Voilà un CR qui a été posté suite à une partie au dernier tournoi d'Albany.
FT83 Go On To Kolpino!, Adrian Earle
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Wow, Adrian Earle ? a legendary ASL name! I?ve known Adrian from the ASL mailing list and other Internet forums, but this was our first meeting. It was great to get a chance to play but at the same time I knew this would be a pretty tough matchup. We diced between FT83 and FrF11, Rostov Redemption, and a subsequent roll gave me the attacking Spaniards.
The situation: A mixed bag of shaky Russians hunkers down in fortifications on Bd 32, behind wire and mines, awaiting the onslaught of an elite company of the Spanish Blue Division. The Soviets get five first liners, five conscripts, an 8-1 and 7-0, an HMG, an MMG, and a light mortar. The real stars of the Russian defense, though, are three pillboxes, eight trenches, six Wire and 36 mine factors. The Spaniards are no joke either, though, with nine 468s, three 548s, a 9-2, a 9-1, a pair of 8-0s, an MMG and three LMGs. They also receive an 80mm OBA module with a pre-reg hex and Barrage capability, but sadly no smoke capability. Ground snow is present and only the Soviet mines can be HIP. Victory is by VP ? CVP as normal, plus two points to the Spaniards for every PB captured, and CVP to the Russians for exiting their mapedge on/after turn four of the five turn game. My Spanish had to amass at least twice the Russian VP total to win.
Adrian?s defense: Adrian showed a bunker complex centered on 32C9 with most of the wire fronting it. He had another bunker on his left in O6 and P6, and the bulk of his defense was in the center woods mass in and around J8. It looked like he was going to try to give me a bloody nose, holding me up long enough to scamper off with a few squads in the endgame.
My plan: When I selected my pre-reg, I chose 32F9, planning to assault the Russian right (my left) behind the nine-hex-wide +2 hindrance of a rolling barrage. Unfortunately, it looks like a rolling barrage needs an SSR all its own so that was out. Also, Adrian?s defense looked like he was enticing me to either flank. With that in mind, and trusting in my high morale and firepower, I decided to form up tight and smash right up the center. There was wire in 32J10 but the only unit covering the immediate approach to the woods mass was concealed in a trench in K9. Artfully misreading the setup instructions, I cost myself a couple MF by setting up along the 6 hexrow on Bd 33. I teamed the 9-2 up with the MMG and some helpers to dish out a 4(0) on K9, while everyone else laced up their running shoes.
The flow: My initial shot cracked and ELR?d the 447 in 32K9. That made the initial run-up a little easier, though I got banged up a bit finding some mines in and around M9 and N9. I managed to get most of my force up into or adjacent to the L9-K10 stream intact and ready to assault the heart of Adrian?s defense.
The turning point: Two events in quick succession allowed me a toehold in the center woods. First, a 12(+3) Barrage attack broke and wounded Adrian?s 8-1 in J9, depriving the accompanying HMG of a vital DRM. As a result, the now-leaderless HMG whiffed on the attack against my 8-1/LMG/548 as they banged up into K9. I had my fingers in my ears as I moved up out of the stream but was surprised to find no mines waiting for me.
The wrap: We exchanged casualties in a couple CCs, plus a conscript managed to KIA a 468 in the stream with an FPF shot ? ouch! I was able to get concealed units adjacent to three broken but un-DM?d conscripts for some tasty prisoners. In the endgame, a mistake on my part gave Adrian a chance to sneak off map with enough VPs to win, but I was able to catch up and break his last squad. As a result, the Russians came up a point short and I won 25-12.
Conclusion: We had a tight contest but I think I like the Spanish in this one ? I misplayed a couple key elements but was still able to pull out a win against a tough opponent. I think Adrian would probably put mines in K9 should he play this again, but otherwise it was a solid D with a sound fallback plan. The balance swaps out a pair of 426s for 447s, which sounds about right to square things up.
Lessons learned: Read the scenario card! Cripes, twice in a row I missed something. It didn?t prove critical but I was a bit of a dope setting up two hexes shy of my start line ? I was lucky to roll a result on my 9-2?s initial attack but with a better setup I would?ve managed a 6(0) or 8(0) for that all-important shot.
Donc victoire espagnole