Boston insider again hints at Dodgers-Kenley Jansen offseason reunion

Boston Red Sox v Baltimore Orioles
Boston Red Sox v Baltimore Orioles / Mitchell Layton/GettyImages

The Los Angeles Dodgers have lacked a consistent closer in a bullpen that's shown fatigue down the stretch.

But a former staple of LA's 'pen could bring a regular closer back into the picture in 2025 and beyond. Kenley Jansen is an impending free agent, and the Boston Red Sox aren't likely to bring him back next season.

Jansen is a 15-year MLB veteran and he spent 12 of those years with the Dodgers. He pitched to a 2.37 ERA over 705 innings and collected 350 saves, three All-Star nominations, Cy Young award consideration and MVP votes in Los Angeles.

Red Sox reporter Chris Cotillo of MassLive named the Yankees as a top contender for Jansen's services next year, but mentioned "big market" teams as the likeliest landing spots for the closer. He was the fourth-most expensive player on Boston's roster this season, and his record suggests he'll remain pricey into the final years of his career. If the Dodgers proved anything last winter, almost nothing is too expensive for them.

Dodgers could reunite with Kenley Jansen this offseason after latest update from Red Sox reporter

Jansen has posted a 3.42 ERA and 27 saves over 52.2 innings for the Red Sox this season and earned an All-Star Game appearance in 2023. The veteran is pushing 37 years old, but is still reliable enough to pitch out of the closer spot on a near-nightly basis.

Michael Kopech is under contract until the end of the 2025 season and the Dodgers have Evan Phillips until 2026. Los Angeles may not need Jansen to fill the closer role, but he could reunite with his former team if he's willing to drop from the ninth-inning slot.

On the July 11 episode of the "Foul Territory" podcast, Jansen mentioned that he would like to retire as a Dodger. He doesn't plan to retire soon, as he hopes to pitch until his early 40s — so even if a reunion with Jansen doesn't come to fruition this winter, the Dodgers may still have time to make something happen before one of MLB's most dominant closers calls it a career.

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