The Telegram (St. John's)

Jays rout Orioles to clinch first AL East title since 1993

- BY STEPHEN WHYNO

It wasn’t the storybook scene anyone would have dreamt up: a half-empty road stadium in the first half of a doublehead­er on a Wednesday afternoon.

It was a moment 22 years in the making for the Toronto Blue Jays franchise and almost a year in the making for the 2015 team. In front of an intimate crowd at Camden Yards wearing more blue than orange, the Blue Jays routed the Baltimore Orioles 152 to clinch the American League East.

The pennant is Toronto’s first since 1993, when it won its second of back-to-back World Series titles. It assures the Blue Jays a spot in the five-game AL Division Series rather than the uncertaint­y of a one-game wild-card playoff.

“It’s been a really long time since this city has been to the playoffs, so to do it for the city of Toronto and to do it with this group of guys, it’s been a dream come true,” said pitcher Marcus Stroman, who earned the win.

That’s not a problem anymore. In late July, any kind of post-season appearance would have been welcomed, before general manager Alex Anthopoulo­s went allin, trading for all-star shortstop Troy Tulowitzki, ace David Price, outfielder Ben Revere and relievers LaTroy Hawkins and Mark Lowe at the deadline.

Those moves worked like a charm, taking a Blue Jays team that was 50-51 and eight games back of first place on the day Tulowitzki entered the lineup on a 42-14 run up the standings, past the New York Yankees and into October.

Winning the division seemed inevitable in recent days as the Yankees struggled and the Blue Jays kept rolling.

The final victory of that accomplish­ment came Wednesday with young stud Stroman on the mound in just his fourth start of the season following a torn ACL in spring training. Stroman (4-0) was masterful yet again, striking out eight and allowing just one run on five hits in eight innings.

“It still feels like a dream, to be honest with you,” said Stroman. “How everything played out from the beginning of this season and being in this position to help my team clinch, it’s been a journey, it’s been a special ride. I’m just thankful for everybody who helped me get to this point.”

In typical Blue Jays fashion, the most productive lineup in baseball led the way by tormenting opposing pitching. RBI hits by Russell Martin and Ryan Goins in the second inning and more trouble in the fourth forced Baltimore starter Miguel Gonzalez (9-12) out of the game.

With Anthopoulo­s watching in the first row above the visiting dugout, the Blue Jays poured it on, scoring four runs in the fifth, including three on an infield dribbler that allowed hitter Darwin Barney to come around to score.

Edwin Encarnacio­n hit his 37th home run of the season, a two-run shot, in the seventh to get to double digits, and Jose Bautista hit his 40th in the ninth. Justin Smoak added a two-run shot to put an exclamatio­n point on the blowout.

It was the 41st time in 157 games Toronto scored eight or more runs. Bautista’s blast also got the Blue Jays two hitters with 40-plus home runs (MVP front- runner Josh Donaldson has 41) for the third time in franchise history and first time since 2000.

Everyone in the lineup got at least one hit for a total of 18. Goins set a new career high with five.

“I wake up every day with a huge grin on my face. I wake up every day and it doesn’t feel real,” said Stroman. “Taking the field every day with Josh Donaldson, Troy Tulowitzki, David Price, Mark Buehrle, it’s nuts to me. ... We’ve got unbelievab­le camaraderi­e on this team. Like I said we’re motivated and we’ve got our eyes set on bigger things.”

This monstrous offensive outburst made the clinching game feel like a coronation, in front of Blue Jays fans who chanted “MVP” for Donaldson’s at-bats and serenaded Anthopoulo­s with a chorus of “Thank you, Alex.” After Hawkins got the final out, players celebrated on the same field on which they watched Baltimore clinch the AL East a year ago.

This division title also came with the guarantee of home-field advantage in the ALDS. The Blue Jays will either play host to the AL West champions — the Texas Rangers, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim or Houston Astros — or the wild-card team at Rogers Centre for Game 1 on Oct. 8.

Home-field throughout the playoffs is within reach, too. The Blue Jays’ magic number to earn the top seed in the AL is three — any combinatio­n of victories and Kansas City Royals losses.

With the second half of the doublehead­er and one more game against the Orioles left, that could come as soon as this afternoon, since the Blue Jays’ game was moved up to 12:05 because of the threat of rain.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? The Toronto Blue Jays’ Josh Donaldson (right) celebrates with teammate Ben Revere after clinching the American League East title with a 15-2 win over the Baltimore Orioles Wednesday in Baltimore.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Toronto Blue Jays’ Josh Donaldson (right) celebrates with teammate Ben Revere after clinching the American League East title with a 15-2 win over the Baltimore Orioles Wednesday in Baltimore.

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