[MUSIC] How about the trading card deals you were telling me about. Those are very lucrative deals, and autographs too, can be a very lucrative category. How do you play the trading card game? >> They give you two or three thousand cards, that a rep comes, and you sit down with them for countless amount of hours to sign, and then they disperse them out to the fans and all the fans love the cards and if you're card sells good, they continue to come back and feed you with more cards and more money. So, [LAUGH] it's about as best as I can give you at that. >> [LAUGH] Okay. Now going forward, let's just take you through the path, this is going to be A, AA, AAA, or is AA not considered the cutoff? We've had Francisco Linder here. It seems as if Jose Ramirez, is that really the way you're looking at it Clint AAA play at the Indian? >> Whatever the Indians think is best for me, if I'm in AA, and they feel that I can help impact their major league team, and they want to bring me up. So be it. I'll be ecstatic. But if they think AAA is where I need to be for a little while then that's where I need to be. I mean I'm not the player development coordinator. I can't make the calls, if I could I'd be in the big leagues right now. But I'm in Lake County right now so I'm trying to fulfill whatever that is I can here and try to help the team as many ways as I can. >> And it shows. You are considered to be the Mike Trout in the making. Do those comparisons make it difficult for you? You are the five tool player, everybody's looking for you. >> Yeah. Especially whenever you have that guy on Twitter that, >> [LAUGH] >> that won't leave you alone but, I think the biggest thing that I've done this year is, with a lot of success comes a lot of pressure and lot of outside pressure is the hardest thing to handle. But I'm one of the people that puts the most pressure on myself. And when you have people that doubt you that only makes you want to come out there and prove them wrong and when I get compared to the best player in baseball right now. It almost seems unfair for a 19 year old kid to have comparison of a guy that's doing what he's doing right now and it's hard to live up to. I'm 19 years old, and I'm going to continue to go out there everyday and try to live up to that comparison. But, I'm Clint Frazier. And I want to be Clint Frazier. And I want one day, for someone to say, this is the next Clint Frazier. And that's what I'm trying to be right now. >> That's awesome. Couple last questions, then we get you on the bus. That's the other part about the minors, right? >> [SOUND]. >> You're riding those. What's it like riding those busses? Don't laugh. [LAUGH]. >> I showed up here three weeks late, four weeks late. So I had to room with, or share a seat with somebody. I wasn't doing that, so I bought my seat for, I paid $400. For a seat for the rest of the year. And we're going on an eight hour bus ride tonight and I wanted to be able to sleep and it's not fun whenever you have a six foot three, 220 pound guy sitting next to you and you're squeezed in the corner. So, I thought it was a fair amount. >> [LAUGH] >> I ended up hitting a home run and won $125 and I broke a couple of bats and I think I got $330 that night, so I just handed it to him and then, went to the agency and cashed the rest out. So, those bus charge are brutal, terrible. >> This is brutal, but what would you say I'm your five tools, which of the ones you are working on in A-ball this year. >> I mean I've said this to all the reporters this year. I'm continuing to work on all of them. Someone nabs you as a five player, you want to make sure you have all five tools as precise as you can. And make sure that I am as mature as I can in every single one of those aspects and I think my hitting is my strongest tool, my speed is my strongest tool, and one of my strongest tools. But I, I don't want to abandon the fact that I need to continue to work on getting better as a defensive player or make sure my arm is as strong as it can be. So you really have to make sure that every part of your game is refined. And you just don't stick out in one part. >> One last question, I saw you the day, we get a lot of rehabs here Aroldis Chapman was here. >> Jesus. >> That Saturday, fastest throwing pitcher in all the Major Leagues. I saw you go up there against the man and you did okay. What was it like facing the guy that throws over 100 miles an hour? >> [LAUGH] I remember we were going in the locker room and someone said Aroldis Chapman is throwing. And I went to YouTube because I could only picture one thing, one thing, 105.6 miles per hour being thrown at me. And I texted all of my friends and I said, if I don't come home from Ohio you know why. >> [LAUGH]. >> And he struck me out but I fouled the ball off and I felt like the bat was worth it to go up there and strike out against him. You know, he's supposed to strike me out. He did strike me out and it only gave me one more, or one opportunity to get ready for him whenever I get to playing in the major leagues. >> Well, we can't wait to see it progress Mike, I mean Clen. >> Yeah. [LAUGH]. >> And we can't thank you enough for taking time before you get on the bus with all the other captains. And, thanks so much for being here today. [APPLAUSE] [MUSIC]