Veteran closer Kenley Jansen is reportedly moving on after one season with the Los Angeles Angels.

Jansen and the Detroit Tigers have agreed to a one-year deal pending a physical, ESPN’s Jeff Passan reported Saturday. The deal includes a club option.

Jansen will now join Kyle Finnegan, who recently re-signed on a two-year deal, in the Tigers’ bullpen.

The market of available relievers is dwindling now that candidates like Jansen and Finnegan are off the board.

The Los Angeles Dodgers’ signing of Edwin Díaz, the Atlanta Braves bringing in Robert Suarez and the Baltimore Orioles agreeing to a deal with Ryan Helsley are other recent moves that have taken relief pitchers out of the free agency market.

Here are some of the top bullpen arms still available for signing, per MLB.com’s free agent tracker.

Jansen originally joined the Angels on a one-year, $10 million deal ahead of the 2025 season.

He went on to lead the Angels with 29 saves, posting a 2.59 ERA through 62 appearances and 59.0 innings pitched.

Adding one of the most effective closers in MLB wasn’t enough to get the Angels back into postseason contention, however, as the club missed out on October baseball for an 11th straight season.

Detroit has every reason to hope Jansen can continue being an effective closer as he heads into his age-38 season, especially given the time he has to prepare for the 2026 campaign.

Jansen told told the Orange County Register’s Jeff Fletcher he did not get a full offseason before pitching for the Angels because he was caring for his mother, who became sick before the end of his 2024 season with the Boston Red Sox and died in February.

“I’m going to put the work in this offseason to get my body in better shape… I’m definitely dedicating that to her and also to myself, to get in the best shape I can get,” Jansen told Fletcher in August.

The Tigers will now hope adding Jansen to the bullpen will help the club close out more wins in 2026.

Jansen, who turned 38 in September, told Fletcher he wanted to pitch for “at least four more years” after the 2025 season.

He will now look to continue climbing MLB’s all-time saves leaderboard. The veteran closer (476 saves) is currently just three saves shy of passing Hall of Famer Lee Smith (478 saves) for the third-most career saves of all time.