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Brett Phillips

Born: 05/30/1994 (Age: 21)
Bats: Left Throws: Right
Height: 6' 0" Weight: 195
Primary Position: CF
Physical/Health
Skinny, but with a high waist that suggests that more good weight can be put on. Phillips is built like your prototypical athletic centerfielder.
Evaluator Christopher Crawford
Report Date 06/13/2015
Dates Seen 6/12/2015
Affiliate Lancaster JetHawks (High A, Astros)
MLB ETA Risk Factor OFP Video
2017 55 No
Tool Future Grade Report
Hit 55 Above-average bat speed from the left side. There's very little wasted movement, and the hands work into hitting position early with a slight drop/hitch, and though there is some backwards movement his quick wrists make up for it. The swing has excellent plane, and he showed a willingness both in BP and in game to hit the ball to the opposite field. There's some swing and miss here, mostly do to the length of the swing, but it's improved from where it was in high school and the strikeout totals shouldn't prevent an above-average hit tool when all is said and done.
Power 45 Natural loft to the swing along with extremely strong wrists allow for some explosion. Power grades down a bit because he doesn't incorporate enough of his lower half with a small stride and the swing is mostly upper-body. Swing stays in sync though and as he gets strong there's no reason he can't be a 12 to 15 homer guy at the big league level. Overall power numbers are definitely inflated by the friendly confines of the league, though.
Baserunning/Speed 60 A plus runner, borderline 65. Easy gliding actions and a body type that suggests that he won't lose that speed as he matures into the body. Ran a 4.06 to first on hard contact to right-center.
Glove 55 Didn't see much action, but looked like a centerfielder. First step was back on balls hit his way, and took solid routes.
Arm 70 A cannon. Phillips has excellent mechanics and a very quick arm, and there's loads of carry on his throws. Sets his feet well, and got himself into throwing position like an elite centerfielder does.
Overall

This was the first time I'd seen Phillips in person since he was a senior at Seminole High School in Miami, and the improvement was impressive. There's a nonzero chance that he ends up with five average to above-average tools, and he's a lock to stay in centerfield assuming something weird doesn't happen developmentally. The ceiling is leadoff hitter who wins games with his glove, with fourth outfielder/late baserunning threat off the bench as a floor.

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