casmith07;3499253 said:
It's generally the old heads in the Army that are able to run the young guys into the ground...
...but it's only running

I guarantee in athletic competition those old guys would peter out faster than the younger guys...I see it quite often in basketball and football games at PT, actually.
But yes - conditioning-wise I'm sure Colombo is in as good of shape as anyone else in the league. I'm also a little concerned about his lower body structurally, however.
Some soldiers were on the wrong end of physical conditioning and athletic ability upon entrance. At such a late development, their drive at sporting events was less driven than in natural sports fans. That is a factor as to game types of endurance considerations.
That all boils down to pain tolerance and mental struggle to shoulder the sensations. A person who is boundary level in moivation in sports themselves, usually don't sustain at top levels of demand for that reason....usually.
Until the much more restrictive body mass/fat percentages became gospel in the service, had you EVER seen a skinny Army?
The aspects that you addressed have been transitionary...as were ethical scrutiny as well. I once was in a unit upon entrance into, that had my section Sergeant, as well as Plaroon Sergeant up for Black Marketing charges in Korea. Target groups at entrance have been transitionary as well. High School and education once were an optional aspect as well. Not in the NFL...as high sohistication, dedication, and education are all functional and state of the art now.
One can observe series of scars about some player's knees and without functional declining as well. The whole body is consistently developed in today's NFL...with cutting edge medicine and rehabilitation. With no expenses spared. This is also closely monitored.
Hey, when synthetic knees are needed, sports are gone at that level. This doesn't appear to be what is being worked at present with Colombo.
Oh, and I never benched 500 until I was 45 and an instructor at the Armor School.