milnews.ca said:
Well, neither are in a great position to realistically play the "he's too old" card … ;D
President Eisenhower had this to say about that, “The greater likelihood that a man of 70 will break down under a load than a man of 50.”
Eisenhower: A need for “younger men in positions of the highest responsibility so as to symbolize the youth, vigor and virility of the Republican Party.”
Eisenhower: "All the programs in the world, and all the Eisenhower prestige, cannot elect some revolting old Republican hack against a youthful, able, and personable Democrat.”
Franklin D. Roosevelt was fifty when he won his first term; John F. Kennedy, Bill Clinton, and Barack Obama were in their forties.
He said, “We all know that when advancing years and diminishing energy begin to take their toll, the last one that ever appreciates such a situation is the victim himself.”
Eisenhower was willing to consider the nation’s welfare ahead of personal ambition. He was 62, but had the prestige and qualifications of successful 5-star general.
Edit to add,
Just read something about Biden telling voters about driving girls on dates in his '51 Plymouth.