With a major league outfield that may be boxing out Jacoby Ellsbury and a Triple-A unit with Clint Frazier and Dustin Fowler, the Yankees don’t need another outfielder on the scene soon.

So Blake Rutherford has time. Even if he might not need all of it.

“There’s times he makes this game look very, very easy at the plate,” Single-A Charleston manager Patrick Osborn said of Rutherford, the Yankees’ first-round pick in 2016. “For a kid straight out of high school, you don’t often see that. A lot of times kids are drafted by what they can become, but this guy shows glimpses of now-potential or now-ability.”

The Yankees swoon over those abilities in the California product, who was rated higher than the 18th-overall pick that he slipped to, much to the Bombers’ delight.

“He was one of the top players in the draft,” said Gary Denbo, the Yankees’ vice president of player development. “For such a young hitter to use all the fields, to hit with power to all fields, he’s been impressive.”

The buzz is building about Rutherford just a year into his development. The 6-foot-3, 195-pounder, who bats right-handed, has been the biggest revelation from last year’s class, slashing .280/.355/.394 with Charleston. The Yankees see a five-tool player who will develop more power — he has one homer in 175 at-bats this year — and has the outfield know-how and baseball intellect elsewhere. He had stolen nine bases this year before being sidelined last week with a foot contusion.

The Yankees are trying him in each outfield position, though Osborn praised his natural center field ability.

“What I see in him a little bit is Grady Sizemore, the former Indians outfielder,” Osborn said. “They kind of have the same skillset. Grady can run, a good outfielder, has a good hit tool, can hit for some power. Leadership capabilities, that type of game.”

Rutherford has become the jewel of a 2016 class that still is very much unknown. Second-round pick Nick Solak, a second baseman out of Louisville, has taken a fast track, beginning this year with High-A Tampa. With power still developing, Solak, 22, has shown he isn’t overmatched and has a batting eye the team values. The .279 hitter struck out 36 times in 179 at-bats — to go with 36 walks.

“Nick plays the game the way it’s supposed to be played. He’s an exceptional baseball player,” Denbo said.

Digging deeper into the draft unearths questions and potential. Third-round pick Nolan Martinez — an 18-year-old right-hander grabbed out of high school in California with a fastball, curveball and changeup that Denbo praised — hasn’t pitched this year, sidelined with a sore shoulder.

The pitcher Osborn commended most, though, was 10th-rounder Trevor Lane, a left-handed reliever nabbed out of the University of Illinois.

“This kid’s going to pitch in the big leagues,” Osborn said. “He has the right mentality to pitch in the back end of the game.”

The 23-year-old southpaw has struck out 28 in 29 innings this year out of the bullpen, allowing just three earned runs (0.93 ERA).

“Saw him in spring training, and right away I was like, who is this kid?” Osborn said. “He’s a bulldog, left-hander with a plus-fastball that goes 94, really good breaking ball and he’s shown some glimpses of a pretty good changeup.”

Each pick, of course, is a lottery ticket, a new set coming with this year’s edition on Monday. The biggest curiosity that has arisen from last year’s draft, though, is how quickly the Yankees will try to cash in on Rutherford.