TAMPA — If you happen upon Cadwell, Ga., a tiny town located 137 miles south of Atlanta, please don’t mention that homegrown product Dustin Fowler is a highly touted baseball prospect.

The Yankees’ center fielder wants to keep it a secret.

“They probably don’t know [of his prospect ranking],” Fowler, whom Baseball America identified as the Yankees’ ninth-best youngster, said of his family. “No one probably knows.”

Down here in George M. Steinbrenner Field, people know. On Tuesday, the 22-year-old anchored an all-rookie, all-hyped outfield, with Clint Frazier in left field and Aaron Judge in right field, and enjoyed the best day of the trio. He contributed two singles in two at-bats to the Yankees’ 10-inning (yeesh), 7-6 Grapefruit League victory over the Rays while recording a pair of putouts.

“He’s swung the bat well,” manager Joe Girardi said of the Yankees’ 18th-round selection in the 2013 amateur draft. “He’s played good defense. He’s run the bases well. You kind of see a young man growing up in front of you, is what we’re seeing.”

“He flies under the radar in a lot of ways. I don’t think he gets the credit that he deserves,” Frazier, who struck out in all three of his at-bats, said of Fowler. “But he’s the most polished player I’ve seen as a position player since I’ve been here. It’s exciting to play alongside of him.”

Said Judge, who struck out twice and flied out to the warning track in right field: “He’s going to surprise a lot of people. I’m excited for him. He’s one special kid and one hell of a teammate, too. I love having him out there in center.”

If Judge (now at .333/.417/.571 this spring) attains his goal of being the Yankees’ starting right fielder, then he won’t have Fowler next to him, barring an injury epidemic. Veterans Jacoby Ellsbury and Brett Gardner, the former the team’s everyday center fielder and the latter perfectly capable of sliding over from left field to center, are still around and not going anywhere, making Fowler’s future Yankees fit uncertain. Fowler, slashing .353/.421/.471 for the spring in nine games here, should start the season at Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barres after slashing .281/.311/.458 — hitting 12 homers, 15 triples (!) and 30 doubles — in 132 games for Double-A Trenton last year.

Baseball America ranked Frazier, he of the bright red hair and the bombastic tweets, second in the Yankees’ system and the 6-foot-7 Judge, known for his light-tower power, sixth. You can understand how Fowler, 6 feet and 195 pounds with boring brown hair, gets lost in this crowd. You understand how much he appreciates such anonymity by speaking with him.

“I’m not really much of a social media guy,” he said with a smile. “I don’t really know much of anything.” His friends, too, he insisted, don’t follow the prospect rankings.

“They’re a lot like me,” Fowler said. “They just kind of take it slow, from Georgia. No one gets much into everything like that.”

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For the Yankees to get even more into Fowler, the areas for improvement stand as obvious. That underwhelming on-base percentage must get better; he walked only 22 times in 574 plate appearances last year.

“I’ve always been an aggressive hitter,” Fowler said. “Just picking pitches that are in the zone that [I should] probably take, get to the next pitch, get a little deeper.”

Also under the heading of managing his aggressiveness, Fowler swiped 25 bases last year … and was caught 11 times, a 69.4 percent success rate.

“I’m learning times I can and can’t go,” he said. “I kind of pushed the limits a little too much last year.”

As I interviewed the soft-spoken Fowler, Judge watched us from a distance, nodding his head in approval. As we finished, I asked Judge to grade Fowler’s media performance.

“Fantastic,” Judge said. “You’ve got a good one there.”

They will be finding that out shortly in Cadwell if Fowler’s 2017 goes as well as his 2016. He can’t keep it on the down-low forever.