There is a natural tendency to try to justify a choice, but people are going overboard with the Tatum comparisons and the thoughts of him playing the three while Barnes plays the 4. Dude is a 4/3. He simply does not have the handles to create his own shot right now. You can’t play the three at a high level in the NBA if you can’t face up and drive and score/create.
I watched the game below live. Murray had a great stat line (so don’t even start with the cherry picking nonsense), but nothing really popped beyond his three point shooting. Count the number of turnovers (some turnovers were unaccredited) when he drives. And look at how he scores when he’s in the paint. He’s grinding through guys. He’s not Tim Duncing dudes with footwork or fadeaway or skill. This game was against Trayce Jackson Davis. Dude will prob be an UDFA when he comes out. Those points in the paint will evaporate against NBA length. His saving grace will be that three point shot initially. The rest will take work. On defense, he’s aware. So if he’s playing within a team defense, should do well. His ceiling is a 4/3 version of Harrison Barnes. He pierces it, if he can play the 5. Then his ceiling becomes Al Horford. Good, but never elite.
I watched the game below live. Murray had a great stat line (so don’t even start with the cherry picking nonsense), but nothing really popped beyond his three point shooting. Count the number of turnovers (some turnovers were unaccredited) when he drives. And look at how he scores when he’s in the paint. He’s grinding through guys. He’s not Tim Duncing dudes with footwork or fadeaway or skill. This game was against Trayce Jackson Davis. Dude will prob be an UDFA when he comes out. Those points in the paint will evaporate against NBA length. His saving grace will be that three point shot initially. The rest will take work. On defense, he’s aware. So if he’s playing within a team defense, should do well. His ceiling is a 4/3 version of Harrison Barnes. He pierces it, if he can play the 5. Then his ceiling becomes Al Horford. Good, but never elite.