Flint Firebirds put ugly past behind them, gunning for deep playoff push
After some very low points in their tumultuous history, the Flint Firebirds are being taken seriously. And it was no easy task making it happen.
The Firebirds had a questionable reputation at best after their owner was suspended following player protests in their inaugural 2015-16 season in the Ontario Hockey League. The Michigan club was fined, stripped of a draft pick, and had little to no success on the ice, only making the playoffs once in its first four years with a combined record of 88-159-25.
Things have changed this season, though. Flint is riding a 10-game win streak into this weekend’s action, is 32-17-2 overall and sits fourth in the always-difficult Western Conference.
“It’s been rewarding, exciting, been a long time coming wanting to be a competitive hockey team,” said forward Ty Dellandrea. “Everyone’s pretty pumped. But also we aren’t satisfied, we want a long run to the playoffs. We’re motivated.”