Editor’s note: This is an excerpt from a story that appears in the upcoming 2025 issue of PLAYBOY Magazine and was written by Jack Tien-Dama. Preorder your copy of PLAYBOY Magazine now.
Darrell Doucette, the best flag football quarterback in the history of flags and football, is stuck. Someone has parked their car across the entrance to his driveway and he can’t get out. We’d planned to meet at Neyow’s Creole Café in the Mid-City neighborhood of New Orleans at 2 p.m.; now it’s 2:41 and he’s still boxed in. All the Ubers are far away, inching through the torpor of a rainy pre-Christmas Tuesday afternoon.
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When Doucette arrives 20 minutes later, he’s at the midpoint of clammy and wet, his long cornrows matted to his neck. He couldn’t wait any longer, he explains, so he ran up and down his block, knocking on every neighbor’s door until he finally found the owner of the offending car.
The symbolism here—overlooked hometown hero labors to overcome an obstacle separating him from the acclaim he deserves—isn’t exactly subtle. Still, it’s fitting that the 35-year-old Doucette, the son of a New Orleans police detective, doesn’t brook vagary or mystery. In person, the most striking thing about the five-foot-seven, 140-pound Doucette is his vibe: It’s more distilled and concentrated than the average person’s. He doesn’t fidget or yammer. When asked a question, he actually answers.
On his future: “I’ve got three, four years left in me. I want to play in the Olympics—that’s the one thing left for me in the flag football world that I want to accomplish.”
On the stigma that surrounds flag football: “People look down on us because they think we’re nothing but NFL rejects.”
On what I should order: “The gumbo. You’re in New Orleans—you gotta get the gumbo.” He also gets the gumbo.
On the Olympics? Don’t get him started. In an interview with The Guardian in August, Doucette infamously said it was “disrespectful” for NFL stars like Jalen Hurts and Joe Burrow to “automatically assume” they’d be able to steal his spot as the starting quarterback on the U.S. National Team when flag football makes its Olympic debut in 2028. “We just don’t think they’re going to be able to walk on the field and make the Olympic team because of the name, right?” he said. “They still have to go out there and compete.”
“At the end of the day,” he then proceeded to tell TMZ Sports, “I feel like I’m better than Patrick Mahomes because of my IQ of the game.”
Immediately, Doucette became the first flag football player to go viral. Lost in all the social media brouhaha, though, is the fact that he was—and is—correct. Just as there’s no guarantee that Roger Federer would be good at ping-pong or that Joey Chestnut would have a knack for Hungry Hungry Hippos, flag football requires a skill set that the typical NFL player has never bothered to acquire. Doucette says he isn’t motivated by personal pride or some grudge against Mahomes (whom he greatly admires); he simply felt a duty to speak up.
“Other flag football players were asking me to say something about the way that [NFL players] were talking about the Olympics,” he tells me. “I feel like when I speak out, people listen. It’s like LeBron James—whenever he speaks within the NBA, he becomes their voice. I kind of view myself the same way [in terms of flag football]. I’ve accomplished so much that people are gonna listen, whether they think I’m right or wrong.”
The two types of football are so different, Doucette has made it without really having any formal gridiron experience. He quit his high school team after his freshman season so he could focus on track and bowling (he won a state championship in the latter); he didn’t take flag football seriously until he signed up for a coed intramural league as a student at Xavier University of Louisiana. After a few classmates invited him to compete in a regional tournament in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, Doucette (or Housh, as his friends call him, due to his resemblance to former NFL wide receiver T.J. Houshmandzadeh) was hooked.
“At first, I was like, ‘What?’ when I heard about the tournament, because I thought flag football was just, like, a kids’ thing in New Orleans,” Doucette says. “When we got to the tournament and I saw how many people were there and how passionate they were, I really started to fall in love with it.”
To read the rest, check out the 2025 issue of PLAYBOY Magazine, on shelves Feb. 10. Preorder your copy now.