That's entirely irrelevant, but nice try. As if somehow Stepan would have stopped scoring over the next 48 games. Even if he reverts to his .6 PPG pace he established in his sophomore season, he still finishes the year with a better total that Setoguchi's one good season.
Your "argument" is that you can somehow see that Stepan is "regressing" -- which of course you championed at this time last season as well before he went on to be the leading scorer on the team -- while nobody else can,
and yet you blindly ignore the fact that Setoguchi has never even remotely come close to those point totals again in 4 years.
Facts vs opinion and projection. Now I'm sure you'll counter with some bogus argument about Setoguchi not being given favorable minutes, and Stepan gets to play with Nash and Kreider. All while ignoring the fact that Setoguchi's best year came from playing on a line with one of the best playmaking centers in the NHL