Name change gives Cleveland Indians a distraction and chance to begin anew: Paul Hoynes

Donna Heller, contract worker for Warner Signs in Cleveland, rolls a glaze over the painted face of the Cleveland Indians logo to protect the paint surface on the dugout at Jacob's Field from weather April 13, 2000 in preparation of the home opener tomorrow.

Ed Weinfurtner of Cleveland Heights greets fans at the gate as one half of the "Wahoo Brothers" before the start of the 2009 Indians season opener against the Toronto Blue Jays at Progressive Field on Friday, April 10, 2009.

Willoughby resident Pedro Rodriguez (who has dressed like this since 1995) debates with Chief Wahoo protester and executive director of the American Indian Education Center, Robert Roche, before the Cleveland Indians home opener, April 4, 2014 at Progressive Field.

Reverend Neal Wilds of Brooklyn Memorial Church put masking tape on his mouth along with other protester outside the Federal Courthouse on Superior Ave during the Native American protest against the Cleveland Indians logo.

The eyes of the Cleveland Indians wahoo logo on top of the Indians dugout keep an eye on fans as they wait for the game to start against the Chicago White Sox on July 23, 2011 at Progressive Field.

Groundskeeper Kyle Calhoon puts the finishing touches on the Indians logo at Progressive Field on Thursday in preparation for today's Opening Day against Toronto.

Protesters say they will continue their fight to abolish the Cleveland Indians logo, which they say is racist and demeaning, outside of Jacob's Field, April 11, 2005. 12cOPENERa: FOR OPENING DAY METRO: Outside Jacobs Field, William Cook, right, and Ted Hill, both of Champaign, Illinois, join other protestors against the use of Chief Wahoo and the name "Indians" for the Cleveland MLB team that opens its season today, Mon. April 11, 2005. Cook claims some Cherokee background and Hill is married to a Native American. (Thomas Ondrey/The Plain Dealer) The Plain Dealer

Jim Stamper of Cleveland holds up a sign at the Indians home opener, April 5, 1993, in support of keeping Chief Wahoo as the mascot.

A man who goes only by the name Chief Wahoo wears full regalia behind his home in Indiana. Photo taken Mar. 2, 2001.

A Cleveland Indians fan sports a Chief Wahoo temporary tattoo as she takes her seat before the season home opener against the Kansas City Royals.

Joe Juhasz Jr., 14, of Strongsville (right) leans close to his father Joe Juhasz Sr., so he can hear his dad speaking through a papier mache Chief Wahoo mask before Game Three of the World Series.

Stripping off masking tape from the Indians logo on top of the visitors dugout at Progressive Field is Dale Kay of Brilliant Sign Company, April 1, 2009, in preparation for the home opener.

Chief Wahoo finally hits the ground, January 3, 1994, after adorning the roof of Cleveland Stadium since 1962.

Ed Borris walks along the Indians logo above the bleacher scoreboard at Jacobs Field on March 28, 2001. Borris along with fellow employee Tom Ross were replacing some the of 1,024 light bulbs, getting it ready for opening day.

Cleveland police move in and remove a lighter-fluid soaked effigy of Chief Wahoo/David Jacobs outside Jacobs Field before Sunday's Indians game.

Heather Youngman of Berea, protests the Cleveland Indians logo, Chief Wahoo, near gate A at Cleveland Stadium, April 5, 1993. Some 60 people echoed their words of protest as crowds of Indians fans passed by for the home opener.

Kandi Dimacchia of Amherst painted her face to resemble Chief Wahoo. She was in the crowd at Game Six of the World Series at Fulton County Stadium in Atlanta.

Skip Huber and Victor Melargno of Brilliant Sign prepare to place the top piece of Chief Wahoo at the Western Historical Society's Reinberger Gallery in Cleveland, April 11, 1995. The Chief Wahoo figure was a fixture on the roof of Cleveland Stadium since 1965.

Chief Wahoo leaves his place among the Cleveland skyline as he is taken down from Cleveland Stadium where he has been I=since 1965.

Chris Begay manned this skeleton puppet during the demonstration against Chief Wahoo before today's game against the Minnesota Twins on opening day at Jacobs Field, April 8, 2002.

Cleveland Indians fan Jim Stamper has his Wahoo sign set for the 2018 season at the opening day game against the Kansas City Royals, at Progressive Field, April 6, 2018.

Philip Yenyo, left, and Chris Headworth were among a handful of protesters against the usage of logos and the Indians name outside Jacobs Field, October 15, 2007.

Indians fans brave a 20 degree temperature to line up for opening-day tickets under the watchful eyes of a bronze Chief Wahoo plaque at the Stadium, March 3, 1989.

Sign painter Chuck Hanley of the Buddy Simon Sign Co. adjusts his position under the eager gaze of Chief Wahoo. He was giving the sign atop the Stadium a new coat of paint and updating the Indians uniform, April 6, 1988.

The new 2019 All-Star logo unveiled before the game between the Cleveland Indians and the Minnesota Twins at Progressive Field in Cleveland, Aug. 7, 2018.

An Cleveland Indians Wahoo logo is passed around between Indians fans during the game against the Houston Astros in Game 2 of the ALDS at Minute Maid Park in Houston, Texas, October 6, 2018.

Chief Wahoo finally hits the ground, January 3, 1994, after adorning the roof of Cleveland Stadium since 1962.

Cleveland Indians fans hold up Chief Wahoo cutouts as the Indians go on to clinch the central division championship Sept. 23, 2007 at Jacob's Field.

This poster produced by the Committee of 500 Years of Dignity and Resistance makes clear, American Indian activists in Cleveland are not buying the ballclub's insistence that the team name and mascot, Chief Wahoo, are meant to honor American Indians.

The Cleveland Indians home opener against the Chicago White Sox, April 11, 2017.

Jim Stamper, 63, of Cleveland, wears a hat he originally made in 1994 as he walks into the ballpark for the 2015 Indians home opener baseball game against the Detroit Tigers at Progressive Field, April 10, 2015.

1926-48 Chief Wahoo, owned by Cleveland Indians fan Bruce Wood, July 31, 2015.

Philip Yenyo, left, executive director of the American Indians Movement for Ohio, talks with a Cleveland Indians fan before a baseball game against the Detroit Tigers, in Cleveland, October 17, 2016. .

Jim Stamper, 63, of Cleveland, hoists a sign he originally made in 1994 as he walks into the ballpark for the 2015 Indians home opener baseball game against the Detroit Tigers at Progressive Field, April 10, 2015.

Indians fans wait in line for Opening Day against the Chicago White Sox at Progressive Field, April 1, 2019.

Chief Wahoo is visible amidst fans at Progressive Field, Monday, April 1, 2019.

Alyssa Sheid, 20, of Painesville, painted her face for the Cleveland Indians home opener baseball game against Kansas City Royals at Progressive Field, April 6, 2018.

The Cleveland Indians home opener against the Chicago White Sox, April 11, 2017.

1948 Chief Wahoo patch, owned by Cleveland Indians fan Bruce Wood, July 31, 2015.

Jordan Vahcic, of Euclid, shows off his Chief Wahoo tattoo during Game 7 of the World Series at Progressive Field, November 2, 2016.

A Cleveland Indians fan holds an autographed baseball by the Indians Tyler Naquin with the Indians logo on it before a preseason game at Goodyear Ballpark in Goodyear, Arizona. March 2, 2016.

Some young Cleveland Indians fans wait for an autograph of Tyler Naquin before the game against the Los Angeles Angels at Progressive Field, August 11, 2016.

About a dozen demonstrators protested the Cleveland Indians name and logo, Chief Wahoo, during Game 1 of the World Series, October 25, 2016.

Ron and Betty Manolio of Lyndhurst feature Chief Wahoo in this year's version of Eggshell Land, April 8, 1998.

Eileen Kiesel, 83, of the West Park neighborhood, shows off one of her favorite tattoos of Chief Wahoo on her right ankle. She has six tattoos now and is hoping to get more.

Jesse Burghardt of Hartville debates with Anti-Chief Wahoo protesters before the Cleveland Indians home opener, April 4, 2014 at Progressive Field.

Anti-Chief Wahoo protesters gather on E. 9th near Gate C before the Cleveland Indians home opener on Friday, April 4, 2014 at Progressive Field.

A Chicago Cubs fan takes a selfie with a Cleveland Indians fan dressed as Chief Wahoo during Game 6 of the World Series at Progressive Field, November 1, 2016.

About a dozen demonstrators protested the Cleveland Indians name and logo, Chief Wahoo, during Game 1 of the World Series, on October 25, 2016. Phil Yenyo, an Aztec Indian, uses a bullhorn to chant, "Change the name, change the mascot."

Anti-Chief Wahoo protester Joseph Patrick Meissner stands near Gate C along E. 9th before the Cleveland Indians home opener on Friday, April 4, 2014 at Progressive Field. Meissner represented the Indian Center in 1971 when they filed a lawsuit against the Cleveland Indians.

Cleveland Indians Edwin Encarnacion points to the Indians logo on his jersey in the Indians locker room at Progressive Field on, January 5, 2017.

Vernon Bellecourt (L) and Juan Reyna hold a news conference outside the Justice Center before the start of their trial in 2001.

A look at the Cleveland Indians logo in the upper deck seating during summer camp practice at Progressive Field, July 7, 2020.

A look at the Cleveland Indians logo above the gear shop in the left field area of Progressive Field, July 7, 2020.

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CLEVELAND, Ohio -- The Indians will officially announce that they are changing their name sometime this week. They have been called the Indians since 1915.

The announcement is not a surprise. When the team said in July it was considering a name change, it was a done deal. But it sounded like it was going to take a while, maybe a year or two.

So the timing of the announcement, after the New York Times broke the story on Sunday night, is a surprise. Then again maybe it’s not.

Baseball’s virtual winter meetings have been extended into this week. The original meetings scheduled to take place in Dallas were canceled because of the pandemic.

Teams will put their managers on Zoom calls. Indians manager Terry Francona will talk on Monday. Agent Scott Boras will hold his annual winter meeting press conference on Tuesday by Zoom as well. The only thing missing will be a herd of reporters swarming around him in some swanky hotel lobby.

The winter meetings are about trades and free agent signings. The Indians will have little to do with free agent signings and any trades they make will not be the popular kind.

Basically, they have no money to spend on improving their roster after taking a big hit in the 60-game sprint because the pandemic prevented fans from coming to the park. Not only are they in the process of turning their payroll into a dot on the horizon, but at some point this winter they’re going to trade the face of the franchise (Francisco Lindor) and, perhaps, fan favorite Carlos Carrasco.

A team like that could use a distraction. Something to change the subject.

That’s not to make light of the organization’s decision to change the name. It has been a long time coming and it is being driven by positive forces.

After they dropped the Chief Wahoo logo following the 2018 season, the name was going to be next. It’s something that needed to be done if the Indians were going to be an institution dedicated to seeking tolerance and acceptance of all races among its fans and the citizens of Cleveland.

It is hard for an organization to reach out to the community it lives in with the goal of promoting social justice when it is nicknamed after a Native American population that has been marginalized for centuries. Chris Antonetti, president of baseball operations, talked about that in June following the death of George Floyd at the hands of police in Minnesota and the Washington Redskins’ subsequent decision to change their name.

“We can do better as an organization and as a sport to help address this systemic racism and social injustice that continues to exist,” Antonetti told cleveland.com. “There are opportunities for us all to do better, starting with me.”

Last week, as part of the Players Alliance “Pull Up Neighbor” Tour, Antonetti and other members of the Indians handed out baseball equipment, COVID-19 prevention supplies, cold weather clothing and team merchandise at E. 79th and Superior. The Players Alliance is a group of over 150 active and retired players trying to bring more Black youth into the game.

The Indians’ record on social justice is checkered. Larry Doby the first Black player in the American League and Frank Robinson, the first Black manager in the big leagues, broke barriers as members of the Indians. But the team wore Chief Wahoo, in one form or another, on their uniforms for the better part of 70 years.

“We can’t shy away from it,” said Antonetti. “We have a complicated history with race in our organization. It’s part of our dialogue. It’s something we need to own and think about it. We can’t necessarily go back and unwind what has happened. Nor should we because we’ve also been at the forefront of some very good things in race issues, but there have been others where we’ve lagged behind.

“Our focus is what can we do from this point forward.”

The name will be changed. What the new name will be and how it will be chosen has yet to be revealed. But it will mark a new beginning and hopefully a positive one.

A variety of Cleveland Indians face masks available online today. (Fanatics.com)

New Indians face masks for sale: Here’s where you can buy Cleveland Indians-themed face coverings for coronavirus protection, including a single mask ($14.99) and a 3-pack ($24.99). All MLB proceeds donated to charity.

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