The game we played was a small action by British forces advancing
and clearing the Liri Valley, after the breakthrough at Monti Cassino (yep,
Italy for a change). The write-up below is for a more historical scenario based
on the actual forces, but in our game we just used the right terrain and selected our
own forces, using the Overlord book (with a few small alterations). This was mainly
so we could us the miniatures we wanted to (or have just painted) in a pick-up
game on a Sunday afternoon.
The British force consist of 2 infantry platoons (on foot)
supported by a squadron of Churchills, with off-table mortars and timed 5.5”
and 25 pdr strikes to hit the village early. The Germans were veterans from 1st
Fallschirmjäger, supported by a StuG and a Ferdinand (never used one before, so
this was very cool).
Below are a few photos of the game. It didn’t start well for the
Brits, as their leading Daimler armoured car was toasted by a Panzerfaust
trying to sneak an early objective and their opening artillery did very little
(most of the FJ were still in reserve or not in the village, instead pushing
forwards in the hedges and vineyards to wait on ambush fire). The British
advance was dogged by poor reinforcements rolls, so was very piecemeal and the
veterans FJ were fighting hard, causing a lot of pinning with their MGs and
then with an accurate Nebelwerfer strike.
As the Churchills hooked right (my left) they crossed the
sights of the waiting Ferdinand and in a display of awesome firepower it
wrecked two in short order, at very long range – nice!
But the relentless British mortars had found their range. As
the FJ arrived to occupy the buildings they came under sustained mortar fire
which got their heads down, and pinned the German 120mm mortar team.
The first bold Brits reached the edge of town, but having dashed
across open ground into MG fire, there
were many left to press the assault further, and they were gradually whittled
away to nothing. The last Churchill traded shots at maximum range with a StuG
on the overlooking hill, and survived repeat hits, but then... we ran out time!
Drat!
Despite the situation on the ground the BR reckoning was
close, the Brits were still 10 from breaking, and after a series of terrible
chit draws, (4, 5, 4, 5) the veteran FJ were actually only 11 from breaking too.
Still, with the Ferdinand re-armed and now hunting the last Churchill, I don’t
think the Brits could have taken the village today.
Here are some snaps from the game. A nice change from our norm. Italy has prospects for a good BG book, one day!
First blood - Panzerfaust 1, Daimler AC 0.
The German artillery support behind the village, werfer and (often pinned) 120mm mortar team
The lurking beast, on ambush fire.
British armoured support moves up the road to take their chances against the very big gun waiting for them.
Infantry under 'werfer fire and pinned down in the village's surrounding cornfields. (Historically very accurate!)
The Church's trundle up through incoming mortar fire. Slow and steady.
A StuG peaks its gun out from cover on the hill behind the village. Targets approaching.
Meanwhile, reinforcments rush towards the cover of the buildings (Nebelwerfer marked as reloading)
The last of the first British infantry platoon dash over the open ground from the fields to the buildings, swept by 3 MG42s. Ouch! The PIAT won't really help much.
The Elephant's calling card... kaboom! Churchills have good armour -right? 6s to hit, twice - lucky (I am sometimes).
And this is the historical forces for the scenario.
Casa Sinagoga, Liri Valley, 16 May
1944
After the fall of Monti Cassino, the 78th
(Battleaxe) Division is advancing into the Liri Valley to secure Route 6, the
major road which leads through the valley toward the Hitler Line - the German‘s
last prepared defensive position before Rome.
The 2nd Battalion, London Irish Rifles, began their attack on
the heavily defended buildings near Casa Sinagoga just south of Route 6 at 0900
on 16th May, supported by Sherman tanks of the 16th/5th
Queens Royal Lancers. Having cleared the building they reached the Colle
Monache (report line Pytchley) just after midday. They spent the rest of the
day staving off small attacks from the Piopetto river on their left flank,
before the Sherman tank’s and well directed artillery was able to stop the
counter-attack, destroying 4 self-propelled guns (probable Nashorns) and 2 anti-tank
guns firing across the river.
Our game was
inspired by the events in the capture of Casa Sinagoga by H Company of the
London Irish Rifles and their supporting tanks and the successful morning
assault. It was played diagonally across a 6’ x6’ board.
Included
here are the forces if you want to replay the events with more historical
forces.
British
Forces - Attacking
H Company 2nd
Battalion London Irish Rifles
1 Forward
Headquarters’
3 Infantry
Platoons, each consisting of
1 platoon command section with PIAT
3 Rifle Sections
Heavy machine gun team
Medium Mortar team with Bren Carrier
1 Combat
Engineer Section with minesweeper
16th/5th
Queens Royal Lancers
2 Troops each
consisting of
3
Sherman 1 (M4) Tanks
17th
Field Artillery Regiment
Consisting
of
1 Forward Observer team
1 timed 5.5” barrage
1 timed 25pounder barrage
1 Pre-registered target point – somewhere in Casa Sinegoga
Off table artillery fire 2 x 25 pounders
German
Forces - defending
Elements of
361 Panzer Grenadier Regiment,
1 veteran Grenadier
platoon consisting of
1 Platoon command squad
3 Grenadier squads with a Panzerfaust
3 MG teams with MG42
1 Medium mortar team with loader
team
1 Forward
Observer team
Elements of
6 Coy 741 Grenadier Regiment
1 Grenadier
squad
1 MG team
with MG42
Elements of
95 Fusilier Battalion consisting of
1 Sniper
1 Fusilier
squad
1 MG team
with MG42
3 timed 80mm
mortar barrages
Off-table 2 x 150mm
Nebelwerfers
2 Nashorn SP
guns