Flint Flames

The Flint Flames were a professional indoor American football team based in Flint, Michigan. They were members of the original Indoor Football League founded in 1999 and began play in 2000. They competed in the Southern Division of the Eastern Conference and played their home games at the Perani Arena and Event Center.

Flint Flames
Established 1999
Folded 2000
Played in Perani Arena and Event Center
in Flint, Michigan
League/conference affiliations
Indoor Football League (2000)
  • Eastern Conference (2000)
    • Southern Division (2000)
Team colorsPurple, red, orange, gold
                   
Personnel
Team history
  • Flint Flames (2000)
Championships
League championships (0)
Conference championships (0)
Division championships (0)
Home arena(s)
Perani Arena and Event Center (2000)

History

The Flames were founded as an expansion team in 1999 and joined the original incarnation of the Indoor Football League along with several others expansion franchises. In the only season in the IFL, the team compiled a 2–14 record finishing in last place in the Eastern Conference. After the IFL was bought out by af2, the Flames were not among the many teams that moved to the new league and subsequently folded.[1][2]

Years later in 2008, the Flint Phantoms began play in the Continental Indoor Football League, but quickly folded after going 1–10.[3]

gollark: ||They get the infinity stones from the past but an evil nebula goes to the future and brings thanos back to the future so they have to kill thanos again.||
gollark: ||also they do time travel by misunderstanding quantum physics and a van||
gollark: ||thanos is in it||
gollark: They're not run on boot, though, so it's uninstallation.
gollark: Spoilers: ||Snape kills Trinity with Rosebud.||

References

  1. "IFL Franchise Histories". OurSports Central. Retrieved February 8, 2018.
  2. "Indoor and Arena Football History: Flint Flames". OurSports Central. Retrieved February 8, 2018.
  3. Dan Nilsen (June 12, 2008). "Analysis: Flint fumbles indoor football once again". The Flint Journal.
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