Several Mets are set to participate in the upcoming World Baseball Classic. So there’s a good chance this list featuring players who were Mets at one time or another encapsulating the four previous editions of the international tournament will have an addition or two by the time it’s over on March 21.

2006 and 2009: Dice-K Goes Back-to-Back

By the time Daisuke Matsuzaka arrived in New York, he’d already achieved his biggest professional baseball accomplishments. In 2006, he was a star pitcher for Japan getting plenty of attention from major-league suitors. At the inaugural WBC, Dice-K raised his national hero status while simultaneously improving his stock. He won the championship by going four innings and allowing one run in a 10-6 victory over Cuba. Three years later, Matsuzaka was again the star—going 3-0 with a 2.45 ERA—with Japan again being the event’s dominant country.

2009: Wright Walk-Off

It’s not just one of the best moments by a Met in the WBC, but it’s also one of the best moments in WBC history. David Wright was already beloved by Mets fans. Now he had a whole country to embrace him. Days after the United States was humiliated by Puerto Rico in a mercy-rule loss to put the Americans in a win-or-else scenario, Wright came up in the ninth down 5-4 with the bases loaded and one out in Miami. He took a pitch down in the zone and placed it perfectly down the right-field line to score the tying and winning runs and send Team USA to the semifinals.

2013: When “The Captain” Became “Captain America”

This was the off-season when Wright’s unofficial title as leader of the Mets became official. But there was a more prestigious title that awaited him after the first-round contest with Italy. Just like the ’09 Puerto Rico thriller, Wright was up with the bases loaded. It was a less-dramatic situation (the fifth inning) but still had a tremendous result. His blast went into the left-center field stands and broke a 2-2 tie. Wright is one of the top performers in WBC history, batting .300/.400/.458 and driving in 10 runs over the four games he played in 2013. But his participation was cut short because of an oblique injury and teammates hung up a superhero cap in the dugout to pay homage to their third baseman.

2013: Canó Leads DR to Perfect Record

The Dominican Republic clearly had the most talent in 2013 and proved it—never losing on their way to the championship in a feat no WBC champ has done before or since. In their eight wins in eight tries, Canó batted .469 with two homers. In addition to being named tournament MVP, he became one of four to have a WBC title and a World Series ring. Canó was wrapping up his career with the Yankees, but not his career in New York of course. After spending 2014 through 2018 in Seattle, the All-Star second baseman was anything but All-Star form during his two-plus seasons as a Met.

2017: Díaz Brings the Heat

In a thrilling and contentious extra-inning Puerto Rico win over the Netherlands, Edwin Díaz gave a hint of a future for both Seattle and eventually New York. He breezed through the 10th by striking out the side and even inciting a bench-clearing after a pitch that went high and tight. WBC rules then stipulated that two runners were automatically put on base beginning with the 11th. But it had no effect on Edwin—except it may have gotten him more pumped up. Díaz kept the Netherlands off the scoreboard again and his hitters won it in the bottom half. He saved 34 for the Mariners in ’17 and then locked down 57 the next year. That dominance, as we know, is now in full effect in Queens.

2017: José Bautista’s Walk-off Throw

He was “Joey Bats,” but his arm was the difference for the Dominican Republic. In the bottom of the ninth of a first-round match-up, Columbia was in position to win with runners on the corners and one out. Bautista hauled in a line drive and fired it home to try and get a tagging Oscar Mercado. Catcher Welington Castillo shielded the baseline, caught Bautista’s laser throw, and applied the tag in time to end the inning and outrage Columbia’s personnel. Two innings later, the DR offense broke out with a seven-run eleventh to make a dramatic game seem lopsided by the 10-3 final.

Bautista wrapped up a 15-year major-league career the next season when he played for not one, but three teams in the NL East. His stint with the Mets lasted 83 games, the highlight being a game-winning grand slam against Tampa.

2017: Javy’s No-Look Tag

He’s mesmerizing whether on the field or at the plate. It’s impossible to keep your eyes off him–whether he was on the Cubs, Mets, or now with the Tigers. What makes this play from Javier Báez so fascinating was what he wasn’t seeing. In the top of the eighth against the Dominican Republic, a 3-1 Puerto Rico lead was in danger with Nelson Cruz on first. On a pitch from Edwin Díaz, Cruz attempted to steal. Yadier Molina caught and fired to Báez covering second. Even before he received the throw, Báez pointed in celebration toward Molina and then continued while blindly putting the tag on Cruz.

2017: Stroman in MVP Form for USA

The most recent edition of the WBC was the most exciting, highlighted by the three moments above as well as Adam Jones‘ sensational catch amid the center field fans at Petco Park, and punctuated by Marcus Stroman‘s brilliant performance in an 8-0 win for Team USA in the championship round. He dominated Puerto Rico, allowing just one hit in six innings for an impressive 2.35 ERA in three starts for a deserving MVP. Proving even if you beat ’em, you can join ’em, the former Met and current Cub will be with Díaz and Francisco Lindor on the Puerto Rico roster in 2023.