To answer your question, ask Kodak.
As for your comments on push processing, I must remind you that a push process usually only increases contrast, not true speed. If true speed were to be increased, then it would be done at constant contrast. And BTW, that is one of the ways to read those curves. Pick a constant contrast for all developers and start from there.
I picked Tri X because that is what I found handy on the EK web site. Most have been removed by now. Which one would you have picked?
PE
It would be more interesting, PE, if you started with T-Max films, as their info papers can be had just as easily. It gets more interesting in there than with Tri-X. Contrast index curves on page 16 for T-Max 100 show that for small tank at 20 C, with stock D-76 (and XTOL) only 2 minutes (6-8 min) of development separate contrast index of 0.55 to 0.8. If you are after 0.65, you have to be very precise timing your process. Develop for 10 minutes, and technically it is not a pictorial film anymore. With 1:1 dilutions both developers get easier to handle, usable contrast raise is between 9 and 13 minutes. However, 6 minutes separate the same span of contrast index for stock T-Max developer. Obviously the chemistry was advanced with this developer, beside it being sold as liquid. IMO, this behavior of T-grain films more than anything explains the popularity of dilute developers with them. It also means that if the film is sent to a lab using stock D-76, using median devt time as you told me earlier, my chances to get back a film without one stop push, uncalled for, are slim, but they get much better if the lab happens to use T-Max or T-Max RS developer. It is interesting that for rotary tube and tray, D-76 is omitted from T-Max data altogether, available data only for XTOL and XTOL 1:1 show that they behave similarly (rapid rise of contrast), but at a different starting time point. There is, of course, a disclaimer that all of the above is only representative of a sample tested, and does not necessarily apply to the roll you purchased. I have not found a lab that uses XTOL, but from the above it follows that if I were interested in a T-Max film developed in a lab, I'd rather give it away to one using T-Max developer. Sounds almost trivial.