You should care about the cranking amps the battery is able to discharge. What good is a fresh 12v battery, if it is can not discharge enough power to drive the starter, engage the solenoid, turn the engine, power the headlight and light the plugs.
The fresh battery in my Kawaski would never turn over the BDM.
The load during the cold start of a BDM has to be more than 300 amps.
A battery design to discharge 465 amps should have an easier time, even as it ages (sulfonates the lead). All the Battery Tender does is keep the battery read for that first big discharge of amps. It won't prevent sulfonation.
My recent example, I disconnect the Battery Trender, roll the bike out of the garage, starts fine, ride to the bar, park on the sidewalk, security tells me to move it, bike barely turns over but starts, back to the drinks and MILFs, time to leave and the battery is toast.
Moral of the story; buy sufficient cranking amps, more is better. Replace the battery after about a year.
There's no point in comparing the life of a car battery to a motorcycle, apples and oranges. The battery in the Moto Guzzi, Kawasaki and Harley all last about one year...all on battery tends