Tuesday, 16 April 2013

Villiers Fossard - afternoon

In all the last minute scurrying to get BGO ready and back by Salute (this weekend), I forgot to post the second part of my Villiers Fossard game. So here it is, rather picture heavy, but enjoy.

I hope a few people can come a say hi at Salute on saturday, I'll be around the PSC stand and its twin demo games for BGO, 'Inland from Utah' and GMG boys' amazing 'Omaha' game, come and see that board at least, its a site to behold.

But, it was all worth it, the books will be on sale at Salute, and all pre-orders will be going out straight after.



After a ‘quick’ drive down the M6 to Wolverhampton, and the second game was played out at WMMS on Sunday afternoon. Again, here are the forces involved. This was a 1000pts aside ‘company’ level attack/defence scenario, with the FJ dug-in holding Villiers Fossard itself and the US attacking over the stream (my river is probable a bit big for what it actually is). On turn 3 the US armoured reinforcements would start arriving at the rate of D6 units per turn, along the road, or within 10” either side of  it.

US attackers, Villiers Fossard - afternoon game
FHQ in jeep, with radio communications upgrade            
Forward Signals Unit, radio truck                                              
Infantry Platoon (inexperienced)                                            
Infantry Platoon (inexperienced)                                            
2 M10 Tank Destroyers                                                                 
Aerial Observer – L4 Piper Cub                                                  
Battery 2 105mm guns (off-table)                                            
Forward Aid Post                                                                            
Ambulance                                                                                        
Sherman Dozer                                                                                
3 x 1st Priority artillery requests                                                 
3 x Timed on Target barrages                                                     
Reinforcements                          
2 M8 Armoured cars                                                                      
Armoured Infantry Platoon in 4 M3 half tracks                   
M8 HMC                                                                                             
Sherman Tank Platoon (3 x 75mm)                                          
Forward Observer Team in Jeep                                                              
Totals:  998 pts  62 BR     7 officers  2 scouts

Defenders, Villiers Fossard afternoon game                                                                         
Forward HQ in Kubelwagen        
Forward Signal Unit, radio van                   
Wire Team                                                         
FJ Platoon (veteran) with 4 x pzfausts
HMG 42 team                                                   
Pzschreck Team                                                               
80mm mortar team
FJ Platoon (veteran) with 4 x pzfausts
HMG 42 team                                                   
Pzschreck Team                                                               
80mm mortar team                                        
StuG III G Battery                                            
Forward Observer Team                              
Nebelwerfer Team                                        
Nebelwerfer Team                                        
Fortified Building (church)                                           
Fortified Bocage                                              
1 Minefield                                                        
1 Booby-Trapped Building                                           
Panhard 178 armoured car                          
3 x Snipers                                                         
Supply Truck                                                     
88m Flak36 with loader team + tow        
Pre-Registered Target Point                       
2 x Counter Battery Fire missions             
3 x Timed 80mm mortar barrages            
Totals 996 pts    60 BR     4 officers   4 scouts

I know the FJ won the last game, but we can assume that a later attack pushed the FJ back to allow this game to happen in the afternoon (I didn’t want to replay the same game anyway).

I deployed the FJ defenders again. My plan was for a defence in depth. To have a first ‘delaying’ line of resistance watching the stream, using the fortified bocage, snipers and HMGs to cause havoc for as long as possible. The OP team in the church would call in werfer fire and the pre-registered target point would allow the two 80mm mortars to keep up a harassment barrage turn after turn (which it did to great effect).  On turn three I would abandon this frontline, and leave timed mortar strikes to hit it (hopefully with the Americans now there – this worked well).

The StuGs would be arriving in reserve, on the two roads from St Lo, as would the 88. The platoons scattered themselves through the buildings (including the fortified church), but I decided my outnumbered forces would give up the first objective (the farm) and leave it mined on the road outside and booby-trapped.  I spread out into ‘pockets’, knowing the American artillery can be devastating and knowing the Piper Cub would be circling overhead again.

The US forces all deployed on the far side of the stream, and took the first turn. They set off across the stream, wading in, and we decided it was dangerous ground for vehicles. The Sherman dozer tank and two M10s nosed forwards very slowly. This was met by ambush fire from my 2 HMG42s and 3 snipers, causing some pinning as the GIs hit the deck or scrambled into the bushes.  In removing that pinning the US pulled and air attack counter, and surprise, surprise, a P-51 banked in to cause havoc.

The FJ’s first turn saw the mortars start their turn by turn harassment into the US lines, and more MG and sniper fire. Others got onto ambush fire, and the StuGs began to advance to join the fight. The 88 and tow raced up the road, ready to deploy to cover the road through the village. It didn’t get the chance as the P-51 strafed along the road and destroyed the tow, leaving the crew to push the wheeled carriage very slowly for most of the rest of the game (it finally got into position on the final turn).

 The US infantry scrambled on, on their left they were in trouble, heavily pinned by hails of MG fire. Return fire from BAR teams did wipe out one of the HMG teams, and the other was pinned by MG fire from the dozer tank. On the right the GIs moved faster and quickly made the hedgerow against sporadic mortar fire only. They also wandered into the minefield in front of the objective, but failed to set it off – drat. The Piper cub flew off to find my werfers (not hard), which drew 105 fire, only pinning one. I realised now that I should have split them up to avoid both being in the same target area, hindsight being 20/20 and all that...

The delaying defence of the first hedgerow was almost complete, my survivors began to pull back into the church, leaving only a sniper behind as a rearguard, but he continued stirling work in keeping GIs heads down (and was still alive at the end of the game). The first timed mortar barrage hit, and caused more pinning (I used it as harassment barrage too), and the first werfer cut loose. It added more pinning, with a direct hit wiping out the platoon HQ - LT down!

It was going well, I had dished out 8 counters and taken 3. It didn’t stay this way.

The US artillery got going. 8” Corps-level guns smashed the farm next to the church and wiped out its defending MG team, and pinned the Panhard 178. More 105 shells hit my mortar teams, but only pinned them (still a pain though, the Piper cub was conducting its own on table counter-battery fire).  The P-51 swung back in and strafed up a Nebelwerfer team, who lost a man, and in a ‘beyond the call of duty; action hit fire! The resulting shells on the PRTP caused more death and pinning. The first farm objective fell. The US broke it, and I rolled a 1 for the booby-trap so it didn’t go off – foiled again!  Also the first US reinforcements arrived, three Shermans rolling on past the farm and heading for the village. Not seeing my squad on ambush, they loosed their panzerfaust at the lead tank, which hit, then glanced off! Hmmm... like that then hey!

To add insult to that insult, another US aircraft showed up. A P-47 with 4 bombs swept in and dropped them into the village as they attempted to wipe it off the map. A direct hit wiped out a squad lurking in a barn as it collapsed on them. Three US aircraft where now circling overhead.

My StuGs moved forwards to engage. On the left one found a clear flank shot across an orchard, and destroyed the Sherman platoon HQ tank. The other StuG in the centre missed, whilst in the village the third reached the church and took a shot at an M10, now at the hedgerow, and also missed. Much to my disappointment (I‘m getting used to it), the M10s return fire blew it up!

So it would continue. More artillery fire, more mortar fire, and the US reinforcements piling on. Their armoured infantry quickly dismounted, to avoid placing those vulnerable half tracks in harms way, and joined the Shermans advance. The Sherman missed the StuG, and ran out of their 3 AP shells (oh dear), but little did they know, the StuG only had 1 shot left (which missed) and then withdrew to find its ammo truck. That duel had been inconclusive.

Things got hot in the village, volumes of 105 shells rained in on the church, and then I pulled a mine strike, played it on a Sherman, only to roll a 1, have it played on my flanking StuG and see it explode. The defences on my left had crumbled to nothing (1 MG team then), and the village was being outflanked to the west. How long could I hold on and risk encirclement. Not long. The counters had been piling up (I’d used quite a few tactical co-ordinations early on too, but veterans are so good at it!). The P-51s last strafing run saw my radio van brew-up (like it was hurting anybody), and the P-47 dived in again to strafe my hard hit ‘werfer crews with its 8(!) MGs. It was a messy end.

I was almost done. I now had 22 counters, my opponent 16. There was time for one last hurrah. In his turn of shooting-up the church (or what was left of it after all the artillery), I got a ‘beyond the call of duty’ counter, which I used on a Panzerschreck team. It fired once at a Sherman dozer, once at an M10, and got both – heroics, but only in a losing cause.

The order to withdraw came. I had lost half my infantry, 2 StuGs and would have to abandon the 88 (it never got a shot in).  I had inflict 42 loss BR on the US, but it was a solid US win. The village had fallen, mainly thank to some fearsome artillery requests (corps-level 155s hurt a lot), and the USAAF who put in good work in a ‘follow-on forces attack’ mission, and basically kept my werfers out of the game, as well as hunting down easy ‘soft-skin kills’ for the counters.

It was a great game (lasting just 4 hours, but both of us are experienced players). It felt brutal as an infantry force under the US bombardments, and their aircraft added to it, which I guess is right for Normandy. But my out-gunned veterans had fought hard, and done significant damage before giving up their ground.  For the campaign, the US had earned 13 victory points, whilst the Germans earned 8. So, the scores now sat at US 18, Germans 17, with the evening counter-attack still to play.  

Thanks to all those you drop by to say hello, ask questions and take a look at the new book’s proofs.  All the enthusiasm really helps when it comes to getting stuff done...



































3 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  2. Fantastic looking table, with fabulous pictures!!! Great work...
    Phil.

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  3. Great looking table and a fantastic set of rules.

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