After the 1878 season,
Cap Anson signed Flint and his Indianapolis teammate
Orator Shafer to the
Chicago White Stockings of the National League. In his first season with the White Stockings, Flint and Anson split duties managing the team, which finished 5–12 under Flint and 41–21 under Anson. That was Flint's only opportunity as manager. Flint remained with Chicago for the rest of his playing career, spending eleven seasons almost exclusively as a catcher. During the ninth inning of a
no-hitter thrown by Corcoran on August 19, 1880, Flint dislocated his right thumb. The
Chicago Tribune noted that as a result of an attempt to put the thumb back in place, "the flesh was badly lacerated. It will probably disable Flint altogether for a fortnight at least." On August 20, 1882, amid a run of 16 Chicago wins in 18 games, Flint caught another no-hitter by Corcoran. Flint's financial difficulties continued as his career progressed, worsened by fines he incurred for his drinking and rowdy behavior. His Chicago teammate
Billy Sunday said he thought Flint's alcohol use was an attempt to deal with the pain he endured while playing catcher with his bare hands. In 1883, a man in Florida wrote to National League president
Albert Spalding and told him that Flint and pitcher
Ned Williamson refused to pay him back for a loan. Spalding threatened to kick the two players out of the league, but they paid their debt and the story was kept out of newspapers. On July 27 of that year, Flint caught a third no-hitter, thrown by Clarkson. For twenty years, Flint was the only major league player to have caught three no-hitters.
Ed McFarland tied the feat in 1905, and now several players have caught three or four career no-hit games. ==Personal life==