Introduction

There’s a certain grin that comes with this song — the kind you wear when you know time has taken a few things from you, but not the ones that really matter.

“As Good As I Once Was” isn’t Toby Keith bragging about youth. It’s him telling the truth with a raised eyebrow and a laugh that carries a little wear in it. The song plays like a series of everyday moments — a bar stool, a boxing match on TV, a woman who still catches his eye — where Toby admits, honestly and without apology, that he’s not as fast, as wild, or as reckless as he used to be.

But here’s the heart of it: when it counts, when life nudges him to step forward, he’s still got one good round left.

That’s why the song hits home. It’s not about denial — it’s about acceptance with dignity. Toby sings like a man who’s made peace with the years behind him, without surrendering the spark that got him through them. There’s humor here, but it’s earned humor. The kind that only comes from living long enough to laugh at yourself and still stand tall.

For a lot of listeners, especially those who’ve crossed a few decades themselves, this song feels like a quiet nod of understanding. You hear it and think about your own stories — the things you don’t do anymore, and the things you absolutely still would, if the moment was right.

That’s Toby Keith at his best. Not preaching. Not performing. Just telling you, with a grin and a  guitar, that getting older doesn’t mean getting smaller. Sometimes it just means knowing exactly when to show up.

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THEY CALLED HIM ‘THE GUY WITH THE BOOT.’ THEY HAD NO IDEA HE WAS THE MAN WHO BUILT A HOME FOR THE ONES FIGHTING FOR THEIR LIVES. Half the internet knew Toby Keith as the “boot in your ass” guy. The other half didn’t bother to know him at all. They took the easy road—reducing a lifetime of grit and heart to a single, angry chorus. Here is what they missed. They missed the 20 No. 1 hits. They missed a debut like Should’ve Been a Cowboy that defined an entire decade. They missed an artist so fiercely protective of his craft that he fought to be recognized as a 100% Songwriter until his final day. But the part that cuts the deepest isn’t on any chart. While the world was busy labeling him, Toby was busy building. He founded the OK Kids Korral—a sanctuary in Oklahoma City. It wasn’t a slogan. It wasn’t a photo-op. It was a free home for children battling cancer, built so that families already facing the worst fear of their lives wouldn’t have to worry about a hotel bill. Then, in 2021, the battle came to his own doorstep. Stomach cancer found him. He didn’t retreat. He didn’t hide. He stood on the Grand Ole Opry stage, visibly worn, and sang Don’t Let the Old Man In. He booked sold-out shows in Vegas just weeks before the end. He was still the Big Dog, showing us that when the shadows get long, you don’t stop standing. On February 5, 2024, Toby Keith passed away at 62. You didn’t have to love his politics. But reducing a man like this to a single song was always a lazy way to ignore the man he really was. He spent years making room for children fighting for their future—and in the end, that same fight came for him, too.