Waylon Jennings? P.J. O’Rourke? David Mamet? Johnny Rutherford? Jerry Schofield? Fausto Coppi? Anonymous?

Question for Quote Investigator: Physical abilities decline with age, but experience accumulates. The following adage is popular with feisty seniors:
Old age and treachery will overcome youth and skill.
This saying has been attributed to singer-songwriter Waylon Jennings, playwright David Mamet, political commentator P. J. O’Rourke, race car driver Johnny Rutherford, and others. Would you please explore the provenance of this expression?
Reply from Quote Investigator: The earliest close match known to QI appeared in the “Beaumont Journal” of Beaumont, Texas on July 21, 1975. A columnist wrote about the retirement of Jerry Schofield who was the newspaper’s national advertising manager. Boldface added to excerpts by QI:1
Jerry doesn’t look his 65 years. But as he grew older he came more and more to treasure this motto prominently displayed in his office: “Old age and treachery will always defeat youth and skill.”
The phrasing suggested that the message was on display for an extended period before the article was written. Schofield is currently the top candidate creator for this motto. Although it remains possible that he was simply repeating an existing saying with an anonymous origin.
The genesis of this saying was lengthy. Phrases of this general type have occurred often during the past one hundred years. Yet, these precursors were not presented in proverbial form. Also, they did not achieve precise wide repetition. Some statements used interrogative form. Here is an overview with dates and ascriptions:
1910: Will experience and brains defeat youth and energy? (Sports journalist Dick Jemison)
1915: Experienced fighters … utilize vast knowledge to overcome youth and strength (Anonymous)
1922: The warfare of youth and love and honor and courage against age and treachery and hypocrisy and mystery (Book reviewer John Clair Minot)
1923: Proved the superiority … of age and intellect over youth and skill (Anonymous)
1925: The ability of age and experience to defeat youth and endurance (Sports journalist Robert Edgren)
1929: How to defeat youth with experience (Anonymous)
1938: The splendid victory of youth and love over age and treachery (Author Louis Arthur Cunningham)
1964: Can age and experience beat youth and enthusiasm? (Anonymous)
Below is an overview of the adage under examination. These entries include dates and attributions for close matches in proverbial form:
1975 Jul 21: Old age and treachery will always defeat youth and skill (Motto displayed in the office of Jerry Schofield)
1975 Jul 22: Old age and treachery will overcome youth and skill (Spoken by Wayne Dollick)
1977: Old age and treachery will triumph over youth and skill (Sign displayed in the office of Joseph Mastroianni)
1978: Age and treachery will win over youth and skill (Credited to a friend of NASCAR driver Hershel McGriff)
1979: Age, cunning, deceit and treachery can defeat youth and skill (Message on a T-shirt sold by John George)
1979: Old age and treachery will overcome youth and skill (Bohor’s Bromide in the book “1,001 Logical Laws”)
1982: Old age and trickery will overcome youth and skill (Motto for cross-stitch pattern)
1984: Experience and treachery will beat youth and enthusiasm (Labeled an “old saying” by race car driver Johnny Rutherford)
1986: Age and guile beats youth and talent every time (Announcer Don Davis)
1988: Age and treachery overcomes youth and exuberance (Curler Lil Werenka)
1991: Old age and treachery always overcomes youth and skill (Lyric in a song by Waylon Jennings and Willie Nelson)
1995: Age and Guile Beat Youth, Innocence, and a Bad Haircut (Book title by P. J. O’Rourke)
2009: Age and treachery will overcome youth and skill (Attributed to Fausto Coppi)
2015: Old age and treachery will always beat youth and exuberance (Attributed to David Mamet)
Below are details for selected citations in chronological order.
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