Turn 6
Continued -
| Campy's Brigade begins reforming outside musket range and now supported by cavalry. At the bottom of the photo 2 Prussian horse artillery batteries make life uncomfortable for the French. |
| French columns continue to press hard on the rapidly diminishing Prussian 2nd Corps. |
Turn 7
| The collapse of the Prussian 2nd Corps continues with another of Sack's 22nd Infantry battalions retreating from the field leading to his Brigade being broken. |
Turn 8
| An overview of the French 2nd and 3rd Corps that had become increasingly strung out in their rapid advance. |
| Napoleon decided to call a halt as the Prussians quickly vacated the battlefield in order to preserve his numbers leaving the last Prussian units to depart unmolested. |
This was a clear French victory having destroyed the threat to their flank and held the river crossing with the Prussians suffering 400 casualties to the French 124. However, the benefit to Napoleon could prove short-lived with the mobilisation of the Prussian 3rd Corps still some distance away to the north.
The Prussians needed an early breakthrough at the bridge crossing and he destruction of 2 Guard batteries boded well. What followed was a combination of very poor Prussian dice rolls and inferior troop quality compared to the French Old Guard sealing their fate.
The Prussian 2nd Corps dice rolls were little better with their artillery inflicting the greatest casualties among the French columns. It was clear early on that there was a need to drive on the bridge to support the main Prussian body establishing themselves on the French side. There was a brief moment when the 2 brigades tasked with making that move enjoyed early success driving the French out of the farm. The advance stalled at that point never to recover the initiative. Their fate was sealed with the collapse of the brigades attempting to hold against the massed French 2nd and 3rd Corps columns.
I will cover the strategic situation in the next post detailing the subsequent map moves.
Well that collapsed pretty quick. I did feel sorry for the Prussian II Korps as it deployed on the table edge and thus had its back to the wall (abyss). Did many retreat / rout off-table? I've encountered this in Waterloo refights where my Prussians appear right on the edge and the French are ready and waiting - any adverse result sees them tumbling back off the edge of the world.
ReplyDeleteA frustratingly quick conclusion. A combination of those damned dice and the difficult position the Prussians were in. On reflection, your earlier belief that line troops rather than the Old Guard defending the bridge might have proved more interesting albeit more risky for the French.
DeleteWell my hope was somewhat misplaced that the Prussians might get a win! In the end quality triumphed over quantity. I look forwar to the post match wash up to see how the French are placed, given any losses suffered in this game and the fact that units were already depleted before the action started. Interesting to see what old Boney will do, faced by the Prussian 3rd Corps and of course Blucher and chums still in the vicinity.
ReplyDeleteA brief respite for the French but their overall situation is becoming increasingly serious for them. Some head-scratching will be in order!
DeleteAnother great game Jon. The first photo is fantastic!
ReplyDeleteThere seems to be an endless number of French infantry columns. Tough for the Prussians.
Many thanks Ben. I too like that first photo. I have been playing around with with the background setting to blank over the garage wall with mixed results so far. It worked pretty well on that photo and something I shall probably continue with whenever possible.
DeleteIt's not that I thought it would be more interesting, it's just that using the Old Guard to defend something just seems 'wrong' - surely they're always kept in reserve to deliver the coup de grĂ¢ce, or occasionally in a counter-attack to restore a dodgy position, e.g. Plancenoit.
ReplyDeleteA reply to your comment Rob. For some reason the 'reply' button has decided to stop working! I could have worded it better in that it would have been a more 'interesting' game for me. I understand what you are saying about the Old Guard and very familiar about its historical use. I chose to give them a different task in this game.
ReplyDelete