Phillis began his senior career with Glenelg in the SANFL in 1966 as a
Centre half back under the coaching of
Len Fitzgerald. He was soon moved to
Centre half-forward and later
Full-forward by incoming 1967 coach
Neil Kerley. This lateral thinking paid off with Phillis kicking a then SANFL record of 137 goals in 1969. He polled 18 votes in the 1969
Magarey Medal to be the first player to win the medal having played chiefly at full-forward for the season. He played in Glenelg's 1973 Grand Final win over
North Adelaide at the
Adelaide Oval, and in losing Grand Finals for Glenelg against
Sturt in 1969 and 1974,
Norwood in 1975, and
Port Adelaide in 1977 and 1981. Quirkily enough, in the 1973 grand final win by Glenelg over North Adelaide, he failed to kick a goal. In perhaps Glenelg's most memorable non-finals game, Phillis scored 18 goals at
Glenelg Oval in Round 18 of the 1975 SANFL season as part of the team's record-breaking 49.23 (317) to 11.13 (79) win over
Central District, and kicked his 100th goal for the season during the match. Phillis is the highest goal scorer in the history of the Glenelg club, having kicked 836 goals in his 268-game, 14-year career, an average of 59.8 goals per season and 3.12 goals per match. He also kicked 48 goals in twelve night series matches for Glenelg, bringing his overall total to 884 goals from 280 matches in Glenelg colours. This is all the more remarkable when considering that former league leading goal kickers
Jack Owens (1927–1928, 1932) and
Colin Churchett (1948–1951) are also Glenelg champions. , Phillis is third on the all time SANFL goal scoring list behind legendary North Adelaide full-forward
Ken Farmer (1,417 from 1929–41), and Port Adelaide champion
Tim Evans (992 from 1975–86): Owens sits 4th on the list with 827 goals, while Churchett is 15th with 555. After retiring as a player, Phillis continued to pursue his chosen career as an architect. ==Notes==