Mark Teahen was traded from the Kansas City Royals to the Chicago White Sox Friday. Mark Teahen was traded from the Kansas City Royals to the Chicago White Sox Friday. (Pat Sullivan/Associated Press)

Baseball's trade market sprang to life with a pair of swaps two days after the World Series.

The Chicago White Sox acquired Mark Teahen from the Kansas City Royals on Friday for infielders Josh Fields and Chris Getz and cash.

Minnesota obtained shortstop J.J. Hardy from Milwaukee for outfielder Carlos Gomez, one of the players the Mets sent to the Twins in the Johan Santana deal.

Two pitchers were blocked from becoming eligible for free agency when teams exercised their 2010 options.

Cliff Lee, who beat the Yankees twice in the World Series, gets a $9-million US salary from Philadelphia next year.

Brandon Webb, the 2006 NL Cy Young Award winner, receives $8.5 million from Arizona rather than a $2-million buyout.

Reliever J.J. Putz's $9.1-million option was declined by the Mets, who will pay a $1 million buyout.

The Chicago White Sox declined a $12-million mutual option on right fielder Jermaine Dye.

The 2005 World Series MVP gets a $950,000 buyout and immediately filed for free agency.

"Money is tight all over the world and certainly on the South Side," Chicago general manager Ken Williams said.

"We're going to spend whatever we have available, but it's not much."

Milwaukee declined a $3.7-million option on right-hander David Weathers, who gets a $400,000 buyout.

Jays' Scutaro, McDonald filed for free agency

The Angels' Vladimir Guerrero, Chone Figgins and Kelvim Escobar were among 39 players who filed Friday, raising the total of free agents to 118.

Also filing were three members of the NL champion Philadelphia Phillies: Pedro Martinez, Brett Myers and Miguel Cairo.

Blue Jays infielders Marco Scutaro and John McDonald also filed Friday.

About 65 additional players are potentially eligible to file by the Nov. 19 deadline. Free agents can start negotiating money with all teams the following day.

Kansas City also declined options for outfielder Coco Crisp ($8 million), catcher Miguel Olivo ($3.3 million) and right-hander Yasuhiko Yabuta ($4 million). Crisp and Olivo became eligible for free agency.

Crisp and Yabuta each get $500,000 buyouts, and Olivo receives $100,000.

Hardy, a 2007 all-star, joins catcher Joe Mauer, a teammate on the U.S. national teams in 2000 and 2003.

The 27-year-old Hardy batted a career-low .229 with 11 homers and 47 RBIs in 115 games last season and was demoted to Triple-A in August.

He replaces Orlando Cabrera, who is eligible for free agency.