I guess I like years because it helps me put into perspective how often a certain event is likely to be affected. And it helps remind us that the draft lotto only happens once a year. We don't have unlimited rolls of the dice to fool around until something turns up in our favor.8.5% is not a huge number, I didn't mean for anyone to have that as a takeaway. I guess my mind processes things differently, but thinking in years is not helpful for me. The percentages are good enough. For others it might be though.
Maybe another analogy is useful. At the end of the game down one point, how many seconds are you willing to waste trying to foul an 81.25% foul shooter rather than an 82.75% foul shooter? When the numbers look like that (1.5% apart) we're willing to say they're pretty much the same and not care which player we foul. But when the difference in odds between #1 and #4 worst records are 1.5% for getting the #1 pick, we somehow imagine that this is a big, important difference worth doing all manner of team degrading to achieve (I exaggerate, but maybe only a bit?).
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