This past week, I took in a couple of High-A games between Rome (Atlanta organization) and Jersey Shore (Philadelphia) that featured Atlanta’s 2024 first-round pick Cam Caminiti as a starter for Rome. Below are scouting thoughts on Caminiti and other notable prospects from that series, as well as scouting notes on several top prospects I’ve seen over the past few weeks.(Note: Scouting grades are on the traditional 20-80 scouting scale.)Caminiti was the first high school pitcher taken in the 2024 MLB Draft, and he’s emerged as Atlanta’s best prospect over his year and a half in their system. On Sunday, the left-hander got the start against Jersey Shore and showed two above-average pitches and excellent control, but didn’t have an average breaking ball in his six-inning outing.Caminiti was 92-95 for most of his start, dipping to 90-93 in his last inning, with above-average control. He showed an easy plus changeup that was mostly 84-87 with deception and good fade. He didn’t walk anyone until the sixth, then walked two and hit a guy to start that inning, getting out of it with a strikeout and a double play. For five innings, he was really cruising; Jersey Shore’s lineup isn’t strong, and they could barely touch him.His breaking ball wasn’t great — probably a 45 overall, average at its best, with decent shape but not a lot of tightness or overall deception to it. I’ve had multiple scouts tell me they’ve seen a 55 slider from Caminiti, so maybe I got an off day. He was supposed to throw on Saturday, but that game was canceled because of a major power outage in south Jersey, so he was a day off, and it was a pretty hot, humid afternoon. I doubt that’s the reason, but it wasn’t ideal.It may be time for him to try another breaking ball shape, as he’s in a good spot to throw a cutter, at least. There’s a no-doubt starter in here — above-average fastball, plus changeup, throws strikes, and enough breaking ball that is at least a fourth starter. The entire package is not that far off from Michael Wacha, but I’d like to see him try to find a better third pitch before he gets to the majors (or even Triple A).Southisene still dealing with holes in his swingAtlanta took shortstop Tate Southisene with their first-round pick last year, a reach relative to where I had Southisene on my pre-draft rankings (in third-round range). His pro debut last year was a disaster — he struck out 27 times in 66 plate appearances, with one (1) walk and a .219/.242/.297 line. That’s a small sample, however, and he was an 18-year-old in Low A, so it didn’t seem like much to worry about. He started back at the same level this year and was walking a ton, posting a .297/.429/.500 line in 240 plate appearances with a 15.4 percent walk rate. He was promoted to the Rome Emperors in early June.I saw Southisene before the draft and saw nine more plate appearances in the Jersey Shore series, and I don’t think he’s changed at all since high school. He’s still struggling with any kind of fastball up, even at 91-92, and anything up and in is kryptonite to him. He had one hit, a double in his first at-bat on a badly hanging slider, and after that it was a lot of whiff and weak contact.