It raises some questions, for sure. With some variance of body proportions/leverages, a push up is going to be around 70% of your bodyweight. One would assume, being able to perform some amount of push ups would roughly equate to being able to bench press 70% of your bodyweight. On that scale, a 325 lbs man who can perform some amount of pushups should be, in theory, perhaps capable of bench pressing 225 lbs.
On the (highly debatable) scale of being reasonably strong, its often been argued that a "reasonably strong" male should be able to bench press their bodyweight for "reps", but the average American male is ~200 lbs so, on that scale, 225 lbs bench press would still have them being well above average of what some/many consider to be "strong"
Of course, with these global statistics, we can immediately eliminate the female population across the board as the percent of women who can bench press 225 lbs is insanely small. And then if you consider that the average Asian and African male populations probably weighs somewhere in the 130-140 lbs range, its puts it into perspective.
However, in strength based sports or Western gym culture in general, or even in your average American high school football locker room or your average owner of an autographed copy of Cam Hane's book, there is nothing particularly impressive about the ability to bench press 225 lbs, but it appears to still be far, far more rare than what people who have regular exposure to people bench pressing 225 lbs+ seem to think it is. Myself included.