Btw, these aren't my own opinions. This is just things I've heard from multiple people who follow college basketball who have more valuable opinions than Kobe Bryant - who by the way, is on record as saying that college basketball doesn't help players: http://ftw.usatoday.com/2014/01/nba-kobe-bryant-college-basketball-ncaa ... So if anything he's just being PC when specifically asked about buddy hield.
Ok- I mean it's certainly hard to challenge the unknown opinions of unknown other people. The fact that Kobe isn't a great analyst doesn't matter. Nobody is judging Hield based on what Kobe says, despite the thread title.
What doesn't add up is the idea that most if not all "good" analysts are ranking Hield in the Nick Young / Redick / Ben Gordon camp. None of those guys would be lottery picks if teams had a crystal ball to see their career arcs, let alone if that arc was their ceiling.
And I guess that speaks volumes about how this draft is perceived. Two guys with star potential and a lot of role players. It's not unheard of... Anthony Bennett went #1 in a draft... nobody really had him projected as a future star either.
Like it was mentioned before... #3 in this draft might be equal to the #10 pick in the 2014 draft. And Hield might not even go in the Top 5.
It actually makes a lot of sense. Chad Ford and Kevin Pelton suggested Boston's options at #3 were between Murray, Dunn, Bender and Chriss. So based on that, looks like they are projecting Hield 7th at the highest. And Pelton said that Boston should consider moving #3 for Jusaf Nurkic. Nurkic was selected #16 in 2014 and spent most of last season injured. So there you go... two draft experts who think the #3 pick is the equivalent of a mid 1st in 2014... and don't see Hield going 3rd.
And this is the same kind of stuff the people I know who follow College ball are telling me... that there's nobody with star potential available at #3 (though nobody knows anything about Bender) and that Buddy Hield's ceiling is limited. And fwiw, I'm pretty sure it was on Bill Simmons podcast that they suggested Hield would fall somewhere in the Nick Young -> JJ Reddick spectrum. Whoever drafts Hield will be hoping he can be more Reddick than Nick Young.
I don't disagree with -all- of this, but you're taking some small factoids and leaping to conclusions.
Bennett was a terrible choice at #1 in the end, but there were plenty of analysts saying he was the best offensive player in the draft, and did in fact have star potential and could even be a 20-10 guy some day. Most had him in the 5-10 range and virtually all saw him with a very high ceiling. Heck, SBNation had a big board with him at #1:
http://www.sbnation.com/nba/2013/6/4/4378776/anthony-bennett-scouting-report-nba-draft-2013. So your comment "nobody really had him project as a future star" is totally false.
As for Nurkic, he'd go higher than #16 in a redraft, so no, that doesn't mean #3 = #16. Ask Pelton if his trade idea means that #3 is equivalent to a mid 1st rounder from 2014, and he'd say no. Your logical leap.
Again, there's some risk attached to Hield no doubt. #3 is pretty high for him. But all this stuff about #3 = #16, and ceiling = projection, and seniors never succeed, and Anthony Bennett wasn't even projected as having star potential? None of it checks out.
It's pretty simple, really. Drafting 22 year old college players in the top half of the lottery is risky business. But it's no worse than projecting 18 year olds from overseas, or bouncy big guys with crazy wingspans who weren't even good in college... and those are consistently considered acceptable risks. Guys like Brandon Roy and Damian Lillard were really good players well worth high picks (Roy's injury problems notwithstanding), and are just as valid as the Doug McDermott et al comparisons. There's just no need for anyone to claim they know with certainty that Hield won't be more than a role player in the pros. Nobody knows that.