MLB

Cleveland baseball team not allowing headdresses, painted faces at games

While moving forward with a plan to change their name, Cleveland's MLB team said it will not permit fans inside Progressive Field wearing headdresses or face paint.

Club's new team name will not take effect until the 2022 season at the earliest

Cleveland MLB team owner Larry Dolan, right, and son Paul Dolan, seen here in Oct. 2016, have announced fans will not be allowed to wear headdresses this season as the club is in the process of changing the name. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press)

While moving forward with a plan to change their name, Cleveland's MLB team said it will not permit fans inside Progressive Field wearing headdresses or face paint.

The team announced the fan dress policy for the 2021 season on Wednesday in advance of Monday's home opener against Detroit.

The team's new policy states fans can be ejected or denied entrance for disorderly, unruly or disruptive conduct that includes "headdresses and face paint styled in a way that references or appropriates American Indian cultures and traditions. Inappropriate or offensive images, words, dress or face paint must be covered or removed, and failure to do so may constitute grounds for ejection or refusal of admission."

Kansas City of the NFL announced a similar ban of headdresses at its stadium last year.

Cleveland fans will still be allowed to wear caps and clothing featuring Chief Wahoo, the team's contentious mascot. The team removed the smiling, red-faced Wahoo caricature from its game jerseys and caps two years ago but still sells merchandise with its image.

Cleveland said earlier this year that the team is changing its name for the first time since 1915, joining a nationwide movement to ban racist symbols and slogans. The name change will not take effect until the 2022 season at the earliest.

In December, owner Paul Dolan told The Associated Press that the team's new name "will not be a name that has Native American themes or connotations to it."

Cleveland's move to change its name followed a similar decision by the NFL's Washington Football Team.

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