The Baltimore Orioles, Miami Marlins, and Toronto Blue Jays are all interested in costless agent OF Ichiro Suzuki. Bob Nightngale of USA Today announced the rumors via Twitter on Wednesday.

Ichiro Suzuki, so far, is drawing interest from the #BlueJays, #Marlins and #Orioles, who are all looking for outfield help.

— Bob Nightengale (@BNightengale) January 7, 2015

Suzuki is currently 41 years old and will be entering the 15th season of his Major League career after first playing nine years with the Orix Blue Wave in Japan.

Suzuki batted .284 last season for the New York Yankees with a .324 OBP, both of which are the best he has posted since 2010 with the Mariners. Aside from those two statistics, Suzuki has not performed above average in his recent years. He cleaned up the awards in 2001, taking home an All-Star appearances, MVP title, Rookie of the Year title, Gold Glove, and Silver Slugger award. He was an All-Star from 2001 to 2010, each year posting an OPS+ in the triple digits. Since then, however, the highest OPS+ Suzuki has posted is 93 in 2012.

If he goes to Baltimore, Suzuki will most likely see the majority of his time alongside David Lough, serving as a fourth outfielder. Steve Pearce is currently the only backup in the corner outfield positions, behind Alejandro De Aza and Lough.

Miami is certainly lacking in outfielders, boasting only three on their current 25-man roster (Christian Yelich, Marcell Ozuna, Giancarlo Stanton) and utility-man Martin Prado. Miami also does not have any solid outfield prospects, with their only outfield top-20 prospects being Austin Dean (#11, Single-A Full) and Casey Soltis (#18, Rookie League). Suzuki would be a nice, cheap addition to the Marlins, and he could serve as a fourth outfielder in case of injury or if one of their three starters is in need of a day off. He would also make an excellent pinch hitter.

Toronto also is not very strnog in the outfield with four outfielders on their 25-man roster (Jose Bautista, Kevin Pillar, Dalton Pompey, Michael Saunders). Toronto could use the help of Suzuki, though this does not seem like the most likely landing spot for him.

Suzuki holds the record for most hits in a season with 262 (2002), and he is just 156 hits away from 3,000 in MLB. He has over 4,000 hits in his career combining MLB with Japan's Nippan League. He will likely accept a paycheck lower than his 2013 and 2014 salaries of $6.5 million to sign with a team for 2015.