Really? Are you sure about that?
How about scoring? That number is 38th.
http://www.nba.com/statistics/playe...itScope=GAME&qualified=N&yearsExp=-1&splitDD=
http://www.nba.com/statistics/playe...itScope=GAME&qualified=N&yearsExp=-1&splitDD=
Looked like 34th to me.
In case you haven't been paying attention, in order to be an all star level power forward, you usually have to be top 3 in your conference, minimum. Last time I looked, both teams that made the finals had an all star level power forward performing on their team. Not a 7th to 8th best in the western conference alone.
We have already been over this. If you went through the listings of Western Conference Power Forwards from last year, the highest he could have possibily been rated was 6th in this conference alone. That doesn't even consider the whole league, and to top it off, there are other players who are comparable to what he brings to the table. Every single one of those power forwards listed ahead of him (Gasol, Boozer, Nowitzki, Stoudemire, Duncan) make the playoffs every year. That means against those teams you are going into the game at a disadvantage. When the difference is 2 to 4 rebounds per game, that is 2 to 4 more possessions per game that the other team gets to try to score. When you are playing in games decided by a point, that is huge.