Quoting myself from the last thread (comparison of the Kings to the Grizzlies):
trex_8063 wrote:The Kings' all-time rs win% is .456 vs .413 for the Grizzlies; even in the SAME 24-YEAR SPAN that the Grizzlies have existed in, the Kings rs win% is .453.
Their all-time % of seasons going to the playoffs is comparable (.408 vs .417). In the same 24 years that the Grizzlies have existed, they've made the playoffs just ONE less time (9 times, vs 10 for the Grizzlies), though have a better playoff record in those appearances (5-9 (.357) vs 4-10 (.286) for the Grizzlies).
They've been as far as the conference finals 8 times to the 1 time for the Grizzlies (have had one trip since the Grizzlies became a franchise; had 7 other trips prior to that [including one in the post-merger era]).
And they have the one pre-shotclock title.
For me, the above establishes the Grizzlies as the marginally worse franchise during their same years of existence ('96-'19):
the ONE additional first-round exit for the Grizzlies is not enough to overcome the fact that the Kings had a notably better rs win% (.453 vs .413) and a better playoff win%, with the same number of CF appearances, and especially noting the Kings also peaked higher (both in terms of rs wins and SRS) during this time-period [they actually have MULTIPLE seasons better than the Grizzlies' peak].
So given I have the Kings as slightly better during the same span of years, the
previous 47 seasons for the Royals/Kings have to not only be poor, but SO poor as to push them behind the Grizzlies.
In those other 47 seasons, they had a .458 rs win%, made the playoffs 20 times (.426 of all seasons), had a 10-19 playoff series record (.345), made the CF 7 times (.149 of all seasons; includes one in the post-merger era), and won a title in 1951.
Now, I'm torn on how I should consider additional years [of the older franchise] when comparing two franchises with great disparity in the number of years played. Part of me thinks I should compare those additional years to a mean or average: any amount ABOVE average is of benefit to that older team; any amount BELOW average is of detriment to them.......because, at least in a comparison to a franchise like the Grizzlies, to do otherwise is basically giving extra credit for almost any kind of longevity (even
bad longevity).
Another part of me thinks I should compare the quality of those additional years to the quality of the team they're specifically being compared to.......because [arguably, anyway] to do otherwise could be construed as rewarding the Grizzlies for a shorter history and/or penalizing the Royals/Kings for longevity (even though those extra years are certainly no worse than the Grizzlies' history).
I'm not sure which is the better philosophy; I think I'm sort of subconsciously aiming for some kind of happy medium between the two [perhaps erring ever so slightly toward the first one].
So given those first 47 years of the Royals/Kings are kinda bad [but not godawful; certainly no worse than the Grizzlies, and arguably a pinch better], and given I think they're a little ahead of the Grizzlies for the '96-'19 span, where does that leave me? I'm still not sure. Will compare one of these two teams to the Pelicans next.....
"The fact that a proposition is absurd has never hindered those who wish to believe it." -Edward Rutherfurd
"Those who can make you believe absurdities, can make you commit atrocities." - Voltaire