1 million dollars
There is no official retirement age in the NHL, as players can choose to retire at any age based on their physical condition, performance, and personal decisions. Historically, many players retire in their mid-30s to early 40s, but some have played into their late 40s. Ultimately, the decision to retire is individual and can vary widely among players.
There are hundreds of thousands of players, making it very difficult to track statistics on all of them. Some players, specially goalkeepers in less competitive leagues, play into their early 40s.
about $10 which is realy cool.
There are hundreds of thousands of players, making it very difficult to track statistics on all of them. Some players, specially goalkeepers in less competitive leagues, play into their early 40s.
only 3 players in mlb history to hit home runs in their 20s 30s and 40s
This needs to be rewritten. It doesn't make sense.
"There were no Starbucks in the 40s" is correct.
The plural of 40 is 40s (forties), as in the man was in his 40s; the Second World War took place in the first half of the 40s.
Did WHO pitch at Andrews AFB in the late 40s
Around 4000-5000 depending on condition.
1,000,000,000,000s = 16,666,666,666m, 40s = 277,777,777h, 40m, 40s = 11,574,074d, 1h, 40m, 40s = 31,688y, 32d, 1h, 40m, 40s So assuming all that math is correct, one trillion seconds is about 31,688 years.
Surrealism still flourished here and there. The new thing in the 40s was Abstract Expressionism.