Poor Flint, Mich. It rarely makes headlines for good news.

The troubled city that gained notoriety thanks to Michael Moore’s auto industry documentary Roger and Me has been making news recently for lead-contaminated city water and police apologizing for handcuffing a 7-year-old. But the latest embarrassing incident, which Reddit user MandatedPineapple posted about in the Hockey community, comes from the sports world.

The Flint Firebirds, an Ontario Hockey League team in its inaugural season, stepped into the spotlight Monday when the team’s coaching staff was fired after a comeback win Sunday night. That led to players—including the owner’s 17-year-old son—to go on strike.

Comment from a #Firebirds player: "The whole team went up to the managments office and said f*** this" #OHL — OHLInsiders(.com) (@OHLinsiders) November 9, 2015

To quote Ron Burgundy in Anchorman:

(A Will Ferrell reference is apt, too, given that the Flint Tropics, the basketball team from Semi-Pro, was a name suggestion that was nixed.)

The exact reasons surrounding the firings and the walkout are still unknown as team officials and the fired coaches are keeping quiet about the matter (even the team’s Facebook page has been taken down). The website OHLInsiders is reporting that one theory behind the team turmoil was owner Rolf Nilsen, who bought the Plymouth Whalers and moved them to Flint earlier this year, was upset that coaches wouldn’t budge on giving his son, Hakon, more playing time, and that led to the firings.

A user in the thread about the firings drew an interesting connection between the Firebirds’ situation and a scene from a classic 1990s sports movie.

It’s unclear what this walkout will mean to the future of the team. The Firebirds, which are 7-9, don’t play again until Friday.