The Orioles have made no progress in their attempt to lock up Erik Bedard to an extension, which will undoubtedly fuel rumors that GM Andy MacPhail will listen to trade offers at next week's Winter Meetings in Nashville. In fact, according to the Baltimore Sun, the O's have already been contacted by interested parties:The Orioles already have gotten several trade offers for Bedard, who went 13-5 with a 3.16 ERA last season and set a franchise record with 221 strikeouts. They figure to get more next week in Nashville, Tenn., though MacPhail said that the cooling of talks shouldn't be taken as a sign that the Orioles are ready to unload Bedard.Several teams have reportedly expressed interest, but he won't come cheap: even if Bedard doesn't agree to an extension, he won't technically be a free agent until after the 2009 season. The Mets are rumored to have offered outfield prospect Carlos Gomez, Aaron Heilman and Philip Humber, which the O's turned down.
That looks like an outstanding return from where I sit, but MacPhail is holding out for something better, then it should send a message that any team hoping that Bedard will be less costly consolation prize to the Johan Santana sweepstakes is sorely mistaken. Bedard may not be Santana, but he is left-handed, posted a marginally better ERA and struck out nearly as many people -- and most importantly, he's one more year removed from free agency.
Going into Tuesday night's game with the Marlins, Mike Pelfrey was under an optical microscope. With each of Pelfrey's previous three starts getting progressively worse, Omar Minaya indicated that his "blue chip prospect" status wouldn't keep Pelfrey from being
Chan Ho Park battled for a job this spring training and now he's got one. However, it's not the one he really wanted. Mets brass came up with the decision on Friday night, but failed to tell Park about it until after his performance on Saturday. It was a performance, by the way, that Park had expected would go five innings, but instead he was pulled after three to start to get him used to relief work. Park's surprise 
























