The meetings between Duquette and Showalter also include discussions about their own arbitration-eligibles and players with options for 2015. The Orioles will pick up the options on pitchers Darren O'Day and Wei-Yin Chen, but they will decline Nick Markakis' $17.5 million option. They're not expected to pick up catcher Nick Hundley's $5 million option. They could let him become a free agent and attempt to re-sign him. The Orioles always seem to sign at least one catcher in the offseason. Anyone remember Johnny Monell? But they've got more depth than previous years. They know that Caleb Joseph can give them the required defense behind the plate. He may have worn down a little by the end - he's used to the minor league season concluding around Sept. 1 - but he would be perfectly fine backing up Matt Wieters next season. Steve Clevenger remains in the organization, and Triple-A Norfolk's Brian Ward may be the best defensive catcher in the farm system. He's definitely on the radar again despite his offensive limitations. As for the arbitration-eligible Orioles, here's the list that a team official confirmed for me: Zach Britton Chris Davis Alejandro De Aza Ryan Flaherty Miguel Gonzalez Tommy Hunter Brian Matusz Evan Meek Bud Norris Steve Pearce Chris Tillman Matt Wieters I checked on Steve Lombardozzi and he's not eligible. It may not matter, since he's a strong candidate to come off the 40-man roster. I'm sure he'd like an opportunity somewhere else and the Orioles' failure to recall him in September or place him on the taxi squad spoke volumes. Meek also is a likely non-tender, though he certainly has his supporters in the organization. Three of the more intriguing decisions center on Davis, Hunter and Matusz. Davis made $10.3 million and is due another raise simply because he's still arb-eligible. It seemed like a no-brainer last winter after he hit 53 home runs, but what about now? Hunter made $3 million and Matusz made $2.4 million. Will their projected raises be deemed excessive given their roles? Also, De Aza made $4.25 million this season and will exceed $5 million in arbitration. He batted .293/.341/.537 with five doubles, three triples, three home runs and 10 RBIs in 20 games with the Orioles. Another tough call. The Orioles must clear some payroll to afford all those raises and to negotiate a multi-year deal with Markakis. And what if they want to make a run at re-signing Andrew Miller, who's going to get big bucks on the free-agent market? Meanwhile, Baseball America reported yesterday that right-hander Julio DePaula, left-hander Kelvin De La Cruz and second baseman Cord Phelps elected free agency. They weren't in the Orioles' plans. Depth moves.