The Yankees corner outfielders Monday were at least 38 years old. Captain Derek Jeter is 38 and battling a bone bruise in his right foot. Alex Rodriguez is 36.
When they lose, you wonder when some of these guys are going to hop in their Mercedes and drive off into retirement.
Then there are nights like Monday, when they can play the experience card, turn pitches from Liam Hendriks into mincemeat and look like a team that won't be a postseason pushover.
There was no spoiler role for the Twins to play Monday, when New York hit four home runs off Hendriks on its way to a 6-3 victory at Target Field. The Twins were coming off winning two of three in Detroit, but they couldn't score a run in six innings off 40-year-old Andy Pettitte.
The Yankees, who moved 1 1/2 games in front of Baltimore in the race for the AL East, have seemed to be waiting for their team to get fully healthy most of the season, but they have been able to remain in contention.
When they lose, they look old and slow. When they win, it's a testament to veteran know-it-all. They are trying to prove that 40 is the new 30, even in baseball.
"Every team battles injuries," Jeter said. "That's when you find out how good teams are. You have to get contributions from man people. Experience helps, but that doesn't always mean you'll overcome things."
Jeter has been slowed in recent weeks by the bone bruise, forcing him to be the designated hitter in six of the previous nine games. But he was able to start at his customary spot at shortstop Monday and went 1-for-3.