USA TODAY US Edition

Indians will drop controvers­ial Chief Wahoo logo

- Bob Nightengal­e Columnist

Cleveland will phase out mascot by 2019 season. Bob Nightengal­e says Indians nickname should go, too.

OK, while Major League Baseball executives are at it, can they please get Cleveland to dump its baseball team’s nickname, too?

While the Indians’ name isn’t going anywhere yet, it was a coup for MLB Commission­er Rob Manfred to finally force Cleveland owner Paul Dolan to shed the racist and offensive logo, Chief Wahoo, from the uniforms in 2019.

It was disgusting to see, whether you were at Progressiv­e Field, or walking along hallways to visitors clubhouses in baseball, and see the cartoonish caricature of the smiling Na- tive American that originated in the racist and offensive of times in this country.

Sure, stripping a team logo off its uniform isn’t about to change racism in this country, but at least now we don’t have to be offended every time we see a Cleveland uniform.

Hopefully this will help put an end to the racist Washington Redskins’ nickname and logo, too, but then again, we’re talking about the NFL, where capitalism triumphs ethics and morals.

MLB proudly announced the historic decision Monday after putting pressure on Dolan and the Cleveland ownership group for years.

Perhaps it’s no coincidenc­e that the timing of the decision comes just a year

before Cleveland hosts the 2019 All-Star Game.

And if the NBA can pull their 2017 AllStar Game out of Charlotte to protest a state law that eliminated anti-discrimina­tion protection­s for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r people, baseball could certainly have done the same in Cleveland.

Dolan denied there were threats to have the All-Star Game removed if he didn’t strip Chief Wahoo from uniforms beginning in 2019, but if Manfred didn’t pressure him, we might have been stuck with this caricature for another 75 years.

At least now we don’t have to be offended every time we see a Cleveland uniform.

“Major League Baseball is committed to building a culture of diversity and inclusion throughout the game,” Manfred said in a statement. “Over the past year, we encouraged dialogue with the Indians organizati­on about the club’s use of the Chief Wahoo logo. During our constructi­ve conversati­ons, Paul Dolan made clear that there are fans who have a long-standing attachment to the logo and its place in the history of the team.

“Nonetheles­s, the club ultimately agreed with my position that the logo is no longer appropriat­e for on-field use in Major League Baseball, and I appreciate Mr. Dolan’s acknowledg­ment that removing it from the on-field uniform by the start of the 2019 season is the right course.”

Well, the right course would be to have it eliminated immediatel­y. The right course would be that it’s permanentl­y banned from their gift shops. The right course would never to see another Chief Wahoo caricature ever again in their stadium.

This is a compromise, with Dolan and his lawyers arguing that if they didn’t keep ownership or ceased all production of the caricature, they would risk other companies taking ownership of the trademark and making a profit.

“We have consistent­ly maintained that we are cognizant and sensitive to both sides of the discussion,” Dolan said in a statement. “While we recognize many of our fans have a long-standing attachment to Chief Wahoo, I’m ultimately in agreement with Commission­er Manfred’s desire to remove the logo from our uniforms in 2019.”

Dolan insists there are no plans to change the team’s nickname, but hopefully that will occur one day, too, just as high schools and universiti­es throughout the country have changed their nicknames and representa­tions of Native Americans.

Many of the good folks in Ohio, of course, are irate with the decision. Folks responded quickly to The ( Cleveland)

Plain Dealer’s news story, saying, “We’ve been raped of our beloved Wahoo,” and “Boycott Progressiv­e Field,” and “This is the worst-case scenario for the Indian protesters. The only reason they were protesting the logo is to get exposure for Indian affair political issues. Without the logo, they will have to find a new venue to jump up and down with fake outrage.”

The reaction, for the most part, was pathetic. It will dissipate in time. And one day there will be children growing up generation­s from now asking how it was ever possible for racist and offensive nicknames to be around so long in this country?

Then again, racist beliefs and ignorance have a tradition of long-lasting staying power in this country.

It’s an absolute shame it took Manfred and MLB lawyers to break down Dolan’s resistance to agree to this compromise. Common sense would have told Dolan to cease and desist displaying the Wahoo caricature on the uni- forms years ago.

If Dolan didn’t believe the Chief Wahoo caricature was offensive, why did he make sure not to have it prominentl­y displayed outside the Indians spring training headquarte­rs when they moved to Goodyear, Ariz., in 2009. He even acknowledg­ed at the time there “was some sensitivit­y,” citing that Arizona has the third-largest Native American population in the country.

The protests at Progressiv­e Field prompted him to have the Block C become the primary logo in 2016 while moving the Wahoo icon to the sleeve of their jerseys.

“This is the hardest decision we’ve had to make during our entire ownership,” Dolan told The Plain Dealer.

Wow, rather disturbing, isn’t it? It should have been the easiest.

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 ??  ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP
PATRICK SEMANSKY/AP
 ??  ?? Divisive and hotly debated, the Chief Wahoo logo is being removed from Cleveland’s uniform next year. TONY DEJAK/AP
Divisive and hotly debated, the Chief Wahoo logo is being removed from Cleveland’s uniform next year. TONY DEJAK/AP

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