LOS ANGELES — The debate is officially dead. NFL players cannot simply roll out of bed and dominate a flag football field. Team USA proved exactly that on Saturday, aggressively dismantling hand-picked squads of pro football elites 106-44 across three games at the inaugural Fanatics Flag Football Classic. As the final whistle blew and reality set in for the pros, Robert Griffin III dropped a bombshell. The former Heisman winner wants his shot at Robert Griffin III flag football glory.
Griffin took to X on Saturday night to declare his intention to join the USA National Team for the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics. The 36-year-old former Rookie of the Year made his ambitions clear, stating, “The journey starts now and there is no greater honor than wearing USA across your chest.”
Team USA Takes the Pros to School
The chilly Los Angeles breeze whipped through BMO Stadium, but it was the blinding speed of the Team USA athletes that left the NFL stars freezing in their tracks. You could almost feel the tension in the air as Hall of Famers and current All-Pros realized their sheer physical power meant absolutely nothing. Team USA didn’t just win; they ran off with the pros’ dignity.
The national squad went a perfect 3-0 on the day. They opened by crushing the Wildcats—a squad led by current star quarterbacks Joe Burrow and Jayden Daniels—by a brutal 39-14 margin. Next, they humiliated the Founders team, captained by Tom Brady and Jalen Hurts, in a 43-16 blowout. In the championship rematch, the Wildcats tightened up, but Team USA still walked away with a clean 24-14 victory.
The 50-yard field completely neutralizes top-end, straight-line speed and heavy tackling. It heavily favors lateral quickness and twitchy agility. A 40-yard dash means nothing when the entire route tree compresses into a 20-yard box. The NFL elites routinely found themselves out of position, grabbing at air instead of flags, while Team USA operated with surgical precision.
“Those guys that we competed against, they didn’t know what they were getting themselves into. They just thought that they were going to come out and play. But I think we gained a lot of respect from those guys.”
— Darrell Doucette, Team USA Quarterback & Tournament MVP
Playoff Implications / What’s Next
Griffin faces a massive uphill battle. He has not taken a competitive snap since 2020. Flag football demands a totally different athletic profile, prioritizing hip-drops and elusive route-running over sheer arm strength and pocket presence. However, Griffin’s historic dual-threat mechanics might translate better to the 5-on-5 format than a traditional pocket passer, provided his knees can handle the violent change of direction.
If current NFL players want to represent the United States in 2028, they need to swallow their pride and learn the actual discipline. As Griffin rightly pointed out over the weekend, pro football and flag football are completely different beasts. The clock is officially ticking. Anyone aiming for the Los Angeles Games has exactly two years to entrench themselves in the flag football circuit, or they will find themselves sitting in the stands watching the amateurs take home the gold.

