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September 09, 2016

Trio of Phillies top prospects honored with prestigious Owens Award

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072716.Phils.Hoskins Ryan Lawrence/PhillyVoice

Rhys Hoskins, waiting on deck while Dylan Cozens hits, hit 38 home runs at Double-A Reading, which was the franchise record entering 2016. Cozens hit 40 home runs this year.

WASHINGTON – Three of the Phillies top prospects were honored as the recipients of the organization’s prestigious Paul Owens Award on Friday: first baseman Rhys Hoskins, outfielder Dylan Cozens, and right-hander Ben Lively.

Hoskins and Cozens, who hit a combined 78 home runs this season at Double-A Reading, are the third set of position players to win the annual award, which was instituted 30 years ago to honor the top player and pitcher in the Phillies minor league system. The last position player tandem to take the Owens Award was Jeff Key and Jimmy Rollins in 1997.

Hoskins, 23, hit .281 with a .943 OPS, 38 home runs, and 116 RBI in 135 games. Hoskins, a former fifth-round pick out of Cal-State Sacramento who was profiled in a PhillyVoice Q&A this summer, had three multi-home run games at Reading this season.

Cozens, 22, broke Reading’s franchise record with 40 home runs in 134 games. The Phillies second round pick in 2012, Cozens hit .276 with a .941 OPS and an Eastern League best 125 RBI. He also stole 21 bases in 22 attempts.

Cozens put together what was just the 22nd 40-home run season in minor league baseball since 1980 and, as the owner of the most home runs in all of the minor leagues, will be awarded with the Joe Bauman Home Run Award at the Winter Meetings … an award that comes with a nice cash prize.

Cozens and Hoskins are among just six players in Reading history to hit more than 30 home runs in a season, along with Darin Ruf (38 in 2012), Ryan Howard (37 in 2004), Greg Luzinski (33 in 1970), and Willie Darkis (31 in 1983).

“The hardest thing to develop is power and the hardest thing to find is a run-producing bat. We feel like both of these guys are going to be that,” said Phillies director of player development Joe Jordan said in a press release. “It has been a fantastic experience to watch them, and the reward was seeing them develop as players. We couldn’t have drawn it up any better. I think both of them should be a bright part of our future.”

Tug Haines/Reading Fightin Phils

Lively, the latest pitching prospect acquired in a trade to pitch his way onto the big league radar, won the 2016 Owens award as the organization’s top minor league pitcher. The 24-year-old Lively went 18-5 with a 2.69 ERA in 28 starts between Triple-A Lehigh Valley and Double-A Reading … and that doesn’t include his masterful performance in Game 1 of Governor’s Cup semifinals on Wednesday, the first playoff game for Lehigh Valley IronPigs in five years.

Lively, acquired for Marlon Byrd on New Year’s Eve 2014, led the International League in WHIP (0.935) and opponents’ batting average (.196).

“Ben opened himself up in spring training and said, ‘I’ve got to do what I can to get better,’ and he has taken a huge step forward,” Jordan said. “His delivery is sound and he is a big, strong guy that lives at the bottom of the strike zone. We saw this summer what he has a chance to be.”

The Phillies minor league system as a whole had quite a 2016 season. Here are some notes from the team’s crack media relations staff:

 • All of the Phillies domestic minor league affiliates finished above .500 for the first time since 1953 (9 teams over .500 in 1953).

 • Considering only domestic minor league teams, the Phillies’ combined .595 minor league winning percentage (412-280) ranked first among all organizations.

 • The Phillies had four minor league affiliates qualify for the playoffs, the most in one year since MiLB’s records began tracking all teams’ postseason appearances in 2005.

 • The Phillies’ six domestic minor league teams combined to post a 3.34 ERA and a .262 team batting average in the regular season. Every team had an ERA of 3.85 or lower, and four of the six hit better than .260.

 • Prior to 2016, the last time that six Phillies minor leaguers had 20 or more home runs in a season was 1983 (seven players).

 • Class A Clearwater, the only team among the top four affiliates that did not advance to the postseason, Clearwater, finished with the best record in the Florida State League (82-54) for the second straight season. It was the second-best record in the Threshers' 13-year history.


Follow Ryan on Twitter: @ryanlawrence21

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