rico43
<B>Director of Minor League Reports</B>
An article that orginally appeared in USA Today and has been reprinted on Yahoo's cover page celebrates that MLB was successful at getting the Cleveland Indians to eliminate their Chief Wahoo logo from all merchandise, marketing and advertising in and around their ballpark, with the understanding that this was a condition of Cleveland getting this year's all-star game.
The article hints that, with the Braves in line to host the all-star game in 2021, Rob Manfried (or his corporate entity) will put pressure on the Braves to eliminate any Native American portrayal from their uniform and stadium -- especially the Tomahawk Chop. The writer of the article, who apparently has only a passing familiarity with the chop's origin, wrote "apparently" Deion Sanders brought it with him from Florida State. Truth be told, injured pitcher Mark Grant began it from the dugout whenever Sanders batted because of his Florida State background. The Braves organist was quick to catch on, and the fans did likewise. It was an organic, spontaneous celebration that has endured now into its third stadium
Wrote Gabe Lacques, the article's author:
"As for the Braves, their Tomahawk Chop – powered by the haunting bars coming out of the house organ – should also have been retired long ago. ... Trouble is, does anybody know what they’re chanting? Is reciting what amounts to gibberish honoring a tribe? Or merely fulfilling your vision of what native peoples looked and sounded like?
With SunTrust Park set to host the 2021 All-Star Game, it might have been nice if MLB gently nudged the Braves to lose the Chop, at least as a team-endorsed rallying cry."
The Braves have eliminated the Laughing Brave logo from their sleeves, and ever Native American Levi Walker Jr. -- aka Noc-A-Homa -- was purged long before the chop emerged. Most fans would say that the club has been reasonably sensitive to Native American concerns, short of dropping the nickname itself. (Wonder how "Crackers" would go over in 2021 as a nickname?)
Just saying that it's not far-fetched that the meddlesome Manfried will set his sights on the Braves and pressure them to drop the chop. Since it is still largely a spontaneous act, I don't know that it can be done. I'm just saying I expect them to try.
The article hints that, with the Braves in line to host the all-star game in 2021, Rob Manfried (or his corporate entity) will put pressure on the Braves to eliminate any Native American portrayal from their uniform and stadium -- especially the Tomahawk Chop. The writer of the article, who apparently has only a passing familiarity with the chop's origin, wrote "apparently" Deion Sanders brought it with him from Florida State. Truth be told, injured pitcher Mark Grant began it from the dugout whenever Sanders batted because of his Florida State background. The Braves organist was quick to catch on, and the fans did likewise. It was an organic, spontaneous celebration that has endured now into its third stadium
Wrote Gabe Lacques, the article's author:
"As for the Braves, their Tomahawk Chop – powered by the haunting bars coming out of the house organ – should also have been retired long ago. ... Trouble is, does anybody know what they’re chanting? Is reciting what amounts to gibberish honoring a tribe? Or merely fulfilling your vision of what native peoples looked and sounded like?
With SunTrust Park set to host the 2021 All-Star Game, it might have been nice if MLB gently nudged the Braves to lose the Chop, at least as a team-endorsed rallying cry."
The Braves have eliminated the Laughing Brave logo from their sleeves, and ever Native American Levi Walker Jr. -- aka Noc-A-Homa -- was purged long before the chop emerged. Most fans would say that the club has been reasonably sensitive to Native American concerns, short of dropping the nickname itself. (Wonder how "Crackers" would go over in 2021 as a nickname?)
Just saying that it's not far-fetched that the meddlesome Manfried will set his sights on the Braves and pressure them to drop the chop. Since it is still largely a spontaneous act, I don't know that it can be done. I'm just saying I expect them to try.