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World Baseball Classic records and statistics
All-time WBC individual leaders in various statistical categories through the end of the 2023 tournament, excluding qualifier games.

Most titles

 * – 3 (2006, 2009, 2023)

Most finals appearances

 * – 3 (2006, 2009, 2023)

Longest Classic appearance drought

 * — 15 years (2009)

Worst finish by defending champions

 * Pool stage – (2017)

[Home run]]s
🇨🇺 Alfredo Despaigne ||align=center| 7

Runs batted in
🇨🇺 Frederich Cepeda ||align=center| 23

Runs scored
🇨🇺 Frederich Cepeda ||align=center| 19

Doubles
🇨🇺 Frederich Cepeda 🇨🇦 Justin Morneau ||align=center| 8

Triples
🇨🇺 Yoenis Cespedes ||align=center| 3

Strikeouts
Carlos Beltrán ||align=center| 20

Stolen bases
5 tied with ||align=center| 5

Games played
Carlos Beltrán ||align=center| 28

At-bats
Carlos Beltrán ||align=center| 95

Wins
🇯🇵 Daisuke Matsuzaka ||align=center| 6

Losses
Hung-wen Chen ||align=center| 3

Games
🇩🇴 Fernando Rodney ||align=center| 15

Starts
🇯🇵 Daisuke Matsuzaka 🇩🇴 Edinson Volquez ||align=center| 6

[Save (baseball)|Saves]]
🇩🇴 Fernando Rodney ||align=center| 8

Innings pitched
Diegomar Markwell ||align=center| 28.0

Hits allowed
Diegomar Markwell ||align=center| 30

Runs allowed
Barry Armitage ||align=center| 14

Earned runs allowed
Barry Armitage David Bergman Walks 🇩🇴 Edinson Volquez ||align=center| 11

Strikeouts 🇯🇵 Daisuke Matsuzaka ||align=center| 23

Indios de Cartagena
Indios de Cartagena (Cartagena Indians) were a baseball team active in the Colombian Professional Baseball League. Founded in 1948, the team was one of the most successful in Colombian baseball.

Indios was the first professional baseball team in Colombia, founded in March 1948 by Juan González Cornett and sponsored by Cigarillos Piel Roja (lit. Redskin Cigarettes); it gained its name from Pielroja's mascot, a stereotypical Native American. Indios was crowned champion of the inaugural 1948 season. The team won three more titles in the so-called first era of Colombian baseball before the league ceased operations in 1958.

When Colombian baseball started again in 1979, Indios returned and immediately won two championships back to back, in 1980 and 1981.

repeating the title in 1950 and 1952 during the first era of the sport in Colombia that would be absent from 1958 to 1979 when hot baseball re-emerged. in the country, being crowned champion again and retaining the title in the following season 1980/81, to win their last title in the 1987/88 season , a year that also meant their disappearance after the absence of said tournament for five years until 1993, they played in the third season of the tournament from the 1996/97 season to the 2001/02 season , managing to play the final three times without obtaining a title, in the 2007/08 season they would return thanks to the brothers Jolbert and Orlando Cabrera who bought the Tigres de Cartagena team to rename them the Indians , announcing as manager Tommy Thompson who played with the team in 1948 as third and second baseman. 1​ In 2009 the Tigres de Cartagena team would return, ending the history of one of the most remembered teams in Cartagena baseball. In the 2016 season, the Tigres de Cartagena team once again gave way to Indios de Cartagena, maintaining the same management and player structure.

Notable players

 * Joe Lonnett
 * Seth Morehead
 * Orlando Ramírez
 * Reggie Williams

Team Europe
Manager: 31 Hensley Meulens

Coaches: Hitting Tjerk Smeets, Pitching 28 Bert Blyleven, First base Gene Kingsale, Third base 44 Ben Thijssen, Bench 25 Andruw Jones, Bullpen Mike Harkey, Quality control Evert-Jan 't Hoen

MLB timeline
The first line is the formation of the National League in 1876, and the second is the transformation of the American League to a major league in 1901. The third line is the beginning of the expansion era in 1961.

World Series championships are shown with a "*", National League Pennants before the World Series are shown with a "^", and American League Pennants before the World Series "#". No World Series was played in 1904, so the pennant winners for each league are indicated. Due to the 1994-95 Major League Baseball strike, there were no pennant winners or World Series in 1994, so this year is left blank.

Global Tournaments
The NBC Global World Series was an international semi-pro baseball tournament organized by the National Baseball Congress in the 1940s and 1950s. The tournament was similar to the Amateur World Series, but was not sanctioned by the International Baseball Federation (FIBA).

The first two editions, in 1955 and 1956, were held at Milwaukee County Stadium in Milwaukee, and the third and final edition was held at Detroit's Briggs Stadium in 1957. The United States team won the first two editions, defeating a team from Hawaii in the finals both years. The third edition saw Japan defeat Canada in the finals. The tournament was discontinued because of high costs and low attendance.

A number of former and future major leaguers took part in the tournament, including Les Layton, Daryl Spencer, John Kennedy, Don Pavletich and Clint Hartung.

Editions
With district, state, regional and a national tournament in place, Dumont set out to establish a non-professional global tournament. He started in 1939, with a seven-game series between the NBC World Series champion representing the United States and the Puerto Rico national champion from Guayama. In 1948, a Can-Am Series with Canada was billed as the Sandlot Baseball World Series. 1950 and 1952 matched the NBC World Series champion against Japan in the Inter-Hemisphere Series.

International Series
In 1955, a non-professional Global Series was organized. Teams representing Canada, Columbia, Hawaii (a U.S. Territory until 1959), Holland, Japan, Mexico, Puerto Rico and Spain played in the eight team tournament. The NBC World Series champion represented the United States. The Global Series only lasted three seasons.

Caribbean Series

 * Notes

* Category:Lists of people by university or college in Massachusetts Category:Boston-related lists