So no guys who were on the radar as prospects heading into the season like Brett Jackson, Trey McNutt, Josh Vitters, DJ LeMaheiu, Ryan Flaherty, Chris Carpenter, Jay Jackson, Rafael Dolis, Hayden Simpson, Matt Szczur, etc. This is about the next wave, the emerging prospects. I'm sure these lists will change once we get more guys up from EXST like Ben Wells, Reggie Golden and Austin Reed, but we are now one month into the season, so, who's caught your eye? 1. Robert Whitenack, RHP, 22 (AA) - For those of us who are avid readers of AZPhil, this guy might have been considered an "on the radar" prospect heading into this season. Phil predicted a breakout season for Robert the likes of Trey McNutt the year before, and, so far, he's been dead on. Already promoted to AA after just 4 starts in Daytona, Whitenack is 4-0 with a 1.85 ERA in 6 starts. The 6'5" righty has thrown 34 innings giving up 21 hits, 0 HR, striking out 32 while walking just 3. 2. Jae-Hoon Ha, OF, 20 (A+) - If he keeps hitting like this, Ha will find himself laughing all the way to the bank. After somewhat of a breakout season last year in Peoria (.317/.334/.468), Jae-Hoon is truly breaking out in his first month in Daytona. Batting .330, his IsoD (.031) is still poor, but it appears to be improving. Last season he walked once every 29 ABs. This year, it's once every 23. The big improvement has come in Ha's power. He slugged .548 over his first 27 games (115 ABs) with 8 doubles and 5 HRs. He had 7 HRs all of last season in Peoria. 3. Austin Kirk, LHP, 20 (A-) - Austin turns 21 in a couple weeks making him age appropriate for the MWL, but if he keeps pitching like this, he'll be in Daytona soon enough. In 29 IP, he's allowed 17 hits with 9 walks and 31 strikeouts for a 2.17 ERA. The 6'1" lefty and 3rd round pick in '09 has held opposing batters to a .163 AVG of the first month of this season. 4. Micah Gibbs, C, 22 (A-) - Gibbs, last year's 3rd round pick, was considered a strong hitter for average, with good to average power and solid but not spectacular defensive ability as a receiver. So far, Gibbs has lived up to that. After getting off to a horrid start last year in Boise, he finished very strong at the plate in August and September and that has carried over to this season as Gibbs is tearing up the Midwest League to the tune of .367/.472/.467. 5. Kevin Rhoderick, RHP, 22 (AA) - The Cubs 9th round pick last season has seemingly come out of nowhere to dominate hitters in a relief role this season. Again, for those who follow AZPhil over at thecubreporter.com, Rhoderick's success comes as less of a surprise. Phil's reports during fall instructs were glowing at times and he was described as throwing a mid-90s fastball with a killer slider when it was on. Well, it appears to be on a lot this season as Rhoderick has followed Whitenack with a quick promotion to AA. In 19.1 IP, he's given up 9 hits, 8 walks while striking out 27. Some may discount his prospect status because he's not a starter. But with a ceiling of a potentially dominant bullpen arm, I think that's a pretty valuable thing for an organization to produce. 6. Justin Bour, 1B, 22 (A+) - Justin will turn 23 in a couple weeks, but he's a college draftee and isn't repeating the level, so he can be considered on schedule. Last year in Peoria, he put up solid numbers going .291/.375/.436 hitting 31 doubles and 12 HRs in 475 ABs. He got off to a slow start this season, perhaps due to adjusting to FSL pitching, but has been red hot of late hitting .371/.452/.714 over his last 10 games raising his season numbers to .269/.358/.519. He's got good plate discipline with an IsoD of .089 and a BB/K ratio of 15/16. That's consistent with last year's IsoD of .084. If he gets the same amount of ABs this year as he did last year, he's on pace for 27 HR and 37 doubles. 7. Nick Struck, RHP, 21 (A+) - Nick is 5'11" righty who is holding is own in the FSL so far this season. He's 4-1 with a 3.19 ERA and is averaging over 5 innings per start. Only 1 of his 6 starts this year has been bad. In 31 IP, he's allowed 31 hits, 1 HR, 10 BB and 30 Ks. When you take out the one bad start that reads 27 IP, 24 H, 0 HR, 8 BB and 28 Ks. 8. Dallas Beeler, RHP, 21 (A-) - Dallas is a 6'5" former standout wide receiver. Sound familiar? Of course, Beeler was the WR for the two-time Oklahoma State Champion Jenks High School football team, but he was still a standout. Selected in the 41st round because he missed most of Oral Roberts' 2010 season recovering from Tommy John surgery, Beeler is the classic under the radar prospect. Due to his frame and the fact that he is now almost 2 years removed from that surgery, Beeler may still gain a few mph on his fastball before it's all said and done, but he already has excellent control. He walked 2 batters in 18.1 innings last year and has walked 3 in 14 innings so far this season. In 32.1 IP between rookie ball and Low-A ball this year, he's yet to give up a HR, allowing 32 hits, striking out 27 while walking 5. 9. Brett Wallach, RHP, 22 (A+) - Another 3rd round pick and another 6'5" righty, Wallach started off this year with two bad outings, perhaps as he adjusted to the new level. He has since settled in nicely throwing 3 good starts in a row. Over those 3, he's pitched 14 innings giving up 12 hits, 3 earned runs, striking out 16 while walking just 4. He was a two-sport star in college and only started pitching full-time after being drafted by the Dodgers in '09. His fastball sits at 91-92 and touches 94. He's reportedly got a good change-up, but his breaking pitches need work. He has struckout a batter per inning consistently throughout his pro career. He may wind up as a power reliever, but he's starting for now. 10. Frank Batista, RHP, 22 (A+) - Batista was working as a starter the previous two seasons but is now the closer for Daytona and the conversion is paying early dividends. In the first month of the season, he's notched 8 saves. In 13 IP, he's given up 6 hits, striking out 13 while walking 4. Opposing batters are hitting .140 against him. Others considered: Su-Min Jung, Cam Greathouse, Arismendy Alcantara, Graham Hicks and Robinson Lopez.