Here are Sunday's top prospect performances from the Minors

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On Sunday across the Minor Leagues, the good times kept rolling for some of the game's top prospects. The Minor Leagues' home run leader reached an impressive milestone and strikeout leader cashed in one more great start before jumping up to a new level. That was just the beginning.

Charlie Condon, 1B, Hartford (COL No. 1/MLB No. 18)
The slugging Condon has been a productive player in his first month at Double-A, though his power has been slow to warm. Maybe he's about to get hot. Condon homered as part of a three-hit day, reaching base four times and scoring three runs, his third three-hit game in the past seven contests. Condon is hitting .414 over the past week. He finished play with 20 RBIs in 28 games at Hartford, where Condon has batted .262 with a .782 OPS. Gameday

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Samuel Basallo, C, Norfolk (BAL No. 1/MLB No. 8)
With the Orioles out of contention and their top prospect continuing to rake at Triple-A, when Basallo might be promoted for his MLB debut is a popular question in Baltimore these days. The slugging backstop cleared the bases with a three-run double and added an RBI single later to drive in the most runs on the day of any Top 100 prospect. Basallo leads the International League with his career-high .996 OPS, while the 20-year-old's 23 homers -- also a career high -- rank second on the circuit. Gameday

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Carson Williams, SS, Durham (TB No. 1/MLB No. 24)
The Rays' top prospect is in the 20/20 club, and Williams gained entrance for the third consecutive season with his 20th homer of the year at Triple-A. His ninth-inning solo shot capped a two-hit game for Williams, who has hit safely in seven of his last nine games and homered in two straight. He has 21 stolen bases in 27 attempts on the season. Gameday

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Jonah Tong, RHP, Mets (NYM No. 2/MLB No. 51)
Tong's last Double-A start was a good one. In his second outing of the week, Tong was characteristically excellent, punching out eight across five innings of one-run ball before being informed of his promotion to Triple-A. He did not walk a batter in a start that actually increased his ERA to 1.59 through 20 Double-A starts. The 22-year-old righty leads the Minors with 162 strikeouts (164-44 K/BB) with a 0.92 WHIP, third in MiLB. This week alone, he allowed one run over 10 innings, striking out 16 and walking only two. Gameday

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Spencer Jones, OF, Scranton/Wilkes-Barre (NYY No. 4/MLB No. 100)
The Minors' top slugger hit a milestone -- Jones took Phillies top prospect Andrew Painter deep for his MiLB-leading 30th home run of the season, his 14th in 32 games at Triple-A. And it was crushed: 110.9 mph exit velocity, 436 feet, to the opposite field, per Statcast. Jones reached the milestone in his 81st game of the season -- in that time frame, he also has 25 steals. He is one of only three Minor Leaguers with at least 20 of each so far this season, and is hitting an otherworldly .320/.400/.704 since arriving in Scranton/Wilkes-Barre. Gameday

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Ralphy Velazquez, 1B, Lake County (CLE No. 9)
The 23-year-old crushed a pair of solo shots as part of a three-hit day while delivering his second multihomer game of the season at High-A. They also propelled Velazquez into sole possession of the Midwest League home run lead, with 17 through 94 games. The '23 first-rounder ranks second in the league in extra-base hits (43) and fifth in slugging (.469) and . Gameday

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Alex Clemmey, LHP, Wilmington (WSH No. 4)
The 2023 second-round pick was unhittable at High-A over six innings. Clemmey retired 12 of his first 13 hitters and struck out eight, working around three walks and a second-and-third situation in his final frame. The 20-year-old lefty has spent the entire season in the South Atlantic League putting together a fine second season in pro ball. His 113 strikeouts (in 87 1/3 IP) place second and his 2.47 ERA through 19 starts ranks fourth among Sally League hurlers. Gameday

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Jean Cabrera, RHP, Reading (PHI No. 8)
The 23-year-old righty was also stingy, facing one over the minimum across six brilliant no-hit innings at Double-A. Cabrera needed only 59 pitches to complete six frames, throwing 40 for strikes, punching out five and issuing only one free pass. The effort lowered Cabrera's ERA to 3.73 through 21 starts, which would be a career best. Gameday

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