Shame he is a guard.
If he was European, enigmatic, and playing in an obscure overseas league he'd be the consensus top pick in the draft.
TP! But you forgot non-athletic!
Well, there is not "if" on the non-athletic part for Murray so it seems it was left out.
He's average. As a minimum, considerably better than Hield. Given his age and production, I'd love to have him at 3.
Problem is he's an awful defender, struggles offensively versus athletic defenders, and his assists (2.2) to turnovers (2.1) is horrible for a player that projects as a combo guard. Kevin O'Conner is really down on him and has him much lower than others.
What was Hield doing at the same age?
I don't like this kind of comparison. To me, you draft based on the known talent and perhaps a bit of projection but not too much.
I like that kind of comparison. Say two kids graduate high school the same year.
One is a 17 year old who finished his Senior year with 3.6 GPA
The other is a 21 year old who finished his Senior year with a 3.8GPA, after failing Senior year 3 times.
Which do you expect will have a better shot of succeeding in College?
That's a horrible comparison on so many levels, just as the case that the only reason that seniors do well at the collegiate level is because they're playing against freshman, which simply isn't the case. I'm not saying that Hield will be a 25 ppg scorer at the next level, but to right him off because of his age is ridiculous. You're dismissing the fact that players improve from year to year, their roles may change, coaches are much more familiar with them as prospects and will have a pretty good idea on how to stop them in terms of game planning, and only a handful of college players are one-and-dones, which means that he's not just competing against fresh meat every game, he's competing against many of his contemporaries who have also improved from year to year, like Taurean Prince.
Also, academic success in high school doesn't automatically guarantee that the student will perform the same way or better at college, and there are tons of people who do far better, academically, while in college than they did high school. Why? Because the expectations, format, teachers, tests, and schedules are completely different as opposed to high school. If you want to get an idea of what college is like in terms of scheduling, etc., while you're still in high school, fail a class and take summer school. It's practically the same thing as college.