UNLV retiring Hey Reb! mascot
Updated January 19, 2021 - 10:55 pm
UNLV is retiring the Hey Reb! mascot but retaining its Rebels nickname, university president Keith Whitfield announced Tuesday.
The Rebels do not plan to create a new mascot.
The school removed a statue of Hey Reb! in June amid national dialogue about potentially racist imagery after the police-related deaths of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor. Whitfield’s predecessor, Marta Meana, announced at the time that the university would evaluate the future of Hey Reb!.
Do you agree with @unlv's decision to retire the Hey Reb! mascot?
READ MORE→https://t.co/j3hKCDb4yC
— Las Vegas RJ Sports (@RJ_Sports) January 19, 2021
UNLV is retiring the Hey Reb! mascot, but retaining its Rebels nickname.
READ MORE→https://t.co/j3hKCDb4yCDo you think UNLV should change the Rebels nickname?
— Las Vegas RJ Sports (@RJ_Sports) January 19, 2021
Whitfield wrote in an open letter to the university’s community that he “engaged in an extensive listening tour among faculty, staff, students and community members” about a variety of topics, including the nickname and mascot. Regarding Hey Reb!, Whitfield wrote that Meana “essentially addressed this issue late last spring when she had a statue of the mascot removed from the main campus.”
Added Whitfield: “For all intents and purposes, the Hey Reb! mascot has been retired since last spring, and there are no plans to bring it back.”
The president also explained why the school is retaining the Rebels nickname, noting that the word itself “represen
ts an attitude or spirit.”
He added: “It captures the essence of an iconic city that is unconventional and celebrates its independence, tenacity and resiliency. Rebels have a purpose or motivation for a greater cause and are not afraid to take risks to make incredible things happen.”
UNLV introduced Hey Reb! in 1982. The mascot was created by former Review-Journal artist Mike Miller. He was inspired by the trailblazing mountaineers who explored Nevada in the 1800s. Its appearance was tweaked in 1997 and 2017 with the intent of highlighting a “stronger connection with the symbolism of Las Vegas,” per the university’s website.
The school previously had utilized Confederate imagery, beginning in 1968 with the introduction of its original mascot, Beauregard, a cartoon wolf outfitted in a Confederate uniform. The school abandoned Beauregard in 1976 after Black student-athletes objected to its use of the Confederacy. But different groups of protesters emerged during the last few decades, contending that Hey Reb! still channeled the Confederate spirit.
A 60-page analysis written in 2015 by former UNLV Chief Diversity Officer Rainier Spencer concluded that neither the name nor the mascot is tied to the Confederacy.