For those who want some context for those shooting percentage numbers, here it is:
The number of players who can sustain an 18.5% shooting percentage, or what Lee has averaged the last two years, is absurdly small. Only 29 players since the 1967 expansion have done it (minimum 70 goals and 160 games played), and 23 of them never played a game after 1995. None are currently playing.
There are six active players with at least 70 career goals (min 160 games played) who have a career shooting percentage above 15%: Byron (18.0%), Stamkos (16.7%), Marchand (15.8%), Henrique (15.5%), Stone (15.5%), and Hudler (15.0%). Lee ranks 11th on that list at 14.6% for his career.
If you sort younger, active players (age 33 or less) by career goals scored, there are 94 forwards meeting the criteria with 175+ career goals...a number Lee should almost certainly reach by that age. Stamkos and Marchand are the only two on the list with a career shooting percentage above 14.8% which means 98% of the group is below that number...with 96% being below 14.6%, and 89% being below 13.8%. The median value for this group of younger prolific goal scorers is 12.0%, which is why I used that number above. Approximately 78% of the group is above the average forward shooting percentage of 10.8%.
The moral of the story is that prolific goal scorers (even elite ones) have a very hard time sustaining 14.6%+ shooting percentages over the long haul in the modern NHL, with most coming in decidedly lower than that. Maybe Lee is one of the select few that bucks the trend, but I hope my team isn't banking on it.