Reds’ 2B Surges on Twitter, Asks for Extension

Picture of Brandon Phillips from his Twitter account

Brandon Phillips' photo from his @DatDudeBP Twitter account

He’s arrogant, famously calling the St. Louis Cardinals a bunch of “little bitches,” but Brandon Phillips is quickly establishing himself as Major League Baseball’s must-follow athlete on Twitter. Is it a tactic to get the Cincinnati Reds to grant him a rich extension, or trade him to a major market team that can pay him big coin?  

Phillips’ Twitter followers surging

Phillips’ followers surged from just over 50,000 to 65,000 in the three days ending June 19, after an ESPN.com story about the Cincinnati Reds second baseman’s use of Twitter to improve his image. Phillips tweets as @DatDudeBP, and is a Mobile Sports Report recommended athlete to follow.

Twitter as negotiating tactic? 

Favorable accounts of Phillips’ Twitter use comes at an auspicious time for the all-star second baseman. Days after the ESPN.com story broke, Phillips asked the Reds to negotiate a contract extension, according to an NBC Sports report.

Phillips told ESPN he will keep clubhouse talk off his Twitter account, but the timing of the ESPN story closely followed by a demand for a contract extension proves that he knows a large and favorable fan base will improve his chances of becoming one of baseball’s highest-paid athletes. Phillips has a $12 million team option for 2012, which ESPN said the Reds may not be able to pick up. Major League Baseball’s trading deadline is July 31.

Even if Phillips doesn’t start sending pay-me-or-trade-me tweets, the day is soon approaching when high-stakes contract negotiations become a part of an athlete’s online repertoire, and something fans will want to follow on smartphones and iPads.   

“The Ochocinco of baseball”

According to Phillips, Twitter is part of a more benign strategy. Twitter gives fans a chance to get to know him better, he told ESPN.

Phillips tweets occasional contests, which in the past have awarded fans spring training visits, dinner, and trips to San Francisco. According to ESPN, Phillips’ use of Twitter may have contributed to improved clubhouse maturity and leadership in 2011.

In addition to famously slurring the St. Louis Cardinals, which caused bench-clearing brawls the next time the two teams met, Phillips has been a controversial player in his seven-year major league career for failing to run out balls to first, laughing and joking when his team has trailed and other on-field lapses.

Phillips acknowledged that he’s after the celebrity athletes can get by being wired to their fans, including another famous Cincinnati pro.

“I want to be the Ochocinco of baseball,” Phillips told ESPN. Of course, Phillips was referring to the Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver who once threatened to be the first player to produce in-game tweets and has attracted greater than 2.13 million followers to his @ochocinco account.

Comments

  1. “I want to be the Ochocinco of baseball.” Remember when kids wanted to be the next Kirk Gibson? Or someone who could play the game instead of act like a clown on a reality show? Welcome to sports in the 21st century says grumpy grampa sports man.

  2. If Brandon Phillips really wants to use Twitter to let fans know the real him, he should try emulating someone from the National Football League who still uses his real name. There are plenty of NFL players who do a lot more for the fans than Ochocinco. The only thing “Chad Johnson” accomplishes on Twitter is a way to distract people from the fact he can’t get separation from decent CBs anymore.

  3. An outstanding comment, and right on the money. The walls are tumbling down, and MLB is recognizing that things have changed forever. Imagine this: what would have happened if Curt Flood was refusing a trade to the Phillies today? He wouldn’t have been so isolated in his courageous decision to challenge MLB ownership, right? What if Denny McClain had access to Twitter after his 30-win season, when he went A LOT crazy and was consorting with known gamblers. He’d be as popular as San Francisco’s Brian Wilson, perhaps. The point is that your comment is AWESOME. You are picking up on the fact that every player has a personalized channel of communication, and what they do with it is going to be worth millions of dollars as more and more fans recognize that the 360-degree view of the game is THE ONLY view of the game to have. Keep reading and writing in. Thank you,

    John Evan Frook, senior editor, Mobile Sports Report

Trackbacks

  1. […] interesting as some of the players already have large followings and often have very interesting things to say. Now it is sanctioned by MLB. Included in the lineup is David Ortiz (@davidortiz),Jose Bautista […]

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