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Las Vegas Golden Knights defensemen Zach Whitecloud (Sioux) accepted an apology yesterday from ESPN anchor John Anderson, who made a crass comment about the Indigenous hockey player’s last name on air.  

During a “SportsCenter” broadcast on Monday recapping the Golden Knights win against the Edmonton Oilers, Anderson, describing the Native American defenseman’s goal, said, “Zach Whitecloud, what kind of name is Whitecloud? Great name if you’re a toilet paper.”

Whitecloud is the first Indigenous NHL player from the Sioux Valley North Dakota Nation. 

Anderson issued an apology the next day, saying he should have been more aware of the player’s background. He also reached out to the Golden Knights to personally apologize to Whitecloud.

Anderson's apology statement read: “This is totally on me, and I sincerely apologize to Zach, the Golden Knights, their fans, and everyone else for what I said. It’s my job to be prepared and know the backgrounds of the players, and I blew it. I will be reaching out to the team to personally apologize and hope to have the opportunity to speak to Zach as well.”

In a press availability yesterday, an emotional WhiteCloud told reporters that he accepted Anderson’s apology.

“It was obviously, I think, an attempt at humor that came out as being obviously insensitive, and he acknowledges that. He understands that it was wrong to say, and I wanted to make sure that he knew that. I accepted his apology.”

Whitecloud said he learned about Anderson’s comments from social media and spoke with his family before talking with the ESPN anchor. 

“In our culture, we’re raised to be the first ones to reach out and offer our help,” Whitecloud said. “That’s why I reached out to John this morning. And wanted to make sure that he understood that, that I understood that people make mistakes, and he acknowledges that he’s willing, trying to move forward in the right direction and be better from it.”

The Golden Knights defenseman was clearly emotional about the incident with reporters. 

“Obviously, I don’t want to be in front of all you (reporters) talking about this. But with that comes an opportunity to allow not just John and myself, but everyone, to learn from this incident,” Whitecloud said, tears welling in his eyes. “To move forward and make sure that these things don’t happen again. And I just want to make that point clear, too — John recognizes that.”

Whitecloud also shared his connection to his culture and the pride that he carries for his ancestors’ name. 

“I’m proud of my culture. I’m proud of where I come from, where I was raised, who I was raised by,” Whitecloud said. “I carry my grandfather’s last name, and nothing makes me more proud than to be able to do that.”

In a 2022 Instagram post, Whitecloud shared that his grandfather, grandmother, and uncle are survivors of Canada’s residential school era, when First Nation children were forcibly removed from their homes and placed in boarding schools designed to strip them of their culture. 

In that post, Whitecloud wrote: “Reconciliation requires truth, sincerity, and accountability for our words and actions. Reconciliation requires leadership and our individual efforts to speak the truth and acknowledge truth so that we can build a foundation for a relationship. It is our responsibility to be informed and to actively participate in addressing the genocide, the pain and suffering, to commit to a new relationship built on trust.”

Whitecloud is currently playing in his fifth NHL season. He joined Las Vegas in 2018 and signed a six-year, $16.5 million contract extension with the Golden Knights in 2021.

Anderson has been an anchor at ESPN for more than two decades, first joining the network in 1999.

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Elyse Wild
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Senior Health Editor
Elyse Wild is Senior Health Editor for Native News Online, where she leads coverage of health equity issues including mental health, environmental health, maternal mortality, and the overdose crisis in Indian Country. Her award-winning journalism has appeared in The Guardian, McClatchy newspapers, and NPR affiliates. In 2024, she received the inaugural Excellence in Recovery Journalism Award for her solutions-focused reporting on addiction and recovery in Native communities. She is currently working on a Pulitzer Center-funded series exploring cultural approaches to addiction treatment.