The Dodgers and free-agent closer Kenley Jansen have agreed on a five-year, $80 million deal, according to multiple reports, keeping the big right-hander in L.A. in an offseason that redefined what teams are willing to pay for dominant ninth-inning specialists.

Jansen's signing first, citing an unidentified team source. Other reports the agreement.

Jansen was the last of three high-dollar closers available this offseason, agreeing to terms with L.A. after Mark Melancon signed with the Dodgers' NL West rivals San Francisco for a reported $62 million over four years and Aroldis Chapman landed with the Yankees for $86 million over five years.

So much for idea that luxury-tax concerns would restrain : Hill, Turner and Jansen expected to go for almost $200M combined.
— Ken Rosenthal (@Ken_Rosenthal)

The Marlins reportedly were another team making a push to sign Jansen, 29.

In 71 appearances covering 68 2/3 innings in 2016, Jansen recorded 47 saves in 53 opportunities with a strikeout-walk ratio of 104-11, a 0.67 WHIP and 1.83 ERA. He was 3-2 with six blown save opportunities.