Curious Hair wrote:
Here are winning percentages since 2002:
numbers
Bears right in the middle as far as the regular season goes.
Came up with a little napkin math for postseasons. I gave each team two points for making the playoffs. Winning the wild card or a first-round bye was worth one additional point. Winning the divisional game was worth another three, winning the conference was worth another six, and winning the Super Bowl was worth another twelve for a total of 24. Obviously, this system isn't perfect, because no Buffalo Bills fan feels losing four Super Bowls is equal to winning two, but weighting each round paints a somewhat clearer picture than just ranking playoff records. So again, since '02:
1 New England 128
2 Pittsburgh 78
3 Indianapolis 68
4 Seattle 67
5 N.Y. Giants 57
6 Green Bay 56
7 Denver 55
8 Baltimore 50
9 Carolina 39
10 Philadelphia 39
11 New Orleans 38
12 Tampa Bay 28
13 San Francisco 27
14 Atlanta 22
15 Chicago 21
16 Arizona 20
17 N.Y. Jets 20
18 San Diego 20
19 Minnesota 15
20 Cincinnati 14
21 Tennessee 14
22 Dallas 13
23 Oakland 12
24 Kansas City 12
25 Washington 9
26 Houston 8
27 St. Louis* 6
28 Jacksonville 5
29 Detroit 4
30 Cleveland 2
31 Miami 2
32 Buffalo 0
So once again, the Bears are firmly in the middle of the pack, though being next to the Atlanta Falcons and Arizona Cardinals in this napkin math can't exactly fill you with the pride and joy of Illinois. Essentially, the Bears may have only made three postseasons, but went deep twice, which is still better than the Bengals' seven (!) first-round outs, but not better than the Falcons being sorta good a lot.
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Molly Lambert wrote:
The future holds the possibility to be great or terrible, and since it has not yet occurred it remains simultaneously both.