At 45, Brock Lesnar is nearing the end of his in-ring career in WWE.

Sure, plenty of wrestlers continue their careers deep into their 40s, 50s, and even early 60s, with Ric Flair about to wrestle his “final” match at the tender age of 73, but for the most part, that isn't the direction things tend to go – as performers get older, their ability to perform diminishes at a compounding rate with basically no exception. With his Last Man Standing match at SummerSlam being billed as the final chapter in his feud against Roman Reigns, it wouldn't be too surprising if Lesnar's run in The Fed – and wrestling, period – is winding down with it.

And yet at 45, Lesnar is still a premier athlete who can do things in – or around – a wrestling ring that few others can even dream of. Need proof? Just ask Otis, who found himself on the wrong side of a super-sized F5 outside of the ring that sent him crashing through the commentators' table like a knife through butter.

Goodness, you don't see a lot of 45-year-olds doing that to a 5-foot-10, 310-pound man.

While Lesnar has much bigger fish to try than Otis or Chad Gable moving forward, as he's got a Last Man Standing match at the end of the month versus Reigns and the potential for Theory – who has his own surprisingly contentious history with “The Beast Incarnate” – to cash in his Money in the Bank briefcase even if he can outlast “The Head of the Table,” he can at least take solace in the fact that his athletic gifts are second to none.