Blue Jays manager John Gibbons hopes a disputed call in the sixth inning of Monday’s 5-4 win over Minnesota is one of the “little things” that is added to the list of plays under baseball’s new video review system.

Gibbons bolted onto the field after Oswaldo Arcia was hit by a R.A. Dickey pitch on the elbow, arguing that the Twins outfielder intentionally put his arm in the way of the pitch.

It was a pivotal moment in the game as Dickey walked the next batter — Kendrys Morales — to load the bases and spell the end of his outing.

Gibbons got what he wanted — all four umpires met on the infield to discuss the play — but there was little to no chance the call would be reversed.

Major League Baseball’s video review system, introduced this season, offers the manager a chance to challenge bigger type plays — home runs, calls on runners at all bases and questionable catches.

But it does not include smaller “details” like whether a batter intentionally puts himself in the way of a pitch to get on base.

“I asked them to check,” Gibbons said about the umpires. “And to look and see if he (Arcia) intentionally blocked the plate, and if they could overturn that there on the field. There’s other guys and some little things, and maybe they’ll include that (in the future).”

Gibbons made his move, calling in reliever Dustin McGowan to bail out Dickey, who left a bases-loaded jam with one out in the sixth. It was a bitter moment for the knuckleballer, who had recovered from two homers in the first inning, and retired 10 straight Twins between the second and fifth innings.

“I felt he tried to get struck by the baseball,” Dickey said of Arcia. “I thought he did it on purpose. I voiced my opinion but I guess it didn’t change anything.”

McGowan coaxed an inning-ending double play ball from Kurt Suzuki on a fastball to preserve what was a 4-2 Jays lead at the time.

Dickey (6-4) was in line for the win until the Twins bagged a pair of runs on two consecutive bloop RBI doubles in the ninth off closer Casey Janssen.

Dickey, though, said he felt “much better” after his previous start against the Tigers on Wednesday when he gave up two runs in just five innings in Detroit, where he said his body simply didn’t feel right.

“Much better, I felt like my velocity improved in the game,” Dickey said. “I’m feeling good now and I will hit a stretch where it all comes together, and I’m gonna grind it out until then.”