Third Turn, 6.00-7.00
am:
The Left wing closes to attack the Durrenberg, whereas
the Grenzers erupt frome the wood on the back of the Prussian position. In the
plain Guasco attacks Prussian infantry and the Imperial cavalry charges in
support. On the Strehla sector the Imperials attack the entrenchements and the
city. This is the all-out move for the Austrian….
which ends in a total failure: in the Strehla sector the
attackers first fail moral test under fire, then routs and despite destroying
the lonely grenadiers garrisoning Strehla, the attackers from the
Hessen-Darmstadt column rout desordering the other regiments.
The cavalry attacks in the centre and against the
Durrenberg are repulsed whereas Guasco and Wurzburg commands lose all the
attacks and becomes exhausted, Guasco in turn collapsing despite winning the
melee with Hauss (proxied by a garrison regiment).
Kleefeld croats emerging from woods make non impression
at all on the stedy Prussian which in turns counter-attacks. Prussian cavalry
takes an holding position against Kleefeld whereas Hauss repulse the Croats in
disorder behind the woods (in the following picture the real Durrenberg with the wood, taken from the Kleefeld croats line of advance).
Finally, Prussian fusiliers garrison back Strehla and
their artillery bring Roth division to the exhaustion; this is the overall picture of the battlefield at the end of Turn III:
With two commands exhausted and one collapsed, the only
Austrian force still available for attack is the Kleefeld division: accordingly
Stolberg calls of the attack.
Analysis:
In V&B each point lost is equivalent to 50% of
effective losses in terms of man/horses/guns. The Austro-Imperial loss are
accordingly in the area of 5000, nearly half from the Reichsarmee. In the real
battle the losses were nearly 2000. However in the real battle the Reichsarmee
put on only a show against Strehla, not a full-scale attacke as in the refight.
Prussian losses are 1000 and 5 guns, very close to the real outcome. Moreover,
in the real battle the attack was called off at 7.00 am like in the refight.
From this point of view the battle is simulated well enough. However there are
some point to consider:
- The Austro-Imperials did only a big mistake, allowing
Guasco to expose its open flank to the Prussian cavalry: the other mistake was
to deploy the Imperial cavalry on the right, whereas on the left it would be
more useful from the very start. The Imperials did their best given their low
morale, crammed deployment and poor training of the infantry. The Austrian
artillery didn’t make any impression on the Prussian. In this sense, without
any further “special rule”, their the lack of effectiveness is portrayed well
enough.
- The Prussian defended wisely, reinforcing the right
wing and using the cavalry to stop Guasco from the beginning. Their task was
indeed easy enough.
- The die-rolls were “average”, that is there was no
“bad die-roll” for anybody. The only “unlucky” roll was for the Guasco
collapse. A roll of 1 was the only possibility, 1 was rolled…however this
changed nothing since an exhausted division cannot move in contact with the
enemies. The collapse means that the unit are also permanently disordered like
after a rout.
- However, the Austro-Imperial task, to exhaust all
the Prussian division seems to out of reach unless the Prussian player is drunk.
To attack stationary, higher-morale infantry with more guns, entrenched or
commanding higher-ground is a daunting task, even with a nearly 2:1
superiority. Accordingly I think that the victory conditions should be changed
into:
Victory Conditions,
updated
The Austro-Imperials win if they exhaust at least one
of the Prussian infantry divisions. The Prussian wins by preventing this
maintaing the control of both the Durrenberg and Strehla. Any other risults is
a draw.
I think this scenario would be interesting if played
twice with reversed role, the Prussian victory being not so granted. An intact
Guasco command together with an early attacking Imperial cavalry could have put
the final result more in balance, so I think.
Next refight Korbitz, 1759, a similar situation with
some different twists.