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Maybe it's for good this time or maybe it's just to assist an injury-depleted bench, but at least for now, Trea Turner is back in the majors, where he's batting a perfect 1.000 for the year.

You may remember he went 3 for 3 in his lone start in his earlier call-up this year. Problem is the incumbent shortstop, Danny Espinosa, has only dug in his heels since then, doing his best Cecil Fielder impression with 15 home runs in his past 39 games. He's now tied for second among all shortstops in that category.

But Turner did begin to play some center field prior to this latest call-up, and that's clearly the path of least resistance now that Michael Taylor has run his course. Maybe Turner can push Ben Revere out with a couple big games. It means he may not gain the shortstop eligibility we've all presumed he'd have, but outfield is the weaker position in Fantasy this year anyway.

Riding an eight-game hitting streak in which he's batting .353 (12 for 34) with three stolen bases and a .618 slugging percentage, he's been clearly just biding his time in the minors, so here's hoping he sticks this time. Eligible only at second base for now, Turner isn't an across-the-board pickup given the oversaturation of middle infielders, not to mention his uncertain role, but with 25 steals in 27 attempts, he at least has his place in Rotisserie leagues.

Five on the verge

(These are the prospects most worth stashing in redraft leagues.)

Alex Bregman, SS, Astros
2015 stats: .294 BA (272 AB), 4 HR, .781 OPS, 29 BB, 30 K
2016 stats: .309 BA (272 AB), 19 HR, 1.019 OPS, 44 BB, 33 K

This is one to get excited about. Even if the Astros sit on Bregman all year, content with Luis Valbuena at third base (which Bregman is scheduled to play more in the days ahead), stashing him will have been a worthy endeavor because he's the one prospect I'm most confident could make an impact in Fantasy. He has steamrolled the minors this year, batting .389 (14 for 36) with five home runs since his move up to Triple-A a week ago, and his stellar plate discipline greatly reduces his chances of being overmatched at the highest level.

Jose Berrios, SP, Twins
2016 majors: 1-1, 10.20 ERA, 2.13 WHIP, 15 IP, 12 BB, 20 K
2016 minors: 8-3, 2.43 ERA, 0.97 WHIP, 77 2/3 IP, 27 BB, 80 K

Maybe the Twins will hold out until the trade deadline, when they'll (presumably) unload Ervin Santana on some fringe contender, but soon enough, their top prospect will be back to starting every fifth day. And he has certainly earned another look with a dominant four-start stretch that culminated in a complete-game victory Sunday. He has a 0.60 ERA during that stretch, allowing just 10 hits with seven walks and 29 strikeouts over 30 innings.

Hunter Renfroe, OF, Padres
2015 stats: .272 BA (511 AB), 20 HR, .783 OPS, 37 BB, 132 K
2016 stats: .335 BA (355 AB), 21 HR, .973 OPS, 15 BB, 70 K

Renfroe's numbers have only improved since last check. He's batting .438 (14 for 32) with three home runs so far in July and .364 with 16 home runs in his past 220 at-bats. Sure, those numbers are inflated somewhat by him playing in the Pacific Coast League, but the same goes for half of all Triple-A players. And most aren't doing what he's doing. The former first-rounder's power potential was never in question, and while the batting average is obviously too good to be true, his reduced strikeout rate gives me hope Renfroe will be more than just an all-or-nothing hitter.

Aaron Judge, OF, Yankees
2015 stats: .255 BA (478 AB), 20 HR, .777 OPS, 53 BB, 144 K
2016 stats: .263 BA (316 AB), 16 HR, .828 OPS, 41 BB, 85 K

And this is our lesson in perspective for the day. Last week, I took great pains to explain why Aaron Judge wasn't one of my "five on the verge," but with Tyler Glasnow and Trea Turner clearing the way ... well, here he is. Granted, his home run binge is behind him now -- he has none in his past nine games after having nine in his previous 16 -- but power is an absolute certainty for the 6-foot-7 behemoth, as is a second-half promotion at age 24. But will he be able to capitalize on it?

David Dahl, OF, Rockies
2015 stats: .266 BA (312 AB), 6 HR, 22 SB, .688 OPS, 11 BB, 81 K
2016 stats: .296 BA (307 AB), 15 HR, 16 SB, .912 OPS, 39 BB, 85 K

Dahl is a big-name prospect whose production has finally caught up to the hype. His tour de force continues at Triple-A, where he's off to a 11-for-19 start. You read that right. Frankly, it's hard to imagine him slowing down in the Pacific Coast league since it's so much more hitter-friendly than the Eastern League, where he played the first 76 of his 80 games, in which case the Rockies already have their Carlos Gonzalez replacement for when they inevitably begin to dismantle.

Five on the periphery

(These are some other prospects doing something of note.)

Orlando Arcia, SS, Brewers
2015 stats: .307 BA (512 AB), 8 HR, 25 SB, .800 OPS, 30 BB, 73 K
2016 stats: .268 BA (325 AB), 7 HR, 12 SB, .717 OPS, 24 BB, 58 K

The Aaron Hill trade could hasten the young shortstop's arrival by freeing up third base for Jonathan Villar, but for now, the Brewers seem content to play Will Middlebrooks and Hernan Perez there. And it's not so clear how excited Fantasy owners should be about Arcia anyway. Even though he was a consensus top-10 prospect entering the year, his numbers make him out to be more like another Alcides Escobar than Francisco Lindor. Then again, Lindor was hitting only .284 with a .752 OPS at the time of his promotion last year.

Jake Thompson, SP, Phillies
2015 stats: 11-7, 3.73 ERA, 1.27 WHIP, 132 2/3 IP, 42 BB, 112 K
2016 stats: 7-5, 2.58 ERA, 1.14 WHIP, 104 2/3 IP, 31 BB, 72 K

One of the biggest names to come over in the Cole Hamels haul at last year's trade deadline, Thompson is clearly one of the Phillies' top prospects and has clearly had a successful season, having put together an absurd 0.73 ERA over his last seven starts. Yet his strikeout rate during that stretch is an equally absurd (but for different reasons) 4.9 per nine innings. You wouldn't trust a pitcher with that kind of rate against major-league hitters, so how excited can you really be about Thompson? And how close can the Phillies really be to calling him up?

D.J. Peterson, 1B, Mariners
2015 stats: .223 BA (368 AB), 7 HR, .633 OPS, 31 BB, 92 K
2016 stats: .282 BA (308 AB), 14 HR, .852 OPS, 31 BB, 77 K

What a roller-coaster ride Peterson's professional career has been. He went from being one of the most promising collegiate hitters in the 2013 draft to a top prospect delivering a 30-homer season to a .223-hitting disaster last year before getting back on track with a .337 batting average and 12 home runs in his last 42 games, which includes a promotion to Triple-A. He told MLB.com that a conversation with his college coach helped straighten him out, which is more of an explanation than we ever got for his collapse last year. I'll take it.

Dietrich Enns, SP, Yankees
2015 stats: 2-1, 0.61 ERA, 0.90 WHIP, 58 2/3 IP, 20 BB, 55 K
2016 stats: 10-3, 1.60 ERA, 1.10 WHIP, 95 2/3 IP, 36 BB, 94 K

Who the heck is Dietrich Enns? Yeah, he was just now added to the CBSSports.com player database at age 25, which should tell you just how far off the prospect radar he is. Or I should say was, because he has the minor leagues under some kind of spell right now. And it's only gotten better with his move up to Triple-A, where he has a 0.70 ERA over four starts. He doesn't throw especially hard and isn't really a control artist either, but he misses bats via Alex Wood-level deception. There's a chance he leapfrogs Luis Severino should an opening develop.

Austin Hedges, C, Padres
2015 majors: .168 BA (137 AB), 3 HR, .463 OPS, 8 BB, 38 K
2016 minors: .389 BA (126 AB), 14 HR, 1.220 OPS, 9 BB, 19 K

You remember Hedges, right? That glove-first catcher who hit only .168 in his first taste of the majors last year? Something's ... different about him. I can't quite put my finger on it. It may have something to do with him homering 12 times during a recent 15-game stretch. And they weren't a bunch of cheap shots either:

Looking back through old Baseball America scouting reports, it's not like he had no chance of developing power. His glove was just so far ahead of his bat that the Padres kind of jumped the gun, lowering our expectations in the process.