Iverson dropped off a cliff between age 32 and 33 and age 34 was his last year in the league.
sure, but Iverson also admitted he didnt lift weights leading me to believe he didnt take too much care of his body. Combine that with the practice rant and its not too much of a stretch to suggest AI could have played a lot longer if hed been smarter with his preparation.
Thomas is a brick and he is already trying to follow a Tom-Brady type regimen, maximizing sleep etc etc in the interest of longevity.
Nate Robinson, barely played after 30 despite being a career 36% shooter from three. Calvin Murphy managed to play till 34, but was a role player his last few seasons.
Smaller players tend to have a shorter prime and larger fall than bigger players because when they lose the speed and athleticism they have no other real way to get a shot off and because they are so short they can't defend well, can't rebound well, etc. so they can't make up for the loss of athleticism and speed in other ways.
Do you have any statistics that actually support that assertion?
At some point last year, I took a look at players who played at least one 1000 minute season past their rookie contract (meaning they were legitimate NBA players) and divided them into under 6' and 6'+ and compared the percentages that posted different seasonal WS accruals past age 30 and past age 33.
I found no real difference and if anything, the smaller players did slightly better at retaining value into their 30s.
The numbers for the under-6' sample were, of course, very constrained, as there are literally only 20 players in the entire basketball-reference.com database under 6' that played a season past the age of 30 with enough minutes to qualify for the leaderboards.
But as a percentage of all under-6' players who played at all into a second contract, those 20 represented a slightly higher percentage than for larger players.
The percentage of over-30 'small' players that posted WS seasons of 5+ was also slightly better than that for players over 6'.
I would assert that big players don't necessarily age any better than small players. They carry more weight on their joints and lower-body joints (knees, hips & ankles) are a significant point of failure in age-related declines.