Steve Pearce remains the most viable option in right field. It's his position to lose at the moment. Pearce, Young, De Aza and Wright are four of the Orioles' 10 pending free agents following the 2015 season. It's never too early to look ahead. They're joined by pitchers Wei-Yin Chen, Bud Norris, Tommy Hunter and Ryan Webb, catcher Matt Wieters and first baseman Chris Davis. You may have heard of them. Pearce jacked up his value this summer by setting career highs in games (102), plate appearances (383), runs (51), hits (99), doubles (26), home runs (21), RBIs (49), slugging percentage (.556), OPS (.930), walks (40) and stolen bases (five). Pretty good for a guy who was earning $700,000 and got released on April 25. Three Orioles had 20-double, 20-home run seasons in 2014 - Pearce, Nelson Cruz and Adam Jones. Pretty good company. Pearce batted .327/.405/.704 in 111 plate appearances against left-handers. He hit .329/.416/.600 with 12 home runs in 51 games at Camden Yards, and .319/.390/.569 with 28 RBIs in 82 plate appearances with runners in scoring position. A repeat performance or better could make Pearce a hot commodity on the free agent market, especially with his ability to play the outfield and first base. He's also going to take ground balls at third base in spring training. Maybe it's dangerous for the Orioles to rely so heavily next season on a player who posted career highs across the board. Or maybe they're just ahead of the curve, so to speak. This much is certain: Pearce could be in line for another big raise if he builds on his 2014 season.