Call me crazy, bit i think adding Dwight would impact this team ... almost as much as Durant would.
I'm not sure quite what to say here. It's like the last five years didn't happen.
In the past 5 seasons Dwight has averaged Per 36 numbers of:
* 19.4 points on 12.6 FGA, 13,7 rebounds, 1.8 assists, 2.0 blocks, 1.4 steals, 57% FG
* 17.1 points on 10.8 FGA, 12.5 rebounds, 1.4 assists, 2.5 blocks, 1.1 steals, 58% FG
* 19.5 points on 12.0 FGA, 13.0 rebounds, 2.0 assists, 1.9 blocks, 0.9 steals, 59% FG
* 19.0 points on 12.5 FGA, 12.7 rebounds, 1.5 assists, 1.6 blocks, 0.8 steals, 59% FG
* 15.4 Points on 9.5 FGA, 13.2 rebounds, 1.5 assists, 1.8 blocks, 1.1 steals, 62% FG
I can think of only two big man in the NBA who have put up Per-36 averages to over the past 5 years which rival those, and they are Demarcus Cousins and Tim Duncan.
If you look at those stats above, you will see that every time Dwights scoring averages have gone down their has been a correlated reduction in his field goal attempts.
* In 12-13 his scoring dropped by around 2 Points Per 36, and his FGA drobbed by 1.6 FGA Per 36 minutes. Considering Dwight connected on 57.3% of his FG that year, it is safe to assume that an extra 1.8 FGA Per 36 Minutes would have seen his scoring average jump by about 2.08 Points Per 36, to an average of 19.2 Points Per 36.
* In 2015/16 his scoring dropped by 4.5 Points Per 36, and his FGA dropped by 3 FGA Per 36 minutes. Considering Dwight connected on 62.0% of his FG that year, it is safe to assume that an extra 3 FGA Per 36 Minutes would have seen his scoring average jump by about 3.72 Points Per 36, to an average of around 19.12 Points Per 36 minutes.
What's my point?
My point is that Dwight hasn't become any less productive on the offensive end then he was in his prime, he's simply not being featured in his teams' offences as much. When his scoring dropped to 17 a game he was playing second fiddle to Kobe Bryant on the Lakers. When his scoring dropped to 15.8 and 13.7 the past two years he was playing second fiddle to James Harden.
What do Kobe and Harden have in common? Both are low percentage, high volume scorers who have to have the ball in their hands 95% of the time, and who get their points by throwing up a ridiculous number of shot attempts. Any time Dwight has played on a team where he wasn't playing behind a ball-hogging chucker, he's been an 18 - 20 PPG scorer.
Basically what it comes down to is this. Give Dwight a decent amount of touches (say, 12 shots a game) and you're looking at just about the most efficient 19 points and 13 rebounds (per 36 minutes) that is humanly possible, along with some outstanding paint protection as a consolation prize.
Is he better then Durant? Of course not.
But I feel that Durant offers us two things (scoring and perimeter shooting) that we need at an elite level.
On the other hand, I feel Dwight offers us several things (rebounding, shotblocking, a second scoring option, a paint presence on offence and toughness) at an exceptionally high level.
People would hold Durant in higher esteem simply because his greatest gift is scoring, and scoring is the "glory stat" that everybody loves to worship. But scoring isn't the only thing that matters, and when Durant isn't scoring he's not doing a whole lot to help your team win. When Dwight isn't scoring, he can STILL dominate a game.
Also Durant is a ball hungry player - he NEEDS the ball in his hands 24-7 to be truly effective. That's exactly why he works so poorly with Russell Westbrook (stats show that each is most effective then the other isn't on the court). So how well would Durant work with a guy like Thomas, who also needs the ball in his hands to really be effective?
Dwight on the other hand doesn't need the ball in his hands to dominate. You can call two plays for him the entire game, and he can still finish up with 12 points, 18 rebounds and 4 blocks.
I have never liked Dwight Howard as a person. I think he's goofy, immature, bratty, unpredictable and volatile. But the man has incredible talent, and he can straight up play.
I would argue that upgrading our starting center (which pretty much doesn't exist right now) to Dwight Howard might well bring a bigger net gain to our team then upgrading our starting small forward (who is already pretty good) to Kevin Durant.
Given the choice I'd still take Durant over Dwight obviously (based on star power alone) but if Dwight ended up having more impact for us then Durant in the win column, I wouldn't be all that shocked.
Remember, Durant has spent the majority of his NBA career playing on some of the most utterly stacked teams in the entire league, and he's still only made the finals what - once?
Dwight made the finals playing on a team full of glorified role players, and he went through Lebron's Cavs to get there. I don't care what anybody says, that is one hell of a feat.