Again, Gorman is only nineteen, and he's in High-A. He has plenty of time to learn plate discipline, and while he'll never be Arenado at the hot corner, he's got a good enough glove. And the power. I'd grade it as a seventy. I wouldn't be surprised to see Gorman become a forty home run hitter, even with a low average. That's the kind of power he has.
Carlson is striking out a lot, true. He's also in the top ten in all of Double A in home runs, OBP, slugging percentage, OPS, doubles, triples, and batting average, amongst other things. He's been nothing short of dominant in a league where he's at least four years younger than the competition.
Then you have Elehuris Montero in Springfield at twenty. He's injured right now, but I wouldn't be shocked to see him get to Triple-A next year. Great hitter, but I'm concerned about his defense at third.
Hopefully the National League bites the bullet and institutes the designated hitter, so that we can see people like Montero play without pitchers embarrassing themselves at the plate.
Also, I wouldn't give up on Seager yet. He's a hell of a shortstop.