As we get stuck between waves of May and June impact call-ups, we figured we would empty the mailbag and answer some interesting questions on some red-hot Double-A sluggers. They might not be anywhere near being ready for the majors, but their current hot streaks in the minors are certainly noteworthy right now.

The first question(s) come(s) from Rob in Ann Arbor: "It is time to change the Kevin Mench-Taylor Teagarden watch to the Nelson R. Cruz-Max Ramirez watch. Cruz is out of control at Triple-A right now in five categories, and Ramirez is the best hitter in the Texas League right now."

Minor League stats
Interested in seeing how your favorite prospects are performing in the minor leagues? You can find a player's stats on his page or you can sort stats for Triple-A and Double-A by clicking here .

Emack: Well, again, our Prospect Watch focuses on minor leaguers owned in at least 1 percent of CBSSports.com's leagues. Cruz has had his shot and has proven to be a Quadruple-A player -- too good for Triple-A and a slug in the majors. But Ramirez should certainly be among the most-owned minor leaguers right now. Pick up the mashing catcher prospect in all leagues.

We mentioned Max's roll in our office Thursday and fellow Fantasy Baseball analyst David Gonos said, "Call him Mash Ramirez."

Yes, indeed, we love it! Great nickname. In fact, we will steal it for another hot Double-A prospect (see below).

Two teams "gave up" on this Ramirez guy? He was stolen from the Indians organization in the Kenny Lofton trade and was sent from Atlanta to Cleveland in a Bob Wickman deal. Two years, two trade-deadline deals involving a potentially elite catching prospect.

Ramirez is hitting .500 (18-for-36) in his past 10 games and his season's average up to .385 in Double-A. The 23-year-old single-handedly forced the Rangers organization to move catchers Jarrod Saltalamacchia to the majors and Teagarden to Triple-A. Ramirez has seven homers, 23 RBI, 21 runs, a .467 OBP and a .683 so far in Double-A.

You want in on the next Geovany Soto-like breakthrough Fantasy star at the thin catcher position? Perhaps Ramirez is your guy.

Next ...

Rob, Ann Arbor: "On another note, what do you know about Luke Hughes, a second baseman in the Minnesota organization? He has all of a sudden exploded in Double-A after not showing much previously. He is an Aussie, so maybe he has caught up to his learning curve? What is your 411 on this guy?"

Emack: He is on some kind of roll right now and warrants attention in long-term keeper leagues. Not listed anywhere in the Baseball America Prospect Handbook -- the bible for keeper leaguers -- Hughes has hit .388 with nine homers, 20 RBI, 31 runs, four steals, a .448 OBP and a .682 SLUG.

That comes after the 23-year-old posted merely a .263 average, .322 OBP and a .382 SLUG in five seasons in the Twins system, mostly in Class A. We cannot explain his breakthrough nor say he is a top prospect now, but his hot bat certainly should earn him a look.

(Emack's note to himself: This Rob, Ann Arbor guy is good. Don't get in a league with him.)

Next ...

Michael Siaca, Brooklyn, N.Y.: By now you have heard enough about Angel Villalona. I actually stumbled over his name recently. How true or really good is this kid? I'm in several leagues this year, but only one is a keeper league and, like most owners, always looking for the next big thing.

Emack: Villalona is rated the best prospect in the Giants organization by Baseball America, but that is a suspect farm system and a really long-term projection on a 17-year-old Dominican third baseman in low Class A. Villalona is hitting just .186 with a .263 OBP and a .284 SLUG. His numbers last year were equally unimpressive.

If Fernando Martinez, 19, doesn't impress us in Double-A, Villalona isn't even a blip on the Fantasy radar at this point. Talk to us in three years, perhaps.

If you want the next big thing right now, it is Brewers outfielder Matt LaPorta. He is a monster in Double-A. Take that flier in deeper leagues if he is available. His 3 percent ownership in CBSSports.com's Fantasy leagues suggests he is.

The Brewers don't have a real spot for LaPorta this season, but if anything happens to Bill Hall, Corey Hart or even Prince Fielder, the scorching-hot LaPorta could be ushered to the big leagues. He is an elite talent and warrants a claim in all long-term keeper leagues and any deeper NL-only formats for potential second-half rewards this year.

Despite having Fielder already at superstar status, the Brewers selected the slugging Florida Gator first baseman with their first-round pick, seventh overall, in the 2007 June draft. After being the first two-time SEC player of the year, the Brewers drafted him and made him a Carlos Lee-like left fielder. A defensive butcher with a serious bat. A Ryan Braun-quality prospect.

LaPorta's bat looks far too good for Double-A in his first full pro season. The 23-year-old is hitting .421 in his past 10 games with four homers, 14 RBI and 13 runs. For the season, he is sitting at .330 with 10 homers, 36 RBI, 28 runs, a .423 on-base percentage and a .696 slugging percentage.

In ranking him No. 1 among Brewers farmhands, Baseball America said this spring: "As with 2005 first-rounder Ryan Braun, LaPorta shouldn't need much more than a full season in the minors before becoming an impact hitter in Milwaukee."

After Braun's smashing 2007 debut, you have to take note of LaPorta right now.

And, yes, we buried the most significant name in this exercise at the end. Among the red-hot Double-A bats -- catcher Ramirez, 2B/OF Hughes and 1B/OF LaPorta -- it is Mash LaPorta who could make a big-time splash sooner rather than later for Fantasy owners.

Prospect watch

Each week, we break down all of the minor leaguers who are owned in at least 1 percent of our Fantasy leagues. This will be your essential guide to unearthing the elite prospects before they hit the big time.

We now have in-season daily minor league stats on our player profiles for all of these players. So, to highlight that enhancement, we give you this week's lists with their season's minor league stats at their current level and separate the hitters and pitchers into two charts.

CBSSports.com's most-owned minor-league hitters
Player TM Pos Own% Level AVG HR RBI R SB OBP SLUG
Jay Bruce CIN CF 29 Triple-A .299 5 23 17 7 .326 .521
Josh Fields CHW 3B 22 Triple-A .240 4 14 17 3 .318 .396
Cameron Maybin FLA OF 22 Double-A .262 4 10 19 6 .402 .439
Chase Headley SD 3B 11 Triple-A .265 3 13 18 0 .344 .419
Colby Rasmus STL OF 11 Triple-A .208 5 14 19 5 .307 .358
Andy LaRoche LA 3B 10 Triple-A .292 2 4 5 0 .452 .542
Adam Lind TOR LF 9 Triple-A .365 3 16 9 1 .423 .587
Ian Stewart COL 3B 7 Triple-A .246 7 23 24 3 .331 .518
Jerry Owens CHW CF 7 Triple-A .267 1 5 10 8 .351 .349
Carlos Gonzalez OAK OF 5 Triple-A .343 3 10 11 0 .410 .514
Steve Pearce PIT RF 4 Triple-A .252 3 20 13 2 .303 .389
Matt Antonelli SD 2B 3 Triple-A .192 3 8 17 2 .325 .365
Jayson Nix COL 2B 3 Triple-A .200 1 2 6 1 .310 .400
Andrew McCutchen PIT OF 3 Triple-A .290 6 17 23 9 .389 .508
Matt Wieters BAL C 3 High A .340 5 18 22 1 .420 .540
Matt LaPorta MIL OF 3 Double-A .330 10 36 28 0 .423 .696
Josh Barfield CLE 2B 2 Triple-A .254 4 12 15 4 .301 .396
Dallas McPherson FLA 3B 2 Triple-A .298 10 22 21 2 .405 .638
Matt Murton CHC LF 2 Triple-A .333 0 4 6 1 .477 .333
Reid Brignac TB SS 2 Triple-A .241 3 14 17 1 .287 .402
Chris Davis TEX 3B 2 Double-A .305 9 25 28 4 .352 .576
Fernando Martinez NYM OF 2 Double-A .244 1 9 15 3 .276 .333
Travis Snider TOR OF 2 Double-A .143 2 4 7 0 .294 .250
Kendry Morales ANA 1B 1 Triple-A .291 5 30 13 1 .320 .470
Joe Koshansky COL 1B 1 Triple-A .290 5 19 22 0 .397 .551
Ryan Shealy KC 1B 1 Triple-A .226 8 16 17 0 .305 .478
Alexi Casilla MIN 2B 1 Triple-A .209 0 2 10 4 .336 .242
Scott Moore BAL 3B 1 Triple-A .175 1 3 9 1 .277 .281
Neil Walker PIT 3B 1 Triple-A .186 4 16 16 0 .236 .372
Jesus Flores WAS C 1 Triple-A .161 1 7 8 0 .288 .268
Josh Anderson ATL OF 1 Triple-A .303 1 12 15 11 .353 .369
Nate Schierholtz SF OF 1 Triple-A .304 2 17 17 7 .360 .471
Brandon Jones ATL OF 1 Triple-A .266 0 10 14 2 .341 .339
Kevin Mench TEX RF 1 Triple-A .267 3 18 16 0 .322 .438
Brent Lillibridge ATL SS 1 Triple-A .172 1 13 12 8 .243 .247
Michael Moustakas KC 3B 1 Low A .213 4 9 12 3 .274 .333
Josh Vitters CHC 3B 1 Low A .214 0 1 1 0 .214 .429
Lars Anderson BOS 1B 1 High A .264 5 15 21 0 .369 .471
Christopher Marrero WAS OF 1 High A .245 5 16 14 0 .336 .453
Taylor Teagarden TEX C 1 Double-A .169 2 6 6 1 .279 .305
Austin Jackson NYY OF 1 Double-A .280 0 5 18 6 .366 .360
Jordan Schafer ATL OF 1 Double-A .091 0 0 1 1 .231 .182
Jose Tabata NYY OF 1 Double-A .232 0 14 11 4 .321 .268
Elvis Andrus TEX SS 1 Double-A .264 0 13 14 8 .313 .304
CBSSports.com's most-owned minor-league pitchers
Player TM POS Own% Level W-L ERA K BB HA WHIP IP
Francisco Liriano MIN SP 61 Triple-A 0-1 5.40 10 12 12 1.800 13 1/3
Rich Hill CHC SP 47 Triple-A 0-1 3.60 5 1 7 1.600 5
Homer Bailey CIN SP 32 Triple-A 4-3 2.72 39 12 37 1.058 46 1/3
Clayton Kershaw LA SP 32 Double-A 0-3 1.11 36 11 23 1.052 32 1/3
Ian Kennedy NYY SP 26 Triple-A 1-0 0.00 8 0 1 0.136 7 1/3
Bartolo Colon BOS SP 18 Triple-A 1-0 0.00 5 1 1 0.400 5
Franklin Morales COL SP 11 Triple-A No stats yet
Chuck James ATL SP 8 Majors 1-1 1.59 10 8 15 1.353 17
David Price TB SP 7 TBD No stats yet
Kei Igawa NYY SP 6 Majors 3-3 3.86 40 12 33 1.134 39 2/3
Adam Miller CLE SP 6 Triple-A 0-0 2.84 10 5 19 1.895 12 2/3
Gio Gonzalez OAK SP 4 Triple-A 0-2 5.00 21 16 31 1.741 27
Anthony Reyes STL SP 4 Triple-A No stats yet
Rick Porcello DET SP 3 High A 2-4 1.98 22 12 25 1.018 36 1/3
Chris Volstad FLA SP 3 Double-A 3-1 2.58 32 17 33 1.103 45 1/3
Jason Bergmann WAS SP 2 Triple-A 2-2 3.68 20 8 21 1.318 22
Jeff Niemann TB SP 2 Triple-A 1-1 3.27 9 5 8 1.182 11
John Patterson TEX SP 2 TBD No stats yet
Carlos Carrasco PHI SP 2 Double-A 3-2 3.25 39 14 30 1.222 36
Wade Davis TB SP 2 Double-A 3-2 3.51 29 13 34 1.146 41
Justin Masterson BOS SP 2 Double-A 1-2 3.25 34 10 23 1.193 27 2/3
Jake McGee TB SP 2 Double-A 3-2 4.20 30 13 22 1.167 30
Kyle Davies KC SP 1 Triple-A 3-2 2.61 22 13 24 1.194 31
Kazuo Fukumori TEX RP 1 Triple-A 0-1 1.74 9 2 5 0.677 10 1/3
Philip Humber MIN SP 1 Triple-A 1-3 4.97 20 13 38 1.759 29
Eric Hurley TEX SP 1 Triple-A 1-2 7.32 42 16 50 1.851 35 2/3
Radhames Liz BAL SP 1 Triple-A 0-3 5.35 34 14 32 1.366 33 2/3
Jon Meloan LA SP 1 Triple-A 2-3 4.11 34 19 37 1.600 35
Chris Perez STL RP 1 Triple-A 0-1 1.84 18 7 10 1.159 14 2/3
Jeremy Sowers CLE SP 1 Triple-A 2-2 2.21 24 14 27 1.118 36 2/3
Claudio Vargas NYM SP 1 Triple-A 0-1 13.50 4 1 9 2.500 4
Kris Benson PHI SP 1 TBD No stats yet
Glen Perkins MIN SP 1 Majors 2-1 2.97 27 19 28 1.410 33 1/3
Greg Reynolds COL SP 1 Majors 1-2 5.17 14 9 43 1.660 31 1/3
Jarrod Parker ARI SP 1 Low A 2-1 1.31 19 2 19 1.016 20 2/3
Ross Detwiler WAS SP 1 High A 1-2 5.18 20 14 30 1.808 24 1/3
Rick VandenHurk FLA SP 1 Double-A 1-0 4.76 7 1 6 1.235 5 2/3

Rookie watch

Top AL rookies to date

  1. OF Jacoby Ellsbury, BOS -- There is just nothing he is not doing well right now.
  2. SP Greg Smith, OAK -- Has earned full-time rotation spot, forcing Chad Gaudin to bullpen.
  3. OF David Murphy, TEX -- Not quite mixed-league worthy, but he has been an AL-only gem.
  4. SP Clay Buchholz, BOS -- If not for a bad outing Wednesday, he would be higher on this list.
  5. SP Armando Galarraga, DET -- Rotation spot uncertain once Dontrelle Willis (knee) returns.

Top NL rookies to date

  1. C Geovany Soto, CHC -- He just might be capable of finishing year as No. 1 Fantasy catcher.
  2. SP Jair Jurrjens, ATL -- We said he would be climbing this list. He looks like a lock-down ace.
  3. 1B Joey Votto, CIN -- Masher has found his stroke and is a must-have in any format now.
  4. SP Johnny Cueto, CIN -- He has kicked his slump, we say, so hopefully you didn't give up on him.
  5. 3B Blake DeWitt, LAD -- Not quite as good as he has shown, but he owns the position for Dodgers now.

Newbie needs

Chris VanDyke: Yet again, no love for Tommy Hanson? Time to get with the program, Eric. His updated numbers following (Monday) night's start -- (Double-A) Mississippi bound? (Monday) night: six innings, one hit, one earned run, seven strikeouts, one walk, one HBP, one wild pitch. For the season: seven starts, 3-1, 40 innings, six runs, four earned, 15 hits, 49 strikeouts, 11 walks, five wild pitches, five HBPs, a .116 batting-average against, 0.90 ERA and 0.65 WHIP.

Emack: A strong Class A prospect off to a great start. Our Prospect Watch focuses on minor leaguers owned in at least 1 percent of CBSSports.com's leagues, though. Hanson is not yet in our database, so therefore we don't have data for his ownership in our leagues. Consider him one yours truly will request to be added immediately. Take that flier on a red-hot 21-year-old pitching prospect proving worthy of a move to Double-A by June and perhaps a second-half call to Atlanta. He is impressive right now, we agree. Time to add him here: Thomas Hanson. Wow, that was quick.

Rob M.: In your May 2 piece, how do you create this list and not even mention Justin Upton? Heck, for that matter, how does Johnny Cueto beat teammate Edinson Volquez (not to mention Max Scherzer even being on the list -- the guy pitches four innings and he is a "Top NL rookie to date honorable mention? How did that happen?) What "date" are you using, the last two days? C'mon, buddy. Excellent feature though -- I enjoy reading it!

Emack: Thanks for reading, Rob, but here is where I don't return to wonderful pleasantries: Get some knowledge. Upton and Volquez are no longer "rookies" by major league rule. My list is restricted to players who can win the Rookie of the Year, so no Upton or Volquez. Scherzer was included to give Fantasy owners a heads up on an elite talent with a big-time opportunity in a top contender's rotation.

Jesse Meineke: Related to your Prospects Report, how can you miss Edinson Volquez under top NL rookies? He is the hottest rookie of them all!

Emack: You mean the hottest "sophomore" of them all? I don't have time for a top sophomore list and there is no sophomore of the year award. We would like to point you to a blog yours truly posted after Cueto debuted with 10 strikeouts in Week 1, though: April 3, 2008 at 6:44 p.m. ET.

At that date and time, NL ERA leader Volquez was owned in just 60 percent of CBSSports.com's leagues and starting in just 18 percent. Those numbers are now up to 95 and 81. Yeah, this writer doesn't necessarily blog beautiful prose, but you can find sleepers on the pages from time to time.

Anonymous: Is Carlos Carrasco worth picking up and stashing in a minor league spot right now?

Emack: Yes, he is an elite Double-A talent who could earn a second-half rotation spot on a top contender.

You can e-mail Emack your Fantasy Baseball prospect questions to DMFantasyBaseball@cbs.com. Be sure to put Attn: Prospects in the subject field. Please include your full name, hometown and state. Be aware, due to the large volume of submissions received, we cannot guarantee personal responses to all questions.