Caratini having a nice year also.
The Rome pitching staff is a bit of a red flag. We have not done a good job reloading on pitching talent at the lower levels in the last few years. Given the attrition you want at least a half dozen bona fide pitching prospects in Low A.
Elias Arias has been killing it in the DSL. He should be stateside soon since he's a bit older than most DSL guys. He has a great eye at the plate and very good speed I would love to see him against better comp.
http://www.milb.com/milb/stats/stats.jsp?pos=OF&sid=milb&t=p_pbp&pid=649379
The weakness in the Rome staff reflects several things. First the college pitchers we drafted in 2013 (except for Hursh) have not panned out. Most college pitchers end up pitching in Rome their first full season and the weak Rome staff mainly reflects on that group from the 2013 draft. Second the international pipeline has not been that strong when it comes to pitching lately. It hasn't helped to have guys like Luis Merejo and Nelson Leon go down to injury last year. Finally, drafting and signing one HS pitcher per year pretty much guarantees that you won't be getting much from that particular source of pitching talent. We did step up last year and take three HS pitchers (Salazar, Stiffler and Grosser) but they are all in Danville right now. Hopefully we'll see some progress out of those three.
I think it also represents a philosophical change. Atlanta has moved away from guys who have "pitchability" that can command the strike zone and more towards guys who have "stuff" that can overpower folks. Carlos Salazar is a great example of this, as is Alec Grosser to this point. I think Grosser is probably a bit farther along, which is why it is surprising that they pushed Salazar to Rome so early.
Luis Merejo was a stud prior to his injury. It will be interesting to see how he comes back.
11 steals. Also leads the team in extra base hits and home runs. Maybe one of those kids who didn't stand out at 16 or 17, but continued to develop in whatever league they have in the Dominican Republic for kids that don't sign with a major league team at a young age.
Another guy off to a great start is Dilmer Mejia, a lefty from Nicaragua. He's the youngest player on our DSL roster (won't turn 17 until July 9), so what he is doing is doubly impressive.