Thanks again for the thread xpyre!

I've also been following along, keeping my comments to myself, but have been anxiously wanting to share. I've had the game for about 1 month now, but am a relatively frequent wargamer, so I picked this one up (at least the basics) pretty quick. I won my first campaign as the USA in Oct of 1862, but this AAR has demonstrated how a human opponent is nothing like the AI, let alone two seasoned gamers like Soundoff and Banks. I can safely say, I'd be getting my a** handed to me right now by either one of them.
So on to my thoughts. I think it is telling how you have to treat a campaign game for it is, a campaign that will be full of victories and defeats. Banks' defeat at Annapolis might have caused players playing the AI to just hit the "Reset" button. But as you can see, he's regrouped and will certainly not be a push over in Virginia. In fact, if he has one major victory in VA, that theatre could change significantly.
I initially questioned Soundoff's move with Wood in Tallahasee. Though now that he is reinforcing the position, it could make it interesting. I look at it this way.
1. If you are just going to raid (destroy the depot and some rail), you don't need a full division (especially this early in the game with the lack of commanders and troops)
2. If you are doing a raid in force with intent on remaining, one division isn't enough. IMHO, you want at least 2 full divisions with several small independent brigades to act as a garrison for any major conquests. With the long term intent being that you would reinforce this front regularly as the Union #'s advantage begins to show. Possibly even putting an Army HQ in the region when they become available later.
But I got to thinking about a General Patton quote, " L'audace, L'audace, Tou jour L'audace (any French contributors feel free to correct the spelling and interpretation, it's been many years since my high school French classes). Which loosely means "Audacity, Audacity, more Audacity". I don't think Banks ever considered this a potential move, and has to be scratching his head as to what the implications might be. Any time you can get the other side thinking about and reacting to what you're doing, so much the better. I'm really curious to see how Banks reacts to the arrival of the next division from the Peninsula. And further, if he recognizes that that division came from the Peninsula, will he press Milroy there?
Frankly, if it was me and I knew where the new division came (another piece of valuable insight I pulled from this AAR is how to look for such things) from, I'd probably leave a token force around FL to contain Wood & Co. Then make a move against Milroy in force.
Anyway, thanks again for the thread!
BB
Find out what Grant drinks and send a barrel of it to each of my other generals! - A. Lincoln