So Hield has proven he is willing to work to get better and Murray hasn't? Hield averaged 17.4 PPG his junior year. Murray averaged 20 PPG his freshman year. Seems Murray worked harder in one year than Hield did in three years. Murray shot 45% his freshman year. Hield shot 41% his junior year. Murray shot 41% from 3. Hield only shot 36% from 3 his junior year.
I don't see how Hield has some special drive to improve when he only distinguished himself as an elite college scorer after 4 years. But even in his 3rd college season, he was way behind where Murray was his first. Why should anyone doubt that Murray can easily catch up to Hield and surpass him considering his freshman season beat Hield's junior season?
Because Murray lacks the physical tools to compete at the NBA level, and he lacks the skill set to overcome those physical limitations.
If Murray was 6'6" with a 6'9" wingspan then I would say he should be fine, as heh as the size to get his shot off against NBA shooting guards.
If Murray was his current size but was an above average run/jump athlete, then I would say he should be fine, as he has the quickness to beat his man off the dribble and get to the basket - this in turn would force NBA players to respect his quickness and sag off abit, which would allow him to get his shot off.
If Murray has his current level of size and athleticism but was an outstanding ballhandler (e.g. Kyrie) then I would say he should be fine, as he has the ball handling moves to freeze the defence, hence creating space so he can get his jumper off.
The problem is that Murray has neither one of those tools. Against college competition he is perfectly fine, but against NBA competition he lacks the size, length, athleticism and ball handling skills to be able to get his shot off against superior NBA defenders.
He's not going to grow taller, he's not going to grow longer, and he's not going to get more explosive athletically - so the only way Murray really has a hope of being able to create his own shot against NBA defence is if he can develop into an exceptional ball handler. So far he hasn't show even the slightest indication that he's capable of that. Even if he becomes an above average ball handler, that still might not be enough for him to be able to score on anything beyond running off screens and hitting catch-and-shoot threes off screens.
When it comes to Hield:
1) We already know that he has the size (6'5" height, 6'9" wingspan) to shoot over a lot of NBA shooting guards
2) He's not an elite athlete, but he is a very good one. He's quick and strong enough that teams cannot afford to overplay him on the perimeter - if they close out too hard he CAN put the ball on the court, blow by them and get to the basket. Teams need to respect the fact that he is a threat to drive, and that will help him get space to get his shots off.
3) Hield isn't just a catch and shoot guy. He has gotten very good at shooting off the dribble from three and from midrange. If he drives and you play him for the drive, then he can stop on a dime and pull up from midrange - something he's very effective at.
All of these things are made possible because Hield is a multi-dimensional threat offensively. He can score from deep three point range, from midrange, off the dribble, off the catch, at the basket, and in transition. You need to pick your poison when guarding him, which Is why he absolutely tore up the competition this year.
Hield already has the physical tools AND the shooting/scoring ability. His only real limitations are his ball handling, playmaking and defensive consistency - all things that he should be perfectly capable of improving on with experience if he puts in the work (which we know he's willing to do).
Murray is only 19, which would indicate high potential
if his biggest weaknesses were skills that can easily be improved on. Unfortunately his biggest weakenesses are physical attributes that almost certainly will NOT improve with age/experience, so that limits how relevance his youth actually is. The only limitations he has that can have potential to improve are his ball handling and passing - neither is likely to be enough to propel him to stardom.
Simmons, Ingram, Brown - those guys are all in the same boat as Hield.
* Simmons weakness is his shooting, something that can be improved with training
* Ingram's weakness is his thin physique, something easy enough to remedy with training
* Brown's weakness is his shooting - again, something easy enough to work on
Of all the guys projected to go top 6, Murray is probably the only guy who has significant limitations (size/length and athleticism) that he cannot improve on. Even Bender (who is seen as a high risk prospect) has the potential to improve on all his weaknesses.