McBubbles wrote:bledredwine wrote:pepe1991 wrote:Longevity changes with advance of medicine, training etc. In 10 years you will probably see somebody who is 43 and playing well because injury prevention, advanced drugs, PEDs will get even more advanced (and it's not like in nba anybody gets tested among stars).
Exactly.
Look at the best players of their sports lately- Mayweather, Pacquiao, Messi, Djokovic/Federer, Brady
They're all praised by insane longevity.
It's sports medicine/science, no coincidence that all of them played to 40'ish at the highest level.
If Michael Jordan had notable longevity for his era you'd have a point...
But he didn't.
So you don't lol. You're talking about today's athletes as if MJ didn't have worse longevity than Kareem

Kareem is literally THE oldest Allstar in nba history at age of 41. Matter of fact he makes near half of "oldest allstars ever".
You can make strong case for him as GOAT based on fact he was best player in the world for longest among MJ/LBJ/Kareem, won first ring at age of 23, last at age of 40, only nba player with 6 MVP awards, if DPOY award existed during vast majority of his career, he would rack probably 5+ such awards . He literally was second best defender in nba as rookie ( probably not first due fact Wilt existed).
Lebron isn't only player who in current sport shows, due new, modern medicine, that playing long is possible. In that regard he is no different than Federrer, Đoković, Modrić, Messi, Ronaldo.
Lebron isn't even only player in current league that is old and going strong, Curry, Durant are turning 37 , Mike Conley just started on team that went to WCF at age of 36, turns 37 in about 9 days.
Times have changed. Penalizing players from past to not having modern medicine & knowledge of present is just flat out dumb. Jabbar being so good for so long in times when athletes trained in ways that today would consider idiotic, barbaric , is just testiment of his name, not "normal".
Just quick story to understand where training for basketball was in 1987 for example. There is documentary called 250 stairs, about Yugoslavian u19 basketball team. Familiar names: Toni Kukoc, Dino Rada, Vlade Divac . Oh and Zoran Kalpic, who happend to be my former coach.
Anyway, as a group they would go to mountain Igman in central Bosnia. No houses in sight, no tehnology, no phones. Nothing, one empty house , in the morning people would bring food and leave, for damn month they haven't seen a single soul but 15 players & 4 coaches.
Now "training quality": well... there were, you guessed it right - 250 stairs that were made centuries ago.
So early in the moring they would have usual uphill sprints through that stairs. After that breakfest.
After that, still early in the morning they would go and jump over chairs with one leg, or do crunches and bodyweight squats or do resistence sprints while being held back by other player through some resistence bands.
After that lunch, in the afternoon- you are allowed to train with ball

Anyway, that U19 Yugoslavia team won world cup in 1987 without single loss, including finals win vs USA. (Gary Payton, Larry Johnson, Larry Brown as coach)

As you can see, those stairs weren't safe by any streach of imagination
Why this is important for context? This sort of training, by today standards would be considered:
1) overtraining
2 ) Kids abuse
3) too dangerous
3) barbaric
4) overkill
but that was all they knew. That's why longjevity in basketball is important, but needs context of time to understand. Just 14 years ago pro coaches were preachign that in squat you should never squat close to parallele because it will wrack your knees, now, with new studies it shows that if you didn't break parallel , you didn't even activate your glutes all that much as main focus. If you think 14 years ago it's 2007.
And squatting like for damn sure isn't reason of Lebron's longevity. PEDs also work. ( for a record, imo, most nba players and athletes in general are on something, so it's not just attack on Lebron. It's just dirty little secret that fans aren't allowed to know, to paint their favorite athletes in more cartoonish, superhero-ish fashion than they are.
Life is what happens when you're busy making other plans. -John Lennon