The Denver Post

Stubborn Snyder could face a trademark fight

- By Jim Litke

Try to think of a more deserving guy in all of sports than Dan Snyder to get his namechange plans caught in a vise. Go ahead, we’ll wait.

In the meantime, let’s all savor this quote from the owner of the Washington NFL franchise formerlykn­own-as-the … (which was precisely the problem) the last time Native American advocates lobbied for a name change:

“We’ll never change the name,” Snyder told USA Today in 2013. “It’s that simple. NEVER — you can use caps.”

Turns out six years later, Snyder HAD to because the sponsors who line his pockets could squeeze him in a way that the Native Americans appealing to his sense of decency for nearly two decades never could. Gone for good are the polarizing name, mascot, logo, fight song, signage, etc. — good riddance — and then there’s this intriguing extra bit of consolatio­n: Snyder’s namechangi­ng headaches might be far from over.

The team’s statement on officially retiring the Redskins name didn’t include a replacemen­t because, according to a handful of news outlets, Snyder’s preferred choice (or choices) might spark a trademark fight. And it could be a doozy.

While Snyder dithered and the internet buzzed with suggestion­s for Washington’s new name, a handful of visionarie­s rolled up their sleeves, fired up their keyboards and filed applicatio­ns with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office for many of the most popular ones.

The earliest adopter might be Philip Martin McCaulay, an author and actuary from Alexandria, Virginia, who staked claim to several candidates back in 2015 and now has registered more than a dozen — including Americans, Warriors, Federals, Red Tails and Red-Tailed Hawks, the latter two an homage to the Tuskegee Airmen from World War II.

But McCaulay isn’t alone anymore. In the last week or so, a handful of others have tried to snatch

Braves, War Hogs, Potomacs, Veterans and Monuments, among others. And while no one had attempted to register the Washington Presidents as of Sunday, the actual president in Washington insisted that any replacemen­t signaled a shameful retreat.

“They name teams out of STRENGTH, not weakness,” President Donald Trump tweeted a week ago, including baseball’s Cleveland Indians in the short diatribe. “Two fabled sports franchises, look like they are going to be changing their names in order to be politicall­y correct.”

It’s a safe bet Snyder feels the same way, though for once he’s holding his tongue. When Native Americans mounted a pressure campaign in 2013, Snyder hired a battery of PR experts and created the Washington Redskins Original Americans Foundation to deflect criticism. There was too much momentum to dodge the issue this time.

Snyder hasn’t asked for my advice, but here it is anyway: Turn off the lights in your home office, put a cold, damp towel across your forehead and definitely do not call Commission­er Roger Goodell for advice; at a minimum, don’t decide anything for at least a month (then sell the team; just kidding).

But people who’ve managed rebranding campaigns for colleges generally figure on an 18-to-24month timeline. Several recommende­d keeping the traditiona­l gold and burgundy colors and playing next season known simply as Washington Football, rather than rush into anything the organizati­on might regret. A quick change can be jarring to fans, and obtaining the trademark for a new name, then re-designing, licensing and getting everything from new uniforms to Tshirts and onesies into production isn’t an overnight job.

If further proof was needed, the team’s Monday announceme­nt featured the old letterhead, with the Redskins name and logo prominentl­y displayed on top.

On top of that, long-term planning was never Snyder’s strong suit. Current seat warmer Ron Rivera is the ninth head coach he’s hired since buying the team from Jack Kent Cooke’s estate back in

1999. Small wonder — Washington has burned through 21 starting quarterbac­ks over that same stretch.

So it should have come as no surprise to find out that Snyder had no Plan B.

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