Since the trade deadline when general manager Alex Anthropolous pulled off two of the biggest blockbuster trades of the year, this is the moment the Toronto Blue Jays and their rowdy fans have been waiting for.

When the Blue Jays took on the Baltimore Orioles in game one of their doubleheader at Camden Yards, Toronto left no doubt in their blowout win to clinch the division.

The Blue Jays pitching staff has been solid as of late and Wednesday was no different. Marcus Stroman got the ball and he pitched one of his best games of the season. He went eight innings giving up one run on five hits while striking out eight and walking two.

As for the offense, they had themselves quite a game scoring 15 runs on 18 hits.

For Orioles starter Miguel Gonzalez, it just wasn't his day as he lasted just 3.2 innings giving up four runs (3 ER) on four hits while walking three as well as collecting three strikeouts.

It started in top of the second when Russell Martin hit an RBI double to open the scoring. Later in the inning Ryan Goins hit an RBI single to score Martin and put Toronto up 2-0.

In the fourth inning, the grabbed two more runs behind a Ben Revere RBI single and a bases loaded walk by Jose Bautista.

The fifth inning was what really broke this game open. Darwin Barney reached on a throwing error, but another error by Chris Davis of the Orioles forced in three runs total for a "little league" home run to make the score 7-0. Then, MVP candidate Josh Donaldson came up with an RBI double scoring Ben Revere and that had the Blue Jays in total control with an 8-0 advantage.

Edwin Encarnacion wanted in on the action as he hit a two-run home run in the seventh to put the run total in double digits at 10-0.

The Orioles offense took until the seventh inning to crack the scoreboard when Steve Pearce hit a solo home run.

In the ninth, the Blue Jays just wouldn't stop hitting. It started with a Joey Bats two run home run, followed by another two run home run, this time by Justin Smoak. Then, two RBI singles by Kevin Pillar and Darwin Barney gave the Blue Jays a 15-1 advantage.

For the bottom of the ninth, Blue Jays manager John Gibbons brought on long time veteran LaTroy Hawkins to close it down. He did give up one run, but he closed things down to preserve the win for the Blue Jays as they won their first AL East title since 1993.

The Blue Jays have played some incredible baseball down the stretch and did what they had to do to clinch this division title. The next order of business will be to secure home field advantage throughout the American League playoffs as they are a tough team to beat up at Rogers Centre in Toronto.

WP: Marcus Stroman (4-0, 1.67 ERA)

LP: Miguel Gonzalez (9-12, 4.91 ERA)