Becoming the Indians


On this date in 1897, the Cleveland Spiders signed Louis Sockalexis to a contract. The former Holy Cross University star -- and member of the Penobscot tribe -- had an impressive rookie season, batting .338 with 16 stolen bases in 66 games. But his career was derailed by alcoholism, and he was gone after just three years in majors. Supposedly, to honor his "outstanding skills," the Spiders, who in 1899, posted the WORST record in baseball history at 20 - 134, were officially renamed the Indians in 1915. I've always had trouble with that tale -- and in a time of greater sensitivity, that Looney Tunes-ish logo of "Cheif Wahoo" seems terribly out of place -- but the name and the association with a player (with a short career) consumed by personal demons has stuck for 100 years. You probably have noticed that despite his place on the uniform sleeve, the image of the Indian has been seen less and less on Cleveland uniforms in recent years. So maybe a time for change is coming.
Do you buy the story of the team honoring Sockalexis? Would Spiders -- despite the legacy of 1899 -- be a better name for the franchise?


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