On Sunday,
Washington began its NFL season like it had begun so many in the past 15 years.
They were dominated, embarrassed and lost.
At this point,
it's becoming hard to reconcile this franchise with the one that was an NFC
power for the 1980's and 1990's. In fact, the first Super Bowl I remember
watching featured Doug Williams dissecting the Broncos. The first article I
ever wrote in my life, for a grade school newspaper, was a game story for
Washington's Super Bowl win over Buffalo.
Yet on Sunday
night, the loss wasn't the lead story on the news, despite the fact that
everyone in this city was wearing a jersey on Sunday.
Sure, the team
was the lead story. But it was, per usual, about the never-ending
name debate and protests that had sprung
up in Houston.
It's frankly
beyond tiresome at this point because the name is racist. There shouldn't be a
debate. However, the results of Sunday's game illuminate why this issue is not
going away for a long, long time.
With the removal
of Donald Sterling, Dan Snyder is now clearly the worst owner in sports. There
are few contenders to that spot. He has systematically destroyed the faith of
fans and made one mind-boggling decision after another.
A family friend
and die-hard fan once told me: "I try to think about them winning the
Super Bowl but I just can't let myself see that [expletive deleted] holding the
Lombardi Trophy."
That quote
accurately sums up why Dan Snyder is never going to change the name. At this
point, I'm not sure what it would take. All I can think of is the threat of the
NFL taking the team away but I don't even see how the mechanics of that would
work.
As the name
debate continues to fester nationwide, it is remarkable to witness the
disconnect between that narrative and the attitudes within the District and the
DMV. No one here wants the name change. That's a blanket statement -- there are
obviously some that do -- but the vast majority do not want the name to change.
In a way, you
cannot blame them. Sure, they sound ignorant and misguided, but it truly comes
from a reasonable place. To them, the R-word only represents their team and is
not derogatory in any way to Native Americans. When they say it, when they sing
the fight song, when they wear the logo, they are not being inherently or
purposely racist. They are being racist, even if unwittingly.
Yet, it is the
one and only issue in which the fanbase supports Dan Snyder. It has become a
badge of honor. Like the moronic Brady Hoke talking about "true"
Michigan fans, supporting the name has become the code of a "true"
Washington fan.
For everyone associated
with the team, from the fans to the employees, there is no joy in Mudville. The
team sucks on the field, again. Jay Gruden appeared to be a dud hire from day 1
and he has not absolutely nothing to change that opinion. RG3
still does not look like the same guy he was in his rookie season and it's
starting to feel like he never will. Kirk Cousins isn't that great either. It's
bad. It's always bad.
So that's why Dan
Snyder teases the fan with a new RFK Stadium that will
never come. That's why he tells reporters to write in ALL CAPS that he'll
never change the name. He needs to give the fans something they can support
that will actually come through for them.
When I mentioned
the lead story was the name debate that may have come across as a bad thing. If
you were a self-respecting NFL owner, it would be. If you're Dan Snyder, it's a
nice sleight of hand. Instead of answering questions about why the team is
losing – questions you have no answer for – you can bloviate about how the nickname
is actually a term of endearment. You can take shots at Congress and rally the
fans around you.
During his entire
time as owner, Washington fans hated Dan Snyder. They loathed him. They wanted
him not just to leave, but to fall into a pit of fire and die a painful death.
Suddenly, the
name debate emerged and they respect him. They support him. They back him.
In my entire life
of following sports, I have never seen anything like it. This is a group of
fans who have been subjected to one of the worst franchises in the NFL for two
decades, following two decades of playoff appearances and Super Bowl wins. They
have been won over by the crappy owner's undying devotion to a racist nickname.
In light
of Ray Rice, the name debate will again retreat to the backburner. The name
supporters will revel in the fact that their controversy is less important than
other controversies. But it will bubble up again, no later than their trip to
Minnesota in November where the Vikings play at the University of Minnesota
stadium and the R-word will
not be displayed anywhere.
The cycle will
begin anew. National commentators will call for change. Local fans will rally
around the racism and support the name. Nothing will change.
Dan Snyder has to
change the name. He knows it. Everyone knows it. But he will not. At least not
until he is backed into a position where he can do so while becoming the
beloved martyr that he fancies himself.
It's a pathetic,
sad existence for a football team.
Follow me on Twitter
the name isnt racist you fucking idiot
ReplyDelete'Redskin' isn't racist like the term 'f**king idiot' isn't and insult.
DeleteIs cowboy racist ? point, African-American slaves who worked with cattle inherited the title �Cowboy� from the English language, the word did not arise as a result of Ame
Deleteof the word "Cowboy,' into the titles of U.S. slaves, there is every reason to believe that the word became the prevalent address for cattle industry laborers who
Delete