If you happen to be a professional baseball player in the Arizona area, Trevor Bauer has a proposition for you.

The Cincinnati Reds pitcher tweeted Friday soliciting any MLB or MiLB player who wants to play a sandlot-style baseball game to contact him directly. It seems like the game will take place, with the contest broadcast on Bauer's own social media and all pitchers and hitters required to be mic'd-up.

Confirmed, this is happening. All content and live streams from this event will be distributed through @Watch_Momentum and my personal channels (@Twitter, @instagram, @Facebook, and @YouTube) No further announcements will be made so follow now or risk missing it entirely. 💪🏻💪🏻 https://t.co/SLDldANomC — Trevor Bauer (@BauerOutage) March 14, 2020

During spring training, players have been mic'd on occasion, with Chicago Cubs stars Anthony Rizzo and Kris Bryant memorably providing some gems on the ESPN broadcast.

Bauer also released a video last spring training of himself mic'd-up during a start.

MLB and MiLB players were informed Friday that they could fly home, go to the city of their MLB team, or stay in the area of their respective teams' spring facility if they wanted to. The news came in the wake of the coronavirus causing the league to cancel the remainder of spring training and postpone the beginning of the MLB season.

It's unclear which players will participate in the contest, but Tampa Bay Rays left-hander Blake Snell shared his disappointment that he wouldn't be in the area.

Wish I was in AZ I’d be down... 😔 — Blake Snell (@snellzilla4) March 13, 2020

Meanwhile, San Diego Padres outfielder Tommy Pham - who was a teammate of Snell's last year on the Rays - seems to be involved.

While the location of the game is unknown, the Reds' spring facility is located in Goodyear, Arizona, and is shared by the Cleveland Indians, Bauer's former team. Bauer's ex-teammate Mike Clevinger seemed up to the challenge, but the right-hander was not expected to be ready for Opening Day while recovering from a knee injury.

The outspoken Bauer recently had a one-on-one meeting with MLB commissioner Rob Manfred, during which the two discussed the Houston Astros' sign-stealing scandal as well as the league's proposed rule changes to the playoff format.