It's a very crude statistic, but 'points per answer' is interesting. For the top 10 users on SO, the values (as of approximately 2014-11-08 17:40Z), the statistics are:
- Jon Skeet (725k) — 30379 answers, 23.86 points per answer (31 questions)
- Darin Dimitrov (551k) — 20636 answers, 26.69 points per answer (34 questions)
- BalusC (521k) — 15726 answers, 33.11 points per answer (14 questions)
- Marc Gravell (504k) — 13117 answers, 38.40 points per answer (43 questions)
- Hans Passant (499k) — 14408 answers, 34.66 points per answer (2 questions)
- VonC (442k) — 11394 answers, 38.79 points per answer (16 questions)
- CommonsWare (402k) — 13594 answers, 30.87 points per answer (16 questions)
- SLaks (413k) — 13660 answers, 30.23 points per answer (51 questions)
- Greg Hewgill (378k) — 5219 answers, 72.49 points per answer (46 questions)
- paxdiablo (363k) — 8007 answers, 45.31 points per answer (154 questions)
The statistic is crude because it ignores the points from questions, but given the small number of questions compared to the answers (only paxdiablo has a question/answer ratio of more than 1% in this sample), this effect is probably small.
It is quite clear that Jon Skeet writes a lot of answers (half as many again as Darin Dimitrov); that's how he gets a lot of points. It's not so much that every answer of his gets a lot of up-votes (though some undoubtedly do) as that he writes a lot of answers that get some up-votes (and many of them are accepted, and the acceptance points no longer count towards the daily cap, though they did at one time early on).