There are at least 41 million reasons why, but Al Jefferson cites another one to explain why he is playing in Charlotte on a team firmly aimed at the Eastern Conference playoffs despite its losing record.
He explains it this way:
"I wanted to do the unthinkable," he said.
For a guy who has made the playoffs just twice in his first nine NBA seasons, the unthinkable was signing with a Bobcats team that won fewer games in two seasons combined — including a 7-59 record in that 66-game labor lockout season — before he arrived after he signed a three-year, $41 million free-agent contract last summer.
"What I did a lot of guys probably wouldn't do," he said. "Come to one of the worst teams in the league last year and help turn them around. That was something I wanted to do. I feel if I come here and things go great, it's something everybody will remember."
A team that won barely 10 percent of its games two seasons ago and 26 percent of them last season approached the .500 mark after the Bobcats beat the Wolves on Friday night for the ninth win in the past 13 games.
Jefferson is the biggest reason why.
He missed nine games in November because of an arthritic ankle and didn't fully recover until January. Since then, he is one of two players in the NBA who are averaging 25 points and 10 rebounds a game.