typhoon wrote:. Can anyone actually see any benefits at all in the Confederates striking first and hard in Kentucky?
if you have enough forces (and you usually havent) to strike Bowling Greene and Paducah AND put up a defensive line stretching from Lexington to Charleston, it might be worth a thought.
main problem is to assemble forces fast enough to attack , then the second problem unfolds, how defend this stretched battlefield ?
Because when you invade Kentucky the Union is free to strike, and the Union doesnt have usually less forces in that area, while it usually delays its actions to get Grant and his forces ready (human player not AI)
The advantage of an early strike:
-a couple of victory points (neglectable) for Bowling Greene and the Union losing the "economic power" of Kentucky for a while (also neglectable).
-You might be able to delay the union offensive into Mississippi by opening a huge battlefield area and "attract" your opponent to fight here, where you want.
disadvantages:
-impossible to defend. (Mississippi is wide open probably)
-you "trigger" a possible union offensive which counteracts the Confederates usual tactic of delaying the enemy.
-you need to recruit/shuffle a lot of troops into this region