Kenley Jansen will turn 38 in September, but the Los Angeles Angels righty isn’t planning on calling it a career anytime soon. The big righty tells Jeff Fletcher of the Orange County Register that he hopes to pitch for “at least” four additional seasons beyond the current campaign. That’d take Jansen into his early 40s and would also give him a clear runway to achieve some historic save totals.
Jansen is currently fourth all-time with 467 saves. He’s just 11 saves behind Lee Smith for the third-most in baseball history. He could theoretically reach that threshold this season, and if he finds his way into closing gigs in subsequent seasons, he’ll climb further into rarefied air. As things stand, Mariano Rivera and Trevor Hoffman are the only two pitchers in MLB history to reach 500 and 600 saves. Jansen could realistically join the 500 club next year. A run at 600 would be unlikely, but not entirely implausible if he can continue pitching at his current level.
The 2025 season hasn’t been the best of Jansen’s career by any means, but he’s still an effective endgame option in Anaheim. He’s pitched 42 innings with a 2.79 ERA, 23.3% strikeout rate and 7.6% walk rate and gone 20-for-21 in save opportunities. Playing for a sub-.500 Angels club hasn’t afforded him the same number of closing opportunities he might expect on a winning roster, but he’s maximized the chances he’s received.
Based on his 2025 performance, there’s little reason to think Jansen can’t keep going for at least another year or two. Four-plus is ambitious, of course, but he’s shown minimal signs of slowing down. The 92.8 mph Jansen is averaging on his cutter isn’t demonstrably slower than peak levels. He sat at 93 mph with the pitch from 2013-17. Jansen has given up more hard contact this season, with a career-high average exit velocity (92.3 mph) and hard-hit rate (43.7%).
Most of that hard contact came earlier in the year, though. He’s on an otherworldly run right now, with 18 1/3 consecutive scoreless innings and an 18-to-4 K/BB ratio along the way. He’s yielded only nine hits in that span, and opponents are averaging just 89.4 mph off the bat with a 39.3% hard-hit rate. His cutter isn’t moving as much as it used to, so he’s missing fewer bats, but he’s still sporting a league-average strikeout rate and swinging-strike rate. Coupled with good command and more than a decade of experience pitching the ninth inning, that’s been plenty to keep Jansen effective even if he isn’t the utterly dominant bullpen powerhouse he once was.
Jansen spoke highly of his time with the Angels when chatting with Fletcher and sounded amenable to a reunion. In a separate piece, Fletcher wrote that GM Perry Minasian lauded Jansen’s leadership and clubhouse presence when discussing the decision not to trade his closer before the deadline:
“He’s somebody that affects everybody, not only our pitchers in the bullpen, but our young rotation, our young position players. His pedigree, his desire to win games, I think, is more than welcomed, obviously, in this place and in this clubhouse.”
There’s no apparent ninth-inning heir for the Halos — particularly not with flamethrower Ben Joyce on the shelf following May shoulder surgery — and owner Arte Moreno is loath ever to entertain the idea of going into any rebuild. All of that would seem to bode well for a potential return in 2026, though Jansen should have plenty of other clubs interested if he ends up getting back to the open market. The Mets, Tigers, Cubs and Blue Jays were among the other teams that looked into him during free agency this past offseason.
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