Her parents obliged, and Doucette went on to make nine saves in an 11-6, state-title clinching victory. As the buzzer sounded, fellow Unionville captains Erin Garvey and Veronica Hineman came crashing toward her for an embrace which she likened to that of the 2017 U.S. World Cup co-captains, when midfielder Sarah Bullard jumped into the arms of Doucette’s idol, goalie Devon Wills, after winning the gold.
Doucette followed that team closely from her desk at Anchor Life and Fitness in Kennett Square, Pa.
“That moment, we shared was this culmination of hard work and knowing how much we fought for every single second,” she said. “While I may not have had it at the level yet of Devon Wills and Sarah, it’s knowing that emotion I felt in that moment. … It’s a crazy thought to even fathom, but it’s something I want to experience more than anything else.”
Nine weeks after hoisting the state championship trophy, Doucette set out to qualify for the U.S. under-19 women’s national team.
“I knew where I wanted to be, and it was a part of this team, doing exactly what that senior team was doing — getting those gold medals to put around our necks after putting in so much hard work,” she said.
Again, surgery had to wait, this time until after tryouts.
On Aug. 12, Doucette made the 36-player U.S. U19 training team. Five days later, she finally made it to the hospital, exhausted and elated at the same time.
It took her less than two weeks to receive medical clearance and resume her summer training regime from Northwestern, which she joined in the fall as a freshman. By Jan. 31, she had advanced to the U.S, U19 roster of 23 after playing in Team USA’s Spring Premiere in California.
Doucette may not set off metal detectors in the airport, but her metal plate now serves as a badge of honor.
“Call it Stark, because it makes me Ironman,” she said. “People get a little nervous when you say, ‘I’ve had a heart procedure,’ and they get a little awkward about it. That’s my way to break the tension. ‘Yeah guys, I’m Ironman.’”