The Haynesville Shale formation in the United States presents unique challenges during completions, the two primary examples of this being high formation temperature of >300 F and high formation pressure of 7,000 – 12,000 psi at depths of 10,000 – 13,000 ft. Oil and gas operators are drilling lateral lengths between 9,000 and 15,000 ft. This analysis will focus on optimizing frac plug drillouts (also known as mill out) and cleanouts of frac plugs in extended reach laterals under high pressure and high-temperature conditions using Hydraulic Completion Units (HCU). In the preplanning phase of the operations, torque and drag models were created for these wells to obtain projected data to compare with field data. Field data was collected by pressure transducers installed on the Hydraulic Completion Units providing rotary torque, casing pressure, pump pressure, and hookload values on a per-second basis. In addition to analyzing this field data, a selection of wells from other basins with less extreme formation temperature and pressure parameters are utilized to compare against. During the post-job phase, operational efficiencies are compared amongst these mill outs to hypothesize about any unknown factors outside of the collected data that may have affected performance.