The Game Is the Name
Shakespeare could wax poetic about 'What's in a Name?' because
he didn't have to contend with sports mascots ...
It's the politically-correct issue in America that refuses to
subside. I consider myself to be an enlightened cyberbeing, but
I contend there are just some topics that blur the bigger
picture of an ethically responsible society, and complaining
that mascots can be degrading is near the top of the list.
A quick check of Webster's Twentieth Century Unabridged
Dictionary defines 'mascot' as 'any person, animal or thing
supposed to bring good luck by being present.' So, it would seem
that a team mascot is an honorable title. Most mascots in
American sports had their origins in the early 1900s. Back then,
teams fumbled around with quaint monickers until they gradually
realized the tremendous marketing value they carried. The New
York Highlanders became the more regionally-identifiable
Yankees, for instance, and the Chicago Cubs took their nickname
so newspaper editors could more easily fit it into headlines.
Distinguished symbols like Tigers and Giants appeared. Unique
features like White Stockings and Red Stockings evolved into the
more headline-friendly and spelling-special White Sox and Red
Sox.
One of the earliest attempts at humor in mascot-anointing was
made by the Brooklyn nine of baseball's National League. Urban
legend wasn't a known phrase back then, but it farily describes
the allusion to fans who 'dodged' trolley fares to get a free
ride to Ebbetts Field and watch the game. Those 'bums' were
called Dodgers, and their favorite team became christened as
such.
Ironically, that drift toward the whimsical --- probably
intended to portray sports in its proper context as a
divertissement of life --- may have been the root of indignation
two generations later.
The social upheavals of the 1960s and early 1970s were certainly
justified, in my view. Civil rights needed to come to the fore,
and the resultant improvement in how all peoples were perceived
was a great step forward for mankind. Still, there's a
difference between significant awareness and pedantic perception
in any movement. Thus, in my view, when certain Native Americans
first raised the mascot controversy in headlines of the time,
the attention afforded was only due to its being sucked into the
backdraft of searing human rights campaigns.
Personally, I've always thought the issue had as much relevance
to their legitimate concerns as bra-burning did for women's
rights.
Think about it. Native Americans aren't alone in being
designated as mascots. In accordance with Webster's Dictionary
definition, other persons given the distinction include the
Irish (University of Notre Dame) and Scandinavians (Minnesota
Vikings). Both of these ethnic groups endured their moments of
discrimination in the annals of American history, too. So far,
neither has mounted a protest about being characterized as a
good luck symbol for a sporting organization.
Don't even try to broach the 'caricature' argument as a reason
why the Native American situation is different. Perhaps Notre
Dame uses a leprechaun logo now, but the term 'Fighting Irish'
was a clear reference to barroom brawlers, a stereotypical
low-life trait at which immigrants from the Emerald Isle were
perceived to be quite proficient. As to the Scandinavians, there
is no evidence that even one Viking was ever so dim as to go
into battle with a set of heavy horns on his helmet; why would
any warrior charge into a kill-or-be-killed scenario wearing
anything that could directly impede his ability to win? (The
image of horns came from priests' drawings of Viking attacks,
attempting to equate them to the Devil incarnate, and it was
Wagner who popularized this image when he staged his epic Ring
of the Niebelung.)
Cleveland's baseball team sorted through a number of mascots in
their early days. 'Spiders' just didn't have that 'je ne sais
crois' of marketing sizzle. They were the 'Naps' for a while, in
honor of their star player-manager, Napoleon Lajoie. So, when
they finally settled on 'Indians' in correlation to one of their
first star players --- Louis Sockalexis, a Native American ---
the monicker may not have begun as a tribute to him, but it has
since memorialized his legacy. The evidence indicates the term
was derogatorily applied to all members of the Cleveland team in
the 1890s because it dared to have the fortitude to allow an
Indian to play for them. Since then, Sockalexis has been
recognized as being as much of a pioneer for minority
involvement in major sports as the great Jackie Robinson was
fifty years later.
Yes, the team uses a caricature of a Native American as its logo
now. In fact, Chief Wahoo is perenially one of the
hottest-selling logos on sports merchandise. It far outsells the
NHL's Columbus Blue Jackets orginal logo, which is honoring the
valiant Ohio battalion that fought so honorably in the Civil
War. We haven't heard historical societies from that great state
howling with indignation that this is done by putting a green
insect in a Union soldier's uniform. Instead, the odds are
they're pleased that more of the North American public has
become aware of the Blue Jacket history than ever before, just
as the Cleveland Indians can keep alive the memory of
Sockalexis. Some protestors say Chief Wahoo has 'shifty' eyes
and that makes him even more demeaning. I, for one, never drew
that connection, but if anyone else did, why wouldn't they be
laughing and demeaning the Oklahoma University Sooners? After
all, that term originally implied cheaters getting a jump on
staking claims to land being opened for settlement.
There are many more examples. I simply don't see Native
Americans being unduly isolated in this context, and no one else
involved is feeling belittled.
The Washington Redskins originated in Boston, home of baseball's
Red Sox and Braves in the 1930s. They were also called the
Braves back then, because they played in that team's stadium.
However, when they wound up getting better terms to locate in
Fenway Park, they didn't want to confuse the paying public by
being Braves but playing in the Red Sox stadium. Their solution
made sense: they incorporated references to their origins and
their new game site by changing their name to Redskins. The
logic apparently didn't register with enough fans, though, and
the team soon exited to the nation's capital.
The point here is that the Redskins name wasn't derived as a
slur, but as a facilitation to distinguish the team's new ---
albeit transitional --- home. Furthermore, to be fair, the
Redskins organization has only used a noble image as a symbol of
the name. Washington DC is one of the most liberal cities in
North America, with its population's majority consisting of
minorities. The connotation of that nickname being demeaning, as
in the Cleveland Indians case, just doesn't emerge from its
context.
My impression, then, remains that the mascot controversy has its
sole value in the publicity it gives those organizations who are
raising it. Pro and college sports are more visible than ever in
the USA, and what better way is there to affix one's
organization to higher 'page rankings' than making headlines in
the Sports section of newspapers and broadcasts?
The matter isn't going away anytime soon. Now the NCAA ---
college sports' governing body --- has decreed that any
university with a Native American mascot can neither host a
championship event nor use their mascot in any championship
event. Some schools have successfully been granted exceptions,
which makes even less sense to me. Does this mean that Florida
State's Seminoles, for example, are less demeaning to Native
Americans than North Dakota's Fighting Sioux (a traditional
college hockey power)? How hypocritical is that? If they're
contending that degrees of discrimination exist due to local
circumstances, then they're admitting to a targeted sensitivity
beyond society's pale, which is discriminatory in itself. How
can such a position be rationalized with a clear conscience?
Mascots, no matter how commercialized, are still nothing more
than whimsical symbols. Society as a whole understands that,
just as it realizes the stylized violence in Grimm's Fairy Tales
leaves no lasting scars on the psyches of children who
innocently absorb them. Those who claim to the contrary only
risk trivializing themselves and the credibility of their
greater cause.
Nowhere in the country do such topics remain in a lighthearted
perspective more than in Orofino, Idaho. That's the site of the
state's mental hospital. The local high school's teams are
called the Maniacs.
No one protests, unless the teams don't play hard.