Thursday, 28 May 2009

Barcelona Wins Champions League

Patience, flair and a brilliant game of keep-away prevailed over force Wednesday night when Barcelona dominated Manchester United, 2-0, to win the European Champions League title, Europe’s most prestigious club soccer tournament
Barcelona controlled the ball for long stretches with its unhurried and clever passing, attacked incessantly, held tight with a patchwork defense and made a tactical switch at forward, placing Lionel Messi as a central striker and shifting Samuel Eto’o to the right wing. Eventually, Messi drifted into midfield to secure possession. Both he and Eto’o delivered goals as Barcelona won its third European title and second in four years.
It will be left to Barcelona’s supporters to gleefully debate whether this is the Catalans’ greatest team, now that the first-year coach Pep Guardiola has guided his squad to the Spanish League title, the Spanish Cup and now the European Cup with a style that is familiarly elegant and ebullient.

Taken from
The New York Times

Saturday, 23 May 2009

The battle of Alcañiz (may 23, 1809)

The battle of Alcañiz of 23 May 1809 was the second major Spanish battlefield victory of the Peninsular War , after Bailén in 1808, and was fought between the Spanish "Army of the Right" commanded by the General Blake and the General Suchet's French third Corps.
At the end of the siege of Saragossa (see
previous post) there had been less than 4,000 Spanish troops in Aragon, but by mid-May General Blake was gathering a new “Army of the Right”, which would soon contain over 20,000 men. On 18-19 May Blake, with just under 10,000 men, captured the town of Alcañiz. This force contained the 4,000 survivors of the disaster at Saragossa and 5,000 men from the Army of the Centre. Another 10,000 men were known to be on their way, so Blake held his ground at Alcañiz, awaiting their arrival.
Suchet finally reached Saragossa on 19 May, and took command of 3rd Corps. By this point the corps was in a dreadful state. Morale was very poor, partly because of the suffering caused during the siege of Saragossa, partly because of the series of minor defeats at the hands of the guerrillas and partly because their pay was in arrears and the only way to find food was by constant marauding. Despite having a nominal strength of 20,000 men, when Suchet arrived the corps was at only half of this strength. Despite the poor condition of his army, Suchet quickly realised that he would have to attack the Spanish at Alcañiz. On 23 May the depleted French force arrived in front of the Spanish position. Only two of Suchet’s three available divisions were with him, giving the French a strength of 8,138 men on the morning of the battle. Blake slightly outnumbered the French, with just under 9,000 men, and was in a strong defensive position, based around three hills outside the town of Alcañiz. The only weakness in Blake’s position was that he was fighting with his back to a river – if the French had forced his army to retreat, then the Spanish force might have been totally destroyed.



Suchet began by making two attacks on the strongest part of the Spanish line, the Cerro de los Pueyos, at the right of the Spanish line. These attacks were repulsed by General Areizaga, at the head of a division of Aragonese troops. Suchet would later claim that these had only been feints, but his entire account of the battle is somewhat unreliable (as is so often the case in the memoirs of defeated commanders).
If the attack on the Spanish right was a feint, then Suchet waited too long to launch his main attack, for by the time this began the fighting on the Cerro de los Pueyos had ended. The main French attack was made against the centre of the Spanish line, and was made by two regiments, formed into columns of battalions – 2,600 men from the 114th Regiment of the Line and the 1st Regiment of the Vistula. While French columns repeated failed against British lines, they had a much better record against the Spanish, but this time Blake’s line held. The French column reached within a few hundred yards of the Spanish line, but then the Spanish artillery began to hit it with grapeshot, its flanks came under long range musket fire, and the advance halted. This was always the moment of crisis for any column. After remaining static under heavy fire for a few minutes, the French column broke and fled back into the French lines.
This ended the battle. Suchet’s force had suffered 700-800 casualties, and he himself had been wounded in the foot. The French retreat began smoothly, but after a dark a rumour spread that the Spanish cavalry had captured the rearguard, and the army scattered, not coming back together until late on the next day. Blake had suffered 300 casualties during the battle.

Extracted from
Military History Encyclopedia on the Web

Sunday, 17 May 2009

A CyberBoard game-box for 'Napoleon's Leipzig Campaign'

Finally, I succumbed to the temptation and during the past week-end, I finalized the Cyberboard (V 3.0) game-box for 'Napoleon's Leipzig Campaign'.
See more information at my
web site.

Friday, 15 May 2009

Napoleon’s Leipzig Campaign. A boardgame

Napoleon’s Leipzig Campaign (NLC) is an old boardgame, designed by Don Alexander and published by OMEGA GAMES in 1994. In the words of the publishers:

"Napoleon’s Leipzig Campaign simulates the great confrontation in 1813 pitting Napoleon’s empire against all the other continental great powers. Napoleon’s Leipzig Campaign puts the players in the position of Napoleon or the allied triumvirate of Tsar Alexander I of Russia, Emperor Francis I of Austria, end King Frederick William III0 of Prussia. The players are required to provide the strategic leader ship for their forces against the background of frictions to military operations in this period: limited command and control; unpredictable subordinates leading large forces of unevenly trained soldiers; unwieldy logistical support and tatical engagements that could shortly produces a bloodbath. The stakes are for nothing less than the fate of the Old Order against the forces of change unleashed by the French Revolution.
The manoeuvre map is centred on the German Kingdom of Saxony. The map is divided into territorial districts, connected by lines of communications. The distance between the districts varies, as the lines of communication represent daily march distances for the military formations of the period. The army and corps combat units are headquarters to which strength points are assigned. Each strength point represents about 1000 men, although this figure varies based upon specific units’ quality of soldiers and number of artillery pieces."


When I bought the game some years ago (in 2004), I started a
CyberBoard gamebox but after several computer crashes I lost the files. However, the last week-end I suddenly found my old efforts in a forgotten back-up CD under a mountain of photocopies!. The following is a reduced version of the CyberBoard map with a superimposed real size area.

Whereas I don't like the NLC's combat system, the map and the movement and command rules could be more adequate to simulate the Leipzig Campaign, than the more complex map and rules from Napoleon at the Crossroads or any other of the boardgames of the Operational Study Group.
I must to continue my research to find the best system to play the Leipzig Campaign... the main goal behind this blog!

See the NLC information at the BoardGameGeek site.

Tuesday, 12 May 2009

The battle of Oporto (may 12, 1809)

Porto (left) and Vila Nova de Gaia (right) with the Serra do Pilar MonasteryThe battle of Oporto of 12 May 1809 was Arthur Wellesley’s first victory after his return to Portugal in April 1809 (Peninsular War). While the British had been absent the French, under Marshal Soult, had captured Oporto, and had 20,000 men in northern Portugal.
Wellesley reorganised his army, forming it into a number of divisions. He had three main opponents – Soult around Oporto, Lapisse at Ciudad Rodrigo and Victor at Talavera. He decided to deal with Soult first, to clear the French out of Portugal.
Soult had a strong position at Oporto, protected by the River Douro. As Wellesley approached, Soult demolished the only bridge over the river, and moved every boat he could find to the northern bank of the river.
Wellesley took advantage of his new divisions to dispatch a force 6,000 strong under General William Beresford to block Soult’s escape route to the east. He then advanced north towards the Douro at the head of an army 18,400 strong (16,000 British, 2,400 Portuguese troops and 24 guns). Soult had 11,000 of his 20,000 men with him at Oporto.
This force reached the Douro River early on 12 May. Wellesley further divided his force to cross the river. Several hundred men crossed over at Oporto in wine-barges that the French had missed. Soult didn’t react quickly enough to this threat, and Wellesley was able to expand his foothold over the river. At the same time a second British force crossed the Douro further upstream at Avintas.
Soult was forced to abandon Oporto and retreat north across mountainous territory. The French lost several thousand men and most of their transport on the retreat from Portugal. British and Portuguese losses were light. Wellesley then turned south to deal with Marshal Victor at Talavera.

Taken from
Military History Encyclopedia on the Web

Sunday, 10 May 2009

Off topics: A CyberBoard gamebox

CyberBoard is a free utility to play wargames by PBeM developed by Dale Larson. In the words of the author:
"The CyberBoard board gaming system makes playing board games by mail and electronic mail a more enjoyable experience. The system allows you to easily graphically design the various parts of a board game on your computer. The players can make their moves and exchange recorded versions of the moves with their opponents. The opponent can then play back the moves. Although many types of games may be created using CyberBoard, games that use counters or chits such as war games work particularly well.
CyberBoard is not an artificial opponent. It provides no artificial intelligence capability.
My goal for CyberBoard was to duplicate the experience of actual paper counter style gaming--at least to the extent that this is reasonable. In its current form the system does a pretty good job of this"
.
CyberBoard can be downloaded free from the
CyberBoard page.

War to the Death, is a boardgame designed by D.W. Alexander and edited by Omega Games in 1986 (1st ed.) and 1994 (2nd ed.). It depicts the problems suffered by the French armies in Spain during the Peninsular War from 1810 onwards. The French player must confront the British (the Portuguese army is abstracted, the Spanish regular forces and the Spanish Guerrillas and. The boardgame emphatises the logistics aspects and requeriments that are different for French, British or Spanish (More information at

War to the Death page in my web site).

I bought the game some years ago and, having discovered CyberBoard utility almost simultaneously, I designed a game-box for it. With the help of Pablo Martín Fernández, a Spanish wargamer whom I found at the Consimworld Forum, the original game map was modified to make it more similar to the true state of the Spanish road communications network at the beginning of the XIX century.


During the first months of 2009, Pablo has been posting to the
ConsimWorld Forum some ideas about a 1808-1809 Scenario, including Spanish Juntas, Early Spanish Logistics, Portuguese Army, Spanish War Weariness and Romana's Division. You can download the corresponding WORD documents starting from the above ConsimWorld Forum address. The Pablo's modifications extend the timespan covered for the game, allowing to play the first stages of the Peninsular War.

Pablo has included all the new markers in a new game-box that can be download from that Forum,
WttD1808.gbx, or from my website, Early Years game-box, at your convenience.

Saturday, 9 May 2009

The battle of Lindenau is finished!

A very BIG picture of the battlefieldGyulai has smashed Marmont, taking the bridge and closing the only western Napoleon's escape way. If l'Empereur becomes routed in the main engagement at Leipzig, he will must to fight again to open his way to France. There was also a sensible French loss: General Morand is dead...

See all the narrative at the main
web-site

Sunday, 3 May 2009

A figure roll call

While making the web page for the Lindenau battle, (a very lenghty affaire, because the original figures must be searched for the more adequate ones, and these must be resized and eventually retouched), I realized the great variety of different manufacturers and figures I are using.
So I have labelled the above picture (click to enlarge) to indicate the actual set used to depict each different unit. Note that AIRFIX 01744 French infantry figures, are really metal clons made some years ago with home-made silicone rubber moulds and that Generals are crude home-conversions!

Saturday, 2 May 2009

Gyulai crushes Marmont!

Breaking news: Lindenau and its vital bridge have fallen to Gyulai hands!
Bertrand has been completely routed and the last remants of his IV Corps (composed from French, Italian, Wurtemberger and Westfalian troops) have crossed the bridge running towards Leipzig, leaving an isolated light infantry battalion in Lindenau.

The only French way to west is now closed by he Austrian Gyulai's III Corps, so Napoleon must try to break throught Bluecher, to find his escape to France.

The narrative is not still written, so see the Scenario at the main-web site