The Washington team is expected to retire on Monday

The NFL’s Washington team is expected to retire on Monday under the name “red skin,” according to media reports on Sunday.

Red manager Rivera: hope to complete the team name change before the start of the new season

It seems to be a foregone conclusion that Washington Redskins will change its name. It is only a matter of when.

Ron Rivera said he and his boss, Daniel Snyder, had spent more than a month discussing the issue and hoped that the team could complete the name change before the start of the new season.

“It would be great if we could change the name in time for the new season,” Rivera said on Saturday.

Rivera, who joined Redskins in December last year, said he was surprised after searching for the origin of the team’s name and thought the team should change its name. He did not disclose the names of the candidates, but mentioned that respect for Native American culture and respect for the military were important criteria.

The call for Redskins to change its name has been going on for decades. Over the past week, 87 investment companies and shareholders have written to Nike, FedEx and PepsiCo, respectively, asking them to terminate their sponsorship unless the red paper changes its name. FedEx then issued a request to red leather, while Nike stopped selling Washington Redskins jerseys and other peripheral goods online.

Redskins said on Friday that he was considering renaming his name, with immediate support from League president, Nike NFL jerseys, PepsiCo and the executive director of the NFL players’ Union.

Under pressure to change the name of the boss is not reliable? At least three shareholders of Redskins began to sell their shares. After all, everything changed after the team changed its name: New Jersey, new home

Under pressure from all walks of life, Washington Red Skin boss Dan Snyder has decided to change the name of the team. However, such behavior will not satisfy everyone, at least from the behavior of several shareholders of the team, they do not agree with Snyder’s “recognition” operation.

According to the Washington Post, the team’s three shareholders have made it clear that they “don’t like to be business partners with Snyder” and have decided to sell their shares.