It's amazing what 3 similar philosophies for drafting can do to a farm. I'll take three: Paul Snyder, Roy Clark and now Ronit Shah. Honorable mention Brian Bridges(Mike Soroka, Austin Riley, Ian Anderson, and Kyle Wright).
Under Snyder, he preferred high schoolers who were good athletes. Given the choice between a pitcher and a position player with high upside, he went pitcher. Interestingly enough, he was my unofficiaI reason I first started going to minor league parks and eye ball scouting myself. (Chipper, Glavine, Andruw, Javy, Avery, Marquis are among his picks). I got to see the "Great 8" in Richmond...what a team.
Roy Clark - Bigger on who the player was as a person and not just skill. He wanted to know everything about the player they were bringing in. Pitcher heavy as well. (Freddie, JHey, McCann, Wainwright, Morton, Kimbrel, Frenchy....SCOTT THORMAN.....). Highly rated system a lot and he loved high schoolers as well.
Ronit Shah - Completes drafts on his own departments scouting and doesn't necessarily go with consensus. (Good and bad). Only 3 years here I think, Waldrep, Hackenburg (wasn't high on), Kuehler, Caminiti, Holton, Sinnard, Southisene, Lodise...so far). Obviously the jury is still out. However, last year's draft was a complete shift in thought. Position players who are athletes with upside. I think the failure rate may be high, but the ones that hit...will be solid.
Now, as I mention just a few snippets of the scouting direction, I wouldn't say currently that there are generational players in the system...yet. There are quite a bit of solid to above average players who could contribute and be quite good. Any list that the experts give...I give...a couch potato gives is going to be all over the place. That's a reflection of the system and up to this point is pretty on par with what we see and what is produced.