All I did was point out a statistical correlation between blocks and rebounds.
And there is none.
Before the Bucks game Smith was blocking 2.7 shots per game.
However he was averaging only 4.5 defensive rebounds per month compared to 6.28 the month before.
Last night Camby had 11 blocks and 17 defensive rebounds. Camby blocks from the weakside just like Smith but it doesn't hurt his rebounding.
This year Howard is averaging .6 more block per game and 2.8 more defensive rebounds per game than last year.
You can disagree that jumping for a block takes you out of position for a rebound if you want.
Nice strawman. I never said anything even remotely like that.
in order for their to be a rebound there has to be a missed shot. A layup or a dunk (which is where Smith gets a lot of his blocks) wouldn't be a rebound if Smith didn't contest them. They would be made baskets.
Time for you to wave the white flag. Bye.