Umpire Joe West (22) communicates with MLB’s review command center in New York during a game last May between the Texas Rangers and the Cleveland Indians. (AP Photo/Brandon Wade)

Umpire Joe West (22) communicates with MLB’s review command center in New York during a game last May between the Texas Rangers and the Cleveland Indians. (AP Photo/Brandon Wade)

MLB umps may soon take to the microphone to explain replays

Adrian Gonzalez dives headfirst into home, seems to beat the tag by Cubs catcher Willson Contreras, but is called out. Safe, shout fans at Dodger Stadium who see replays on the board.

Umpires go to their headsets for a video review, and nearly three minutes later, the signal comes: Out.

Want to hear exactly how disputed calls get decided, like that one in last year’s NL Championship Series?

Soon, we might.

While nothing is set, Major League Baseball and its umpires are expected to discuss a plan — most prominently used in the NFL — for crew chiefs to wear a microphone and explain replay rulings.

Under one possible scenario, they would start at the All-Star Game on July 11 in Miami, tweak the process over the season’s second half and then go forward with the experiment in the playoffs.

People familiar with the talks spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity because an agreement has not yet been reached.

The umpires are in the middle of their five-year labor deal and any change would involve negotiations, plus a comfort level on both sides that the system would be efficient, accurate and easy.

“It probably would be nice to get a little more explanation,” Miami Marlins reliever Brad Ziegler said. “They’re supposed to say the call stands or the call’s confirmed. ‘The call stands’ means you can’t tell. A lot of times we don’t get that. … They just signal out or safe. That’s all we get on the field.

“They may announce it on the PA, but it doesn’t seem like that is consistent in all parks. And the acoustics in the stadium here — we have a hard time hearing what’s on the PA in the bullpen,” he said.

In the NFL, hearing referees announce “upon further review” has long been part of the lexicon. In the NHL, officials explain coach’s challenges based on what the central replay booth tells them. And in the NBA, crew chiefs put on headsets to watch reviews and talk with the replay center. Decisions are explained to the official scorer’s table and the benches, and the public address announcers inform the crowd.

MLB has tried to speed up reviews this year, aiming for the umpires in the New York replay booth to relay the final calls to the field in under 2 minutes.

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