@shadyJ - So what you're really boiling it down to is that sealed designs have less output and therefore more distortion if pushed past a certain point, which all in all congeals with the aforementioned idea that ported boxes produce MORE OUTPUT, MORE EFFICIENTLY (at the cost of group delay distortion, however inaudible it may be).
Thus, you need a larger sealed sub with more power to achieve the same output levels with lower distortion as a ported box. But a sufficiently large sealed sub will always outperform the ported sub in basic design (i.e. group delay) as that flaw is inherent to the design of the ported sub and cannot be removed no matter how much money you put into a ported design. In other words, money no object, you'd still wanted sealed for the lowest possible overall distortion because there is no way possible to overcome the one flaw of a ported design, which is the delay induced by the back wave of the driver.
If cost, power requirements and/or space issues are a serious impediment you would likely have to consider a ported design for such constraints and generally speaking those are the only reasons to consider a ported design in the first place.
Would you say those are accurate statements?