Brewers' top pick Fischer wants to model game after Bryce Harper

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MILWAUKEE – They’re not entirely sure where he will land on the diamond, but when has that stopped the Brewers when they see a college bat with power and plate discipline?

The Brewers selected University of Tennessee third baseman Andrew Fischer in the first round of the 2025 MLB Draft, marking the second straight season they’ve used a premium pick for a power-hitting Volunteer. And like first baseman Blake Burke, Milwaukee’s supplemental first-round pick last year at No. 34 overall, Fischer’s calling card is his left-handed power. He ranked third in NCAA Division I with 25 homers this season and fourth with 63 walks.

“Come on now, it’s a great program,” Fischer said on MLB Network, not of the Tennessee program, but his new potential home with the Brewers. “I just want to go out there and play and I want to win. The Brewers have a ton of young talent and it’s a great place to be.”

At No. 20 overall, Fischer was the third Tennessee Volunteer taken in the Draft after left-hander Liam Doyle went to the Cardinals fifth overall and shortstop Gavin Kilen went 13th to the Giants.

The comps will come with time, but there’s one player Fischer wants to model his game after, and it’s someone with a similarly big personality: 2010 No. 1 overall pick Bryce Harper.

“I’m working on my swing in the cage, so I’m trying to hit like Harper as much as I can,” said Fischer, who grew up on the Jersey Shore. “Obviously he has different rhythm in the box and a different approach sometimes, but how could you not watch a guy like that? …

“He brings a ton of energy, and that’s just what I was taught from a young age, that you have to go out and have fun when you’re playing. I try to bring that to my game at the highest level at the time.”

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Fischer, who played at Duke and Mississippi in his first two collegiate seasons, broke out in a big way with the Volunteers in 2025. He bumped an already impressive .397 OBP at Ole Miss in 2024 to .497 at Tennessee. He drew 63 walks, one fewer than his previous two seasons combined and fourth in Division I, and cut his strikeout total from 53 to 42 on the way to being a unanimous First Team All-American by D1baseball.com.

Fischer also elevated his power, ranking second in Division I with 25 homers and collecting 41 extra-base hits, which took his slugging percentage from .643 a year ago to .760, just outside the nation’s top 10.

“[There was] a split in the room a little bit, but a decent chunk of our group thought he was the best college hitter in the Draft this year,” said Brewers VP of amateur acquisition Tod Johnson. “We're pretty excited to add that kind of bat to our system."

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With Fischer’s power comes positional versatility. Between summer ball and his time in the ACC and SEC, Fischer played first base, second base, third base and left field, though he’ll likely stick on the infield corners as a professional. He was Tennessee’s primary first baseman.

“We’ll send him out at third base,” Johnson said.

Tennessee did not play a game in 2025 in which Fischer, who is ranked as the No. 29 Draft prospect this year by MLB Pipeline, did not reach base. He flashes plus power from the left side to all fields and in 2025 he cut down on chasing pitches out of the strike zone, as evidenced by his Tennessee-record walk total. Fischer was a wrestler at Wall Township High School in New Jersey and gets plenty of strength out of his 6-foot-1, 210-pound frame.

“Great personality, but a little bit of a misunderstood personality. He’s a really lovable kid,” Tennessee head coach Tony Vitello said on MLB Network. “He’s just a big teddy bear on the field that loves competing, loves being around the guys, loves being around the group.”

And he can hit.

“He was the anchor of their lineup,” Johnson said. “They didn’t quite make it back to the College World Series this year, but they were a really strong team and he was definitely the best hitter on that team, the guy you game plan around. We’re excited to get that kind of bat. We’ll get him out at third base and give him every chance to play there.”

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Here are the Brewers' other picks from Day 1:

Brady Ebel, SS (No. 32 overall, compensation round)

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J.D. Thompson, LHP (No. 59 overall, second round)

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Frank Cairone, LHP (No. 68 overall, competitive balance round B)

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Jacob Morrison, RHP (No. 94 overall, third round)

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