Are the Vikings going to wear throwback Duluth Eskimos uniforms this season?

It's the 100th year of the National Football League.
Are the Vikings going to wear throwback Duluth Eskimos uniforms this season?
Are the Vikings going to wear throwback Duluth Eskimos uniforms this season? /

A sideline coat worn by Hall of Fame fullback Ernie Nevers. 

It's the 100th year of the NFL and there's speculation brewing that the Minnesota Vikings could honor the 1920s Duluth Eskimos by wearing their uniforms during a game. 

It's all connecting dots at this point, starting with trademark attorney Josh Gerben publicizing a trademark application filed by the NFL that he says "suggests that a NFL team could play a game as the DULUTH ESKIMOS this coming year."

Gerben's speculation continues as he believes the trademark application makes it "very likely" that the NFL will "ask a team, perhaps the Minnesota Vikings, to play a game this year under the name the Duluth Eskimos." 

Last September, the Duluth News Tribune reported that the Vikings have lobbied "to wear Duluth Eskimos throwback jerseys for one of the team's games" during the 100th anniversary season, quoting a team rep who said she would "feel like I won the lottery if we get to play a game in those." 

Wearing the Eskimos uniforms could come with negative feedback considering the term can be offensive. This, from NPR

"People in many parts of the Arctic consider Eskimo a derogatory term because it was widely used by racist, non-native colonizers. Many people also thought it meant eater of raw meat, which connoted barbarism and violence. Although the word's exact etymology is unclear, mid-century anthropologists suggested that the word came from the Latin word excommunicati, meaning the excommunicated ones, because the native people of the Canadian Arctic were not Christian."

Professional football debuted in the U.S. in 1920 with 14 original teams. Known as the American Professional Football Association to begin, it changed its name to the National Football League in 1922, the same year Duluth got its team. 

The Duluth Kelleys then debuted in 1923, later changing its name to the Duluth Eskimos in 1926. By 1928, the NFL was out of Duluth, but not before producing Hall of Fame fullback Ernie Nevers, a Willow River, Minnesota, native who was inducted into Canton in 1963. 


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Joe Nelson
JOE NELSON

Title: Bring Me The Sports co-owner, editor Email: joe@bringmethenews.com Twitter: @JoeBMTN Education: Southwest Minnesota State University Location: Minneapolis, Minnesota Expertise: All things Minnesota sports Nelson has covered Minnesota sports for two decades, starting his media career in sports radio. He worked at small market Minnesota stations in Marshall and St. Cloud before joining one of the nation's highest-rated sports stations, KFAN-FM 100.3 in the Twin Cities. There, he was the producer of the top-rated mid-morning sports show with Minnesota Vikings announcer Paul Allen.  His radio experience helped blossom a career as a sports writer, joining Minneapolis-based Bring Me The News in 2011.  Nelson and Adam Uren became co-owners of Bring Me The News in 2018 and have since more than tripled the site's traffic and launched Bring Me The Sports in cooperation with the Sports Illustrated/FanNation umbrella. Nelson has covered the Super Bowl and numerous training camps, NFL combines, the MLB All-Star Game and Minnesota playoff games, in addition to the day-to-day happenings on and off the field of play.  Nelson also has extensive knowledge of non-sports subjects, including news and weather. He works closely with Bring Me The News meteorologist Sven Sundgaard to produce a bevy of weather and climate information for Minnesota readers.  Nelson helped launch and manage the Bring Me The News Radio Network, which provided more than 50 radio stations around Minnesota with daily news, sports and weather reports from 2011-17.