Shares His Tips For Game Day & Getting Kids Involved In Sports
** Plus MLB World Series Predictions & Share What You Love Contest
Fall is here and with it comes busy back-to-school schedules. It can be easy to get caught up in all the hustle and bustle of the season and before you know it, winter is here. Enjoy these last few weeks of nice weather, and the upcoming World Series, by hitting the field for a game of catch.
Retired MLB first baseman and Yankee hero, Tino Martinez, discusses how playing sports and sharing the things you love with kids creates life-long memories and how you can bring back the joy and wonder of physical activity outdoors and on the ball field.
As fans across the nation tune in for the World Series, Frosted Flakes wants to inspire dads and their kids to have fun on and off the field with the Share What You Love contest. And to further inspire game day rituals with your kids, a lucky winner and their childs sports team will get a hands on VIP Sports Practice with Tino Martinez and the iconic Tony the Tiger at a professional sports facility.
Viewers Will Learn:
World Series predictions from a sports legend
Details of the ‘Share What You Love’ Contest and how to enter
Empowering kids to enjoy sports
ABOUT TINO MARTINEZ: Although he scored over 900 runs, drove in over 1000 runs, and hit over 300 home runs in his career, Constantino Tino” Martinez will be most remembered as one of the main cogs in the New York Yankees 1990s dynasty. Martinez was drafted in the first round of the 1990 draft by the Seattle Mariners and broke out in 1995 when he drove in 111 runs, hit 31 home runs and batted .293 for the division-winning Mariners. Following that season, he was traded to the Yankees became one of the most popular players in Yankee history, forever remembered for two epochal World Series home runs. Officially retired after 2005 but continuing to contribute to baseball, Martinez now serves as a special instructor to the Yankees to aid their first basemen with their defensive skills. He also spent time as an analyst for ESPNs “Baseball Tonight” program.