Pittsburgh Blitzkrieg continued their strong start to the 2062 regular season with a decisive 41-0 win over the Oakland Outlaws at home on September 24. Under head coach Anthony Kirby, the Blitzkrieg improved to 4-0, maintaining the top spot in their division and showcasing both offensive efficiency and defensive dominance.

The game started with strong defensive pressure from the Blitzkrieg. Early mistakes by the Outlaws, including a sack and forced fumble by Pittsburgh’s William Martin at 9:08 in the first quarter, set the tone. Martin, the right defensive end, recorded two sacks and one forced fumble on the night.

Pittsburgh’s offense capitalized quickly on the turnover. Quarterback Cornelius Camp connected with William Dasilva for a 17-yard touchdown run at 8:22 in the opening quarter, putting the Blitzkrieg on the board 7-0 after a successful extra point by kicker John Bentley.

The Blitzkrieg offense kept the pressure with a balanced attack. Cornelius Camp completed 26 of 37 passes for 271 yards and four touchdowns, despite one interception. On the ground, the team amassed 132 yards with four rushing touchdowns shared across backs Fernando Russo and Gilbert Yates. Russo led the rushers with 65 yards and one touchdown, while Yates added 47 yards on the ground with a rushing and receiving touchdown.

Additional scoring included a 12-yard touchdown pass from Camp to wide receiver James Michaud early in the second quarter, extending the lead to 14-0. Shortly thereafter, a critical interception by Robert Kellar at the Oakland 30-yard line set up another Pittsburgh touchdown. Gilbert Yates capped the drive with a 4-yard rushing touchdown, pushing the lead to 21-0 before halftime.

The Blitzkrieg defense maintained control throughout the game, holding the Oakland offense to just 18 passing yards and 15 rushing yards. Oakland quarterback David Travis was under constant pressure, sacked multiple times, fumbling once, and throwing two interceptions.

Oakland struggled offensively, unable to convert any third downs and failing to mount any scoring threats. Their final record stands at 2-2, placing them third in the division behind the undefeated Blitzkrieg.

Pittsburgh's special teams contributed with solid punting and coverage, despite a few recovered fumbles on punt returns. Penalties were minimal for Pittsburgh, totaling just three for 20 yards.

With the victory, Anthony Kirby’s Blitzkrieg maintained their commanding offensive production, now boasting 126 points scored through four weeks, while their defense has allowed only 25 points. Pittsburgh continues to lead their division with a perfect record and appears well-positioned for a postseason run should they maintain this level of play.