 While the Yankees move past the season-ending injury to Luis Severino, one question persists. Who will round off the rotation come late March? As camp continues, eyes have shifted to promising prospect Mike King, who is excited about the opportunity to make a splash in the Bronx. Yeah, I mean, that's all you can ask for is being able to fight for a spot, coming to spring training. And I know, obviously, the Yankees have an unreal staff. But in any way, how I can contribute to the team, that's what I'll do, whether it's reliever or starter. He's confident. He's got a presence on the mound. There's no fear out there. He feels like he belongs here. And he's a guy certainly in the mix. Michael King is very polished. He knows his stuff, and he is extremely focused and dedicated on what he does. He's going to help the big league team tremendously in the future here, whether it's opening day or it's two years from now. His competitiveness is going to keep him around for a while. During his trip up the organizational ladder, King developed relationships within the farm system that helped him grow on and off the field. A lot of the people that I talked to were actually behind the scenes guys. The coaches are great. They get all the glory. But then the video guys, the analytics guys that I talked to behind are the ones that helped me move intellectually forward on how to attack hitters based on all the information that they gave us. But then pitching coaches make you feel like a professional, and they make you act like a professional. Not just professional baseball, like just in general, being a professional helps you in all aspects of life. So that's really one thing is being like a well-rounded person, whether it's baseball, athletically, mentally, they're big on that. The whole Yankees organization is, and that's why they have a great reputation. He puts so much into his preparation pregame, but also his in-between starts, his ability to throw all his pitches in three or four different locations is going to help him because he's able to utilize scatter reports to their fullest and to his fullest. And when he makes a mistake, he does a really good job of owning up to it and learning from it. So he's a real deal too.