The playoffs every year are loaded with players over age 28 -- and a huge share of the main rotation players on those teams are always over 28. There were 98 players in these last playoffs who played at least 20 mpg (minimum 3 games) and of those 51 (52%) were 28 or older.
As you go deeper in the playoffs, it becomes the land of senior citizens. Of the 46 of those players that made it to 9 games or more, 26 (56%) were 28+. Of the 36 of those players that played 12 games or more, 22 (61%) were 28+.
Of the 13 such players who played in the finals, only 3 were under 28.
You see a similar age distribution in the playoffs every year.
Further, I would bet a significant share of those 98 playoff rotation players who are over age 28 have all had at least one significant injury that caused them to miss a significant stretch of games at some point in their career.
The NBA is an old-man's game. It is dominated by veterans, not noobs.
Heck, the real 'sweet spot', the "prime" if you will, seems to be the age range of 27-33, as 50 of the 98 playoff rotation players were in that range.
I find the idea that because Rondo is age 28 or because he's had one significant injury in his career that makes him "past his prime" kinda silly. If anything, he should just be starting his "prime".
There is an obsession with youth that some on this blog have that is getting extreme. I understand the "allure" of "potential". Potential never misses a shot and never fails to grab every rebound. But potential doesn't win in the NBA. Experience does.