The full thing, according to a friend:
Venezuelan shortstop Kevin Maitan trains with Henderson Martinez, whose program has produced Angels lefthander Ricardo Sanchez (2013) and Mariners center fielder Brayan Hernandez (2014). With teams scouting those high-profile players, they have also had several years worth of looks at Maitan, who many consider the top player in this year’s class and one of the best 16-year-old Venezuelan prospects to come along in years. At 6-foot-2, 175 pounds, Maitan is a switch-hitter with power, athleticism, above-average speed and a strong arm. While some scouts expect Maitan to outgrow shortstop and end up at third base, he should start his career at shortstop and some believe he can stick there. Overall, Maitan is one of the most exciting 16-year-old prospects to come along in a while with high-ceiling upside. The Braves are the favorites for Maitan, whose bonus will certainly surpass the $4 million mark and set a record for a Venezuelan amateur.
Venezuelan catcher Abrahan Gutierrez, who trains at Carlos Guillen’s academy, was a high-profile player last summer, having played on Venezuela’s 15U World Cup team in Mexico in August 2014 when he was still 14. Gutierrez, a big-bodied 6-foot-2, 205 pounds, is likely to sign with the Braves and command a bonus of around $3.5 million, which would likely be the No. 2 bonus in the country after Maitan, though several scouts said the righthanded-hitting Gutierrez didn’t make the progress they were hoping to see from him over the past year.
Dominican shortstop Yunior Severino is another seven-figure likely to sign with the Braves for a bonus that could get close to $2 million. Severino will probably move off shortstop, but he’s a switch-hitter who impressed scouts with his quick wrists, bat speed and power. The Braves are also the favorites to sign another shortstop, Livan Soto out of Venezuela, likely for just north of $1 million. Soto is a skinny 5-foot-11, 165 pounds with soft hands in the field and good bat control with a line-drive stroke even if there isn’t much power right now. Dominican righthander Juan Contreras should command a similar bonus to Soto and is expected to end up the top-paid pitcher in the class, aside from Cuban players. The Braves are the favorite to land Contreras, who has been up to 94 mph already and should throw even harder once he fills out his 6-foot-1, 180-pound frame, though he will have to improve his erratic control.