Monday, April 20, 2015

Lasalle.

Just over a week ago, I had a return match with Andy, following my close-fought victory of the weekend before.  This time it was a Napoleonic game, using Mark's figures and the rule set Lasalle, one of Sam Mustafa's earlier Napoleonic rule sets.  In what follows, I have let the pictures tell the story.  My apologies for the woeful photography here and there - they really don't do justice to Mark's superb figures.  My hands aren't as steady as once they were, so I'll have to start using some kind of support, that's clear.  Before continuing, you might want to check out Mark's blog, Chasseur, for his account of the action.  His pictures are by and large better than mine, too.

(Before continuing I must thank the seven who have begun following this blog since the New Year.  I will make a more formal acknowledgement next time).
The French line, looking west to east.
French Army:
On Table:
Infantry Brigade: 6 x 24-figure battalions (144 figures);
Foot Battery: 4 cannon;
Light Cavalry Brigade: 4 x 8-figure units (squadrons? regiments?) (32 figures);
Horse battery: 3 cannon

Arriving from off table by random die roll:
Cuirassier Brigade: 2 x 12-figure units (24 figures)
Horse Battery: 3 cannon

Austrian Army:
On Table:
Line Infantry Brigade: 4 x 36-figure, plus 2 x 24-figure battalions (192 figures);
Landwehr Infantry Brigade: 6 x 24-figure battalions (144 figures);
2 x Foot Batteries: each 4 cannon.

Arriving from off table by random roll:
Cuirssier Brigade: 2 x 12-figure units (24 figures);
Horse artillery: 3 cannon
Austrian Landwehr drawn up on the Austrian left flank.
As you will appreciate, the Austrians outnumbered the French by a considerable margin, and had a cannon extra as well.  But against that, the Landwehr proved to be very brittle troops, and the French regular light horse proved an annoyance as well.
Austrian regular infantry.
 I was relying on those big battalions for the decisive punch...

French light horse taking one look at the advancing
Austrian line, before making off...
More general view of the Austrian right flank.

Austrian artillery - and my first mistake.   Instead of deploying them
at once, I hoped to bring them closer to the French line before doing so.
That disrupted the right hand battery, which never really came into
truly effective action.

The Landwehr were supposed to carry out a pinning attack
 upon the French left in order to hold it in place.  That
plan proved a dismal failure.

Right from the start, French infantry peeled off
 from their right flank to deal with the threatened left.
Austrian artillery overseen by the Austrian commander,
Feldmarschall-Leutnant Kuekenhertz

Could the Landwehr close the range betimes
to pin down the French right?

Another view of the Landwehr in serried array.

Général de Division Andre Poulecoeur
hurrying his troops eastwards... 

Thinking hard... Can that Austrian juggernaut
be stopped?

Austrina cuirassiers arrive on table ... in the wrong place!  The French
heavies had arrived earlier and already making their presence felt
on the Austrian left.  That's where mine should have gone, too.

Two French cuirassier units hit the lone landwehr battalion.
Though the foot formed square betimes, it did them no good.
No good at all...

Boots, boots, boots, boots...

The French light horse making nuisances of themselves.
I really should have kept a better flank guard than I did....

The French right has been effectively stripped of its infantry...

The Austrians rolling into the attack.  The cuirassiers were meant
to give it extra weight, but they ended up with nothing to do.  Having
failed to support the landwehr, the next best thing would have been to
swing them around the far right flank.

Having crumpled up one battalion, the French heavy horse
charge into the two battalions beyond.  Neither was able to form square in time
(50-50 call for both: both failed).  The left-hand battalion collapsed at once, but the other
actually threw back their assailants!  Bravo!

The first wave of the assault goes in!

Forming square under the muzzles of the enemy artillery was not
going to end happily...

The assault by the leading two Austrian battalions raged for
a considerable while before the French line finally broke.
The attack by a third large Austrian unit immediately carried
the wood covering the French centre.

The Austrian high water mark on their right centre...

But having relaxed their guard on the right, the Austrians
have allowed two units of enemy light horse into their
right rear...

... Just as a big counterattack goes in against the woods
recently captured by the Austrians.

The pitiful remnants of the Austrian Landwehr: three units
ridden down by French heavy cavalry; two more crushed by artillery.
One battalion remains... isolated from its fellows...

A rather fuzzy photo to conclude.  One heavily battered Austrian
battalion has departed the scene, and that defending the wooded hill,
 attacked front and flank, is about to collapse in rout also...


With the collapse of two of the large Austrian battalions, together with the five long since departed landwehr units, the Austrian army morale broke, and the survivors withdrew from the battlefield. We had handed out a few licks of our own - two French battalions had also broken - but there was no disguising the action as other than a decisive French victory.  Congratulation General Poulecoeur Andy!

4 comments:

  1. Nice report and photos, thanks Ion!

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    Replies
    1. I liked your pictures better, Mark. Thanks for arranging the game for us, and your mediation throughout!

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  2. An exciting battle - I've had the rules for a while but I think it's time I read the book thoroughly

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    Replies
    1. The game went off with a swing, despite this being Andy's and my first time playing 'Lasalle', and Mark's own experience with it was very limited. Learning experience for us all.

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