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Cleveland's MLB Team Changes Its Name To Guardians After Years Of Backlash

Cleveland relief pitcher Nick Sandlin (right) and catcher Austin Hedges celebrate a 10-1 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on June 8, 2021, in St. Louis. On Friday, the Cleveland team announced its new name, the Guardians.
Jeff Roberson
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AP
Cleveland relief pitcher Nick Sandlin (right) and catcher Austin Hedges celebrate a 10-1 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on June 8, 2021, in St. Louis. On Friday, the Cleveland team announced its new name, the Guardians.

Updated July 23, 2021 at 6:53 PM ET

Cleveland's Major League Baseball team has changed its name to the Guardians, ridding itself of a previous name that many found highly offensive.

The team announced the name change Friday morning on Twitter, posting a two-minute video narrated by actor Tom Hanks.

The team was formerly known as the Cleveland Indians. The new name will be used following the end of the 2021 season.

The team began the process of changing its name in December, announcing on Twitter its intention to find a new "non-Native American based name." It collected input from more than 40,000 fans and conducted more than 100 hours of interviews before making the final decision, according to the MLB website.

"Our fans are at the heart of this decision. We heard this name often from our fans as a top contender because of its connection to the iconic Cleveland landmark — the Hope Memorial Bridge that stands just outside of our ballpark where the Guardians of Traffic have become a symbol of the city's resiliency," the team said in a statement.

Before the name change, the team discontinued use of the Chief Wahoo logo on team uniformsin 2019. The Guardians' new logo is an artistic rendering of a fastball, with elements added that are reminiscent of the Hope Memorial Bridge's Guardians statues from which the team got its new name, according to its website.

"I think the victory really belongs to the Indigenous people of Cleveland who have been fighting this for decades," Navajo activist Amanda Blackhorse, who has worked against using Native Americans as sports mascots, told NPR member station KJZZ. "Elders have passed, y'know, they're never gonna see this happen. They've committed a lot of time and effort to this, and some people will never see that. That's how old this issue is."

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Sharon Pruitt-Young
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