Tag: National Football League

  • Painting October Pink for cancer awareness

    Painting October Pink for cancer awareness

    The NFL is just one of the many major organisations involved in cancer awareness month. Image by: aliciacandraw
    The NFL is just one of the many major organisations involved in cancer awareness month. Image by: aliciacandraw

    ‘Real men wear pink’.

    This is the slogan of one of the biggest cancer awareness events in America, organised by the National Football League.

    ‘A Crucial Catch’ is the NFL’s annual event aimed to raise awareness throughout the country – and the globe- based on their campaign to increase their international audience.

    The campaign involves players, coaches and officials wearing customized pink game attire, which is then auctioned off to raise money for the American Cancer Society.

    Bids of $1,800 and $3,500 have been made for a Reggie Bush signed game-worn jersey, and a Vernon Davis signed game-worn jersey respectively. An Aaron Rodgers signed game-worn jersey recently sold for just shy of the $30,000 mark which is an example of the campaign’s potential financial reach.

    Closer to home pink is main theme of many companies who are also trying to do their own bit for cancer awareness throughout October.

    The chain store Harvey Norman have also begun their pink campaign, with staff illuminating the stores in fresh pink polo shirts.

    The company is in its third year of a partnership with the Marie Keating Foundation – which has released its new brand campaign ‘sleep pink’.

    Harvey Norman are expecting to raise €30,000 for the charity.

    “It is a great cause to get behind”, said Administration Manager Glenda Finlay, “we are expecting to raise 30 grand, but hopefully we get more than that and it gets closer to 40.

    “We are doing all the ‘sleep pink’ products and we are also encouraging the ‘add a euro’ system at the tills to encourage customers to add a euro to their sale as a form of donation.”

    The Irish Cancer Society have joined up with various Irish companies to create a group of ‘pink partners’.

    Centra have designed a ‘Pink Bag for Life‘ available for €3, with all the proceeds  going towards breast cancer research.

    The store also plans to donate proceeds generated from their own brand Pink Bouquets of Flowers and Potted Plants, Pink Milk, Pink Lady Apples and Punnets of Mushrooms.

    Some of the other companies involved in the ‘Pink Partners’ scheme include: Ballyfree Eggs, Barry’s Tea, Boots, Esso and GHD.

    The Irish Cancer Society is also hosting a Halloween masquerade ball at the Shelbourne Hotel, Stephen’s Green on November 1st.

    A single tickets is €85, but tables of 10 and 12 are available for purchase. The night includes a 3 course silver service meal and entertainment from The Nualas.

    The hope is that the event will go towards making up for the sizeable shortfall in funds raised on Daffodil Day earlier this year, which was hampered due to typical Irish weather.

  • DEBATE: Redskins should change their name

    DEBATE: Redskins should change their name

    The name of the Washington football team has been an issue of contention for the past number of years. Image by: Keith Allison
    The name of the Washington football team has been an issue of contention for the past number of years. Image by: Keith Allison

    Racism is something that, as a society, we like to imagine has been eradicated, but the simple fact is that it has not. It is still rampant, and there is no clearer indication of this than the Washington Redskins.

    The most frequently used word to justify the use of the term “redskin” as the team’s moniker is ‘tradition’ – so let’s discuss the Redskin tradition.

    The Redskins were founded by George Preston Marshall – a well renowned racist, who petitioned the league to excluded black players from its ranks. After the league failed to back the proposal, he ensured that his team remained ‘white-only’ for as long as possible.

    He famously quipped that “We’ll [the Redskins] start signing Negroes when the Harlem Globetrotters start signing whites.”

    Marshall bought the football team when they were a Boston outfit called the Braves. He moved them to Washington and claimed that he didn’t want the association with the previous team so renamed his team the more highly obvious Redskins.

    Is that really a tradition that the Washington team and its current owner Dan Synder really want to preserve, or worth preserving for that matter?

    Dan Synder recently wrote in a letter defending the team’s name that a recent poll showed that 90 per cent of Native Americans claimed they were not offended by the team’s name. But the fact remains, ten per cent are.

    To paraphrase the current NFL commissioner, Rodger Goodell, if one person is offended, let alone one in every ten, then change must be seriously considered.

    Many black people, especially those in the music industry, have attempted to claim the n-word as their own. To remove it from a word of hate and instill within it a sense of respect.

    Despite the modern-day dilution of the historical racial connotations attached to the n-word, the idea of it being used as a sports name is inconceivable.

    Never will a day come that the Baltimore Blacks or the New York Negroes line out in the NFL, so why should it be deemed acceptable by the team’s owners, the league’s upper echelon, or the general public, to have a name derived from hate grace the sport.

    Dan Synder, and anyone else who who roots for the name to remain, will argue that the nickname is honorary.

    However, this could not be further from the case.

    Honorary monikers are those in which celebrate tribes names such as the Braves, the Blackhawks, the Chiefs. The Redskins does not fall into that category.

    The term Redskin evolves from the practice of scalping Native Americans to collect a bounty in precolonial America.

    The term describes a period in which Native Americans endured horrific and barbaric treatment at the hands of imperialists, in the pursuit of profit. And the exploitation of the Native Americans for profit is still ripe today.

    Forbes currently value the Washington Redskins trademark at $1.1 billion – the 8th richest sports franchise trademark in the world.

    The only colour that the owners of the Redskins are concerned about is green.