The Major League Baseball Players Association, working with Internet helpers, has launched Infield Chatter, a social media app that lets players interact with fans. Infield Chatter already has more ...
The Major League Baseball Player’s Association has launched Infield Chatter, their own content platform, and you can win $1 million. The Major League Baseball Player’s Association, in support of their ...
The 2017 World Series won’t only crown a new baseball champion — fans are getting a chance to win a cool million by correctly predicting the score of each game in addition to the player chosen as ...
New MLBPA social app Infield Chatter was designed to keep the toxicity out of baseball. The Milwaukee Brewers’ Eric Thames made himself one of the biggest stories in Major League Baseball earlier this ...
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Move over, Twitter and Snapchat? Not quite. Major League Baseball players are launching their own social media app -- but they realize it won't replace the classics. And they ...
In efforts to create a medium to better communicate with fans, Major League Baseball players launched a new social network called Infield Chatter. With Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Snapchat ...
Infield Chatter is a weekly look at trends and depth-chart movement that will affect your Fantasy strategy. Want to sneak someone more productive than expected into your lineup? Look toward Pittsburgh ...
Infield Chatter is a weekly look at the trends, rumors and news that will affect your Fantasy draft strategy. Last season, Marlon Anderson and Bo Hart became unexpected and inexpensive quality middle ...
But did you know that Indians pitcher Trevor Bauer is still nursing a playful grudge about that particular hit? In a segment for Infield Chatter, Bauer was opening packs of baseball cards and got a ...
The Major League Baseball Players Association, the collective bargaining representative for players in the league, granted a license to sweepstakes app Lucktastic to create free scratch cards that ...
NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Move over, Twitter and Snapchat? Not quite. Major League Baseball players are launching their own social media app -- but they realize it won't replace the classics. And they ...