washington our request that they change the team name,” FedEx said in a statement.

FedEx isn’t just any old sponsor of the team. For the last two decades Washington has played its home games at FedEx Field, in a Maryland suburb outside of the District of Columbia. FedEx agreed to pay $205 million in the naming rights deal in 1999. Frederick W. Smith, the chairman and chief executive of FedEx, is also a minority owner of the team.

There was no timeline given for when Washington would make a decision on its name, only that it would come after input from “our alumni, the organizati­on, sponsors, the National Football League and the local community.”

Native Americans, and Native American activists like Suzan Shown Harjo who has spent decades pushing teams and schools to change American Indian names and mascots, were not mentioned as those whose perspectiv­es would be considered.

 ?? Rob Carr, Getty Images ?? Nike and FedEx were two of the Washington Redskins’ major sponsors that called for the team to change its nickname earlier this week.
Rob Carr, Getty Images Nike and FedEx were two of the Washington Redskins’ major sponsors that called for the team to change its nickname earlier this week.

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