tagwyn wrote:Pocus: ANV killed more Union troops during the 1864 campoaign than Grant had at the start of his final campaign. They must not have any morale problem. Hood's Army of Tennessee fought like banshees in hopeless engagements. Joe Johnston's troops would have marched off a cliff if he had ordered it in last part of the war. I fail to see what kind of correlation could be made here? Thanks.apy:
nilam wrote:I think in yours and now my game the last thing you want to do is give up ground
W.Barksdale wrote:I never worry about giving up ground UNLESS it involves giving up key counties, cities, or rail lines. In fact, it may even be advantagous to give up ground.
seventhly, according to Pocus NM affects cohesion. This is irrelevant in the Winchester example as they had Full cohesion. Brittleness isn't mentioned nor would it be relevant except in terms of replacement problems. Pocus clearly states NM effects how well they fight ! What I am saying given the best possible play, a player who is faced with a big NM differential will not be able to do anything to combat such demoralisation, eg;-Winchester, full strength, full cohesion, great terrain , outnumbered the enemy and still got overrun
eigthly, Other than the Italians in Nth Africa in WWII I don't see many examples of this is history let alone in the civil war. This I find ahistorical. If however someone would like to point out historical examples of well prepared positions with superior numbers and equal generalship doing the bolt, I am welcome to hear them , especially if they are from the civil war.
Captain wrote:As for an example Chattanooga may have had the positioning (and I may stand corrected) but I don't believe the CSA outnumbered the union there did they?
Return to “AACW Strategy discussions”
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests