katero
Jun 26, 2026

How the Phillies' Brandon Marsh evolved from lovable goofball to impact hitter while staying true to himself

Story byYahoo SportsYahoo SportsVideo Player CoverJake MintzSenior writerThu, June 25, 2026 at 8:57 PM UTC·5 min read

WASHINGTON, D.C. — At first, Brandon Marsh was kind of a bit.

It was autumn 2022, and the Philadelphia Phillies were an unstoppable baseball joy ride overflowing with colorful personalities. A booze-soaked backup catcher who rarely played. A center fielder who handed out cigarettes after playoff wins. A guy nicknamed Wolfie because he howled in the shower. It was enough bro-tastic bravado to make a frat house blush.

AdvertisementAdvertisement

But none of it was as visually striking, as loud or as unapologetically offbeat as Marsh.

Here was this hirsute, hippie-looking character built like an SEC wideout who barked at his teammates, poured water on his head before every inning and hollered intricate rap lyrics to nobody in particular. On a team of established megastars such as Bryce Harper and Kyle Schwarber, Marsh was thought of as a character first, a ballplayer second.

Four years on, Marsh is still that guy, a lovable goofball with an infectious energy and a zest for life. He's also something entirely different: an impact hitter on a team that needs him to be one.

Now 28 years old, the gregarious outfielder is enjoying the best season of his career. He's hitting .321, the fifth-highest mark in MLB. His .860 OPS is 10th among qualified outfielders. Always skilled at elevating the baseball, Marsh currently leads the league in something called "Launch Angle Sweetspot Percentage," a dorky jambalaya of a statistic that rates how often a player makes contact at optimal angles. In a month's time, he will almost certainly appear in his first All-Star Game at his home ballpark.

AdvertisementAdvertisement

The potential was always there.

Marsh was acquired at the 2022 deadline from the Angels for Logan O'Hoppe, then a big-time prospect and now Anaheim's No. 1 catcher. Upon Marsh's arrival, the Phillies had high hopes for the former second-round pick, a two-sport athlete from a Georgia high school. Marsh, only 24 at the time, would contribute to that season's playoff push, yes, but he would also be around for the long haul. Philadelphia's front office believed the über-physical outfielder could develop into a needle-moving player.

Four years later, Marsh has rewarded that faith. But like all successful ballplayers, he's doing everything in his power to stay even-keeled.

"Once you put your head on that pillow," the self-proclaimed weirdo told Yahoo Sports before a recent game, "it really doesn't mean anything. Next day, next page."

Marsh attributes his run of on-field success to a change in mentality that he adopted after returning from a rehab stint in Triple-A last May. The lefty swinger had gotten off to an abysmal start to the season before a hamstring issue put him on the injured list. He appeared in six Triple-A games, a longer-than-normal rehab stint, before being recalled to the bigs. It was a convenient opportunity for a reset.

AdvertisementAdvertisement

When he showed back up in Philly, Marsh realized he'd been trying too hard, wanting it too much, letting all the expectations, both internal and external, weigh him down. So he decided to think less and let his athleticism take over in the batter's box. He also put more of an emphasis on learning from the armada of superstars with whom he shares a clubhouse. Copy their routines, their attitudes, their mindsets, he thought, and see where it leads.

"I know I can't be Kyle Schwarber. I know I can't be Bryce Harper. But I can be me," Marsh said. "So I'm learning from the dudes that are paving the path for me."

Other posts