The Cleveland Indians decided to retire their "Chief Wahoo" logo, prompting some to wonder what insignia could get the same treatment.

Recently on ESPN’s “First Take,” Max Kellerman suggested Notre Dame’s Fighting Irish logo should be changed.

"Many Irish Americans are not offended (by the logo), but many are," Kellerman said. "Should that also change? The answer is unequivocally yes. Pernicious, negative stereotypes of marginalized people that offend, even some among them, should be changed. It's not that hard."

That particular state didn’t sit well with former Notre Dame football coach Lou Holtz.

Related News Indians will stop using Chief Wahoo logo in 2019

“First of all understand how the Fighting Irish came about. It is not about Irish, it’s about a spirit, it’s about a feeling,” Holtz told Fox Business. “Learn and understand what it means and you don’t have to be from Ireland to be Irish.”

MLB Network's Brian Kenny expressed his opinion on Twitter saying the logo is an "embarrassment" that "paints us as a bunch of foolish, drinking, fighting, singing, dancing, & lying gnomes."

According to Notre Dame's official website, the Fighting Irish name was somewhat cemented in 1924 when "Notre Dame students violently clashed with the anti-Catholic Ku Klux Klan" and "drove the Klan out of South Bend and helped bring an end to its rising power in Indiana at a time when the state’s governor was among its members."