 Did you have that same type of excitement going out there today? Yeah, I think I tried to carry that over to every outing. I think that obviously you don't want to get too amped up. You want to keep your emotions in check. But for me, I think when I'm a little bit amped up and you have that nervous energy and you're kind of locked in, I think that's the best way to be. So yeah, I tried to prepare just the exact same way I did last outing. And I felt good. I felt good tonight. And it was a good clean outing. I think the last inning could have been a little bit better, but I felt I felt really good. Did you feel like you tired a little bit as as the innings went on? Or was it just a matter of not locating? Yeah, I think I don't think it was a fatigue thing. My stuff felt great. I think one of my takeaways from tonight was my fastball command was really good. I could have done a lot of better job of getting strike one. But I think that's when when I throw a higher percentage of breaking balls and change ups, I think that's going to come a little bit. I think that I got a shot. I had a need to sharpen it up a little bit, especially in the last inning. I had every single hit with two strikes. And if I would have landed one or two more breaking balls, I think I would have had a lot different outcome in the last inning. But overall fatigue-wise, I felt great. And my arm felt good. And I felt strong. Do you feel like you opened eyes not only during spring training, but now here again during summer camp? Yeah, I think that like I said, I've been saying it the whole time that that was my goal. And I think that I'm here to compete. And I've always been a competitor. And I've always held myself to a higher guard. And I've always been a guy that kind of like plays and performs with a chip under my shoulder. I mean, I think that I've always kind of had that mentality of, I wouldn't call it Napoleon when I'm out there, but I have that mentality of being like the underdog almost and that people have always doubted me or whatever it may be. That might not be always the case. But I try to treat it like that. I want to be that guy who goes out there and competes and is gritty and kind of grits his teeth and gets down and goes, guys, and just continues to attack. And I think that the main thing for me is if I'm attacking, then I'm in a position of control. And so I got to continue to be on this track I am. I think tonight was another good outing for me. Like I said, I could have cleaned up the walks a little bit, a little bit of the first pitch strike would have helped a little bit more. But the stuff felt good, command felt pretty good. And, you know, I continue to get outs. Thank you. Eric Boland, do you have the next question? Go ahead and unmute. Hey, Clark, when you were in the interview room the other day, you talked about I'm a confident kid. You believe you're going to be able to contribute at the big league level. When you evaluate, when you self-evaluate, what's missing in your game to get you to that point? I think I said it before. I'm obviously not a complete polished pitcher. I mean, I'm not the final package. But I think that most guys here are not. I think if you ask anybody that, they would want to say that they got to improve on this or that. I think for me, continuing to find up the breaking ball command, it's been great for me so far. I think tonight it was really good, and then the last thing, it kind of slipped a little bit. So I've been able to always throw that for strikes. That was one of my strong abilities. And then tonight it was kind of faltered a little bit. But for me, it's continuing to get that fastball command. I think that being able to work a fastball in and out, up and down in the big leagues is the number one thing. I think you find a lot of these guys who have a lot of success at the big league level, a lot of that comes from fastball command. So I think continuing to work on and fine tune that two-scene command. I've been throwing a lot more two-scenes this camp than I did in the previous camp. I've always been mainly, I mean, I throw a lot of four-scenes, but I would like to mix in the two-scene as well. But this camp, they told me to work a lot more on the two-scene because just because a lot of the pitch metrics and a lot of the analytics going into it, it's kind of been favoring my two-scene a little bit more. So I've been working on the command of that. And I've been getting a bunch of, I got a couple of swinging misses on tonight. I got a couple of swinging misses on the last outing. So I've been really happy with the swinging miss on it. I just continuing to fine tune that command, moving it in and out. Thank you. Anyone else for Clark before we let him go? Brad for Davis, go ahead, you can unmute. Hey, Clark, thanks so much for your time today. You just mentioned that your hope that some of the analytics had highlighted your two-seamer as a potential pitch to lean on. Is it for more for lists or for ground balls or even both there? Yeah, I think it plays, I mean, yes and no. I think that it's very strong pitch for ground balls. Obviously, I mean, I've always thrown it a lot to inside the right-handed hitters and to get quick ground balls or quick outs. I did it tonight to Glaver Torres when I had, I think I walked a guy and then I knew, I kind of almost, I just like preemptively, I knew what I was trying to do and I executed a two-scene in on him and I got a ground ball to third and ended up being a double play. So a lot of the times that's what I end up doing. When I'm trying to get a ground ball, I'll try to go two-seams in or two-seams off the plate. But yeah, I think the swing and miss, I think a lot of the reason why we're continuing to focus on that two-seam is because the analytics, it's been a lot, I've gotten a lot more swing and miss than I would in the past. For me, I've thrown a lot of four-seams. I would try to be an elevate guy. When a lot of it, I really, I don't have a ton of break Z on it or a ton of break X. I'm more of a break X guy, so I'm more of like left to right horizontal break on my pitches. So a lot of my pitches, they run. So when I throw four-seams and I try to elevate, sometimes it'll run it back over the middle and it would end up being, you have some damage dealt to it. So for me, the more I focus on that two-seam, the more I'm going to miss barrels and miss bats. I think that a lot of guys will, especially for lefties, if I try to throw it away, a lot of guys will pull off it or if I'm trying to throw it off the front hip to a lefty, I think I have the ability to freeze hitters with it later in counts. And then to righties, I try to go off the plate as well and try to freeze guys as well. So I think that it's been a big pitch for me so far. And I think if I continue to focus and refine that command on it, it's going to be a huge pitch going forward. Oh, maybe for the breakdown bet. And then, so you mentioned, you mentioned just clarify a difference between what is break X versus break Z? Yeah, break X is basically like the horizontal break. And then the break Z is how much like ride and run you have to it. So a guy like Garrett Cole, obviously he has a ton of break, break Z and Chad Green guys like that. They can run the ball up a lot. So for me, when you see guys with a lot of break Z, they're getting swing and misses at the top of the zone. For me, I'm a break X guy. So I want to miss bats like horizontally. So a lot of times that's why I get more ground balls is because I'm trying to miss the, the meat of the bat, the barrel of the bat. And I'll try to get guys off the end of the bat or wherever it may be and run it up on guys' hands with the break X and kind of continuing to use that run on the ball and use it to my strengths and get a lot of ground balls and swing and misses on it. So, and last question if it's all right. You know, obviously you're, you know, you're new to camp and new to New York now as you know, as you continue to turn heads with your pitching. But obviously, you know, this is a weird year pandemic. You will be indoors a lot more than you probably expected in New York. Is there anything that you particularly wish, you know, or looking forward to being able to explore about, you know, I guess life in New York once you once things subside? Yeah, I think that I don't, I would obviously assume that as of right now it's not safe for me to do that. I mean, to be a normal, like even when things open back up, I think for the betterment of me and the team and the staff, I think that it would be smart for me to stay in. So I'm obviously going to do that. But next year I think that or whenever it may be, I think a big, I'm a, I like a lot of food. So I like to eat. So, I mean, any type of being able to explore all the cuisines around New York, I think that's the main thing. I think it's kind of cool that whatever, what I've always loved is being able, being in the city, you know, you can walk down and get something one night and then the next night you can go right down the street and find something new. So it's kind of never ending, never eating eats. So it's a lot of fun. So I enjoy, I enjoy the energy of being in the city. I love it. It's just, I think the number one thing for me is, I want to be able to pitch in Yankee, a full Yankee stadium. I think that that's obviously been one of my dreams and being able to pitch in front of full stadiums whenever that may be, whenever it's safest. I think that's what I'm most excited about, being able to pitch in front of big crowds and big moments like that.