ASL - VFTT 83

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 28
At a glance
Powered by AI
The document discusses an ASL publication called View From the Trenches and mentions some notable ASL designers and tournaments.

View From the Trenches is a bi-monthly British journal dedicated to the game Advanced Squad Leader (ASL). It contains articles, scenarios, and news related to ASL.

The obituary mentions the passing of notable ASL designer Ian Daglish and provides some background on his career and contributions to the ASL community.

VIEW FROM THE TRENCHES

Issue 83

Britains Premier ASL Journal

Sept - Dec 2011

Free from www.vftt.co.uk

UK 2.00

US $5.00

Ian Daglish
1952 - 2011

IN

THIS

DEATH IN THE FAMILY - a tribute to Ian Daglish

ISSUE

OUT OF THE SEA - HOBs SFII Kustenjager reviewed

DOUBLE 1 2011 - all the ASL action and results from the London ASL Tournament

CRUSADER LADDER - updated

IN THIS ISSUE
PREP FIRE

INCOMING

A SELECTION OF TRIBUTES TO IAN

In His Own Words

15 Questions Ian Daglish

10

DOUBLE 1 2011

14

PREP FIRE

This issue of VFTT is dedicated to the memory of Ian Daglish,
who was piloting a light aircraft which crashed into a house in
Salford minutes after take-off on Friday 29 July. Ian suffered 80%
burns and died of his injuries on Sunday 31 July.

My first contact with Ian was in the early days of VFTT. His
brother Andy was listed in the ASL Annual 90 as a play-test coordinator, complete with address, so I sent him one of the few copies
of the first issue of VFTT in March 1995.
ASL Annual 90 The Non-Coms of Company A
The unsung heroes of the immense effort expended on ADVANCED SQUAD
LEADER are those who act as unpaid playtesters. With every new module of Annual,
in groups large and small, scattered across the globe from Montana to Cheshire,
Mr. Andy Daglish (#7, The Spinney, Cheadle, Cheshire, Great Britain)
Ian Daglish, Graeme Forster, Bernard Savage, Mike Standbridge

The Crusaders Open


ASL Tournament Ladder

17

Wild Bill Wilder Saving Private Ryan 18


Out of the Sea

21

Caring For Your Tiger

23

THIS IS THE CALL TO ARMS!

26

ON THE CONVENTION TRAIL

27

COVER: Ian Daglish 1952-2011. Military historian,

scholar, ASLer, gentleman, and husband to Joy and father


to Hazel and Fiona, and brother to Andy. Rest in Peace.


By then Andy wasnt as involved with ASL as he had been
at the time of the ASL Annual 90, but he put me in touch with Ian,
who was. We exchanged correspondences, one of which was a
flyer he had from someone called Neil Stevens, who was arranging
for people to get together for an ASL weekend he was calling
INTENSIVE FIRE.

In those early days, Ian had already had some early Sealion
scenarios published in ASL News one of them was actually the
first scenario I played at the very first INTENSIVE FIRE, and he
was already working on his first Normandy module, All American,
which was released by Critical Hit in 1997. This was soon followed
by Timmes Orchard, and in 1998 by Shanleys Hill. All three dealt
with the American 82nd Airborne Division in the opening days of
the D-Day landings. His two Scotland the Brave modules (released
by Critical Hit in 1998 and 1999) covered the actions of the 15th
Continued on page , column 1

VIEW FROM THE TRENCHES is the bi-monthly British ASL journal. All comments are welcome. Even better, contribute. Write an article. Design a scenario.
Share your ASL experiences with others. VFTT allows you to communicate with
other ASLers. Dont be a silent voice.
Issue 84 should be out at the beginning of January 2012.
VFTT costs 2.00 per issue (overseas 4.00), with a years subscription costing
5.00 (overseas 10.00). Payment should be in pounds sterling, with cheques made
out to PETE PHILLIPPS. Readers should check their address label to see when their
subscription ends. You can also donwload VFTT free from the VFTT web site.
Back issue are now out of print but can be downloaded for free from:
http://www.vftt.co.uk/vfttpdf.htm
VIEW FROM THE TRENCHES
9 Pier Road
Kilchoan
Acharacle
Argyll
PH36 4LJ

UK STOCKISTS OF THIRD PARTY PRODUCTS


To purchase other third party products such as Critical Hit, Schwerpunkt or Heat
of Battle contact any of the following shops.
LEISURE GAMES, 100 Ballards Lane, Finchley, London, N3 2DN. Telephone
(020) 8346 2327, e-mail them at [email protected] or go to www.
leisuregames.com.

Telephone: (01972) 510 350


E-mail: [email protected]
World Wide Web Home Page: http://www.vftt.co.uk

SECOND CHANCE GAMES, 182 Borough Road, Seacombe, The Wirral, L44
6NJ. Telephone (0151) 638 3535, e-mail them at sales@secondchancegames.
com, or go to www.secondchancegames.com.

THE ASL MAILING LIST

PLAN 9, 9 Rosemount Viaduct, Aberdeen, AB25 1NE. Telephone (01224) 624


467 or e-mail them at [email protected].

The ASL Mailing List is devoted to discussion of Advanced Squad Leader, and is run by Paul Ferraro via a listserv program at the University of Pittsburgh. To subscribe go to:
http://lists.aslml.net/listinfo.cgi/aslml-aslml.net.

COPYRIGHT AND TRADEMARK NOTICE

Most products are trademarks of the companies publishing them. Use of a product name without
mention of the trademark status should not be construed as a challenge to such status.
Copyright for all material printed within VFTT remains with its author, who can be contacted via
VFTT if you would like to reprint his/her material.

BATTLEQUEST GAMES, 29 Victory Road, Horsham, West Sussex, RH12


2JF. Telephone 01403 242003 or go to www.battlequestgames.com.
If you know of other shops stocking third party ASL products let me know so I
can include them here in future issues.

View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

INCOMING
incoming
MMPS SPECIAL OPS
BEGIN


The reprint of For King and Country
began shipping to pre-orders at the end
of July, despite some problems with the
counter shipment from the printers arriving
damaged. The shipment also contained
counters for the reprint of ASLSK 3, but
none of those were damaged, and as a result
it should also begin shipping soon.

Special Ops #1 - Summer 2011, the
replacement magazine for both Operations
and Operations Special Edition, was
released at the World Boardgaming
Championships in early August. In addition
to non-ASL content (including two games
with counters and maps), Special Ops #1
contains two ASL scenarios, two ASL Starter
Kit scenarios, and one article each on ASL
(Singling Must Be Taken) and ASL
Starter Kit (ASLSK Corner). Special Ops
should be published twice a year (one winter
issue and one summer) and contain a mix
of ASL and non-ASL content. It is currently
available from MMP for $24.00.

Action Pack 8: Roads Through
Rome, featuring ten scenarios and three
Charlie Kibler maps (in the same style
as those in Action Pack 6: A Decade of
War), is expected to be put on pre-order
in September. As suggested by the title,
the pack focuses on the Italian mainland
(although one scenario is set in North
Africa) and involves Free French, German,
Italian, British, and American forces.

Layout work continues on Festung
Budapest. The last of the 17 scenarios are
undergoing final tuning, as are the rules,
and the 3 Campaign Games. Because

many of the scenarios have multi-national


orders of battle, and also some capability
to purchase additional units, 12 of the
scenarios fill up two sides of a scenario card
(one of them, At The Narrow Passage, is
a 3-player scenario with several charts and
tables and fills up 4 sides). Layout work
continues on the 9 countersheets, although
one of these has already been printed. The
module is expected to be on pre-order later
this year.

Work also continues on Rising
Sun, the combined Japanese/Chinese/US
Marine PTO reprint. The last of the rules
edits are under review, with the 2nd
edition of Chapter G containing several
Q&A clarifications from the original. The
32 scenarios are being proofed and will
feature balance adjustments incorporated as
needed, and rewrites of SSRs to bring rules
references up to current practice. MMP are
aiming to have it available for pre-order by
the end of the year.

Kurt Miller is working on the as-yet
unpainted overlays for The Overlay Bundle.
This will contain every official overlay apart
from the DASL ones, and MMP hope to
have many of them die-cut for ease of use.

Playtest for the ASL Journal 10
scenarios continues. Several of these are
played on two 8 x 22 map boards that
form a double-wide village.

Once Rising Sun is complete, work
will begin on reprinting Hollow Legions.
This will include the entire Italian OB
(including Italian Chapter H); the Desert
Rules (Chapter F); and the desert maps,
overlays and counters. It will also include
Soldiers of the Negus, originally designed
by Rick Thomas, which contained counters,

View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

rules and scenarios covering the ItalioEthiopian War of 1935-36.



Other projects being worked on
include Korea War ASL, Ortona, Slaughter
at Ponyri, and Ian Daglishs Sealion project.

BOUNDING FIRES STEEL


CRUCIBLE


Due out from Bounding Fire at
ASLOK in October is Crucible of Steel, a
massive new module covering the southern
salient of the Kursk pocket. It will include
32 scenarios, 9 ASLSK-style mapboards (3
regular geo-maps, 3 double wide maps),
one and a half sheets of 5/8 counters (254)
and a half sheet of counters (144), rules,
notes and a magazine. As a bonus, the
module will also include the countersheets
from both Blood and Jungle and Operation
Cobra with grey core instead of the white
core of the originals (another four and a half
countersheets between them).

It will retail for $125.00 US and
Canada, $140.00 elsewhere (prices include
shipping), although it is currently available
for pre-order on the Bounding Fire website
(http://www.boundingfire.com/) for $105.00
US and Canada or $120 elsewhere.

NEW BUNKER UP FOR


DISPATCH


Dispatches from the Bunker 33 is due
out at the Bunker Bash in September, and
will feature an analysis of the VotG scenario
Raid on Rodimtsev, the latest part of Carl
Continued on page 24, column 3

A SELECTION OF TRIBUTES TO IAN


Pete Phillipps

Sad news indeed :-(

Ive shared plenty of chats with Ian
over the years at tournaments, he was
always a joy to speak to and fun to play
against - I always remember having a
fine game of Head of the Mace from AP4
against him at INTENSIVE FIRE a couple
of years ago.

Youll be sadly missed Ian. Thoughts go
out to the family.
Neil Stevens

I cannot believe it. A great friend,
history enthusiast and ASL player. He will
be sorely missed and I feel desperately
so sorry for his wife Joy and their two
daughters. A real tragedy.
Trevor Edwards

The last time I played Ian, we drank
bourbon while he beat the pants off me
in SV14 Day At Night from the Swedish
pack at a recent INTENSIVE FIRE event.
He set up an inspired human wave, which
ran right across an MMG fire lane. Six
squads and a leader set out, and the one
leader and a surviving squad took my Finnish
AT gun out, so allowing exit of the required
VP.

I have his books, all signed. I shall miss
him.
Andy McMaster

Just heard the very sad news that
Ian Daglish has died. I was stunned when I
heard. A great loss

Oliver Gray

Such a bad bit of news, he will be
sorely missed by all who knew him

Ian was truly a gentleman of the game
a very sad loss to the hobby and even more
so to his family. Ian and I regularly had a
game together at every tourney I attended

Condolences to his family.

Aaron Cleavin

Huge condolences to all

Ian was a absolutely first rate
gentleman, I only had the chance to play
him once
at Bournemouth in 2000 and I learnt a LOT,
not just about ASL but about life as well.

He will be sorely missed.

Nadir Elfarra

Very sad to hear this. Condolences to
his family and friends. Rest in peace. Ian.

Gary Fortenberry

Weve lost a gentleman and a scholar in
the finest sense of the words.

Ian was many things to many folk and
will be missed greatly.

Heartfelt condolences go out to his
family and friends.

Jeffery Hallett

A terrible shock, indeed, made more
so because Dave and I interviewed Ian on
Thursday night. This was our first personal
interaction with him and we remarked at
the end of the recording how interesting
and personable he was. A real gentleman.
We were already making plans for several
followup interviews. Today we are both
shocked to the core.
Mats Olsson

Rest in peace
Larry Rohlfing

Tragic
Ian Percy

Very sad indeed.

Huge condolences to Ians family, I
cant begin to imagine how they must feel.

A great scenario designer and author,
a thoroughly good man to play against and
all round nice bloke, hell be missed.

Ulric Schwela

A great chap, a passionate historian
with a treasure trove of history anecdotes,
an ASL player who I first met in a scout
hut in Romiley, friendly and fun, warm
and welcoming. To me he will always be an
inspiring character and I will miss him. My
deepest sympathies to the family.

Hennie van der Salm



Shocked to hear about this news.

Condolences to his family.

Perry Cocke

Ian was very generous with his
knowledge and talents, so I am convinced
that he was loved and respected by many,
not just by those of us in the military
history and simulation community. A
terrible loss. Our hearts go out to his
women.

Honza

Well, if there is a God and there is a
heaven then I hope that Ian Daglish and
Jim McCleod are sharing a pint and playing
a game together. A sad day for us, but who
know what lies beyond deaths door.

Darrell Andersen

Tough news. Ian was an author, friend,
fellow hobbyist and wonderful guy. Hell be
missed by all who knew him.
Martin Vicca

Ian, I will miss your presence at
heroes and the many chats. My heart goes
out to your family.
Joshua Walles

A sad loss for the community. Our
prayers and thoughts should be with his
family at this time of grief.
Martin Barker

Terrible and unbelievable news.

Ian Willey

Truly a sad day. Played Ian for the
first time at Heroes this year, we are all
poorer for his passing.

Paul Saunders

So very, very sad. A true gent.
David Schofield

This is a great shock.

I was in Ians house only a few weeks
ago discussing University options for his
18 year old daugter. He has a younger
daughter as well. He often stayed with
me when giving his lectures at Bovington
or when we had a dinner there. He was a
great historian [hed just got back from
giving historical tours of Normandy] and a
true ASLer. I often helped with his ASL
designs and he always wanted to capture
the essence of the battle. They definitley
have an historical feel to them.

Ian was always a mainstay of the
British tourney scene and well all miss him.

I cant believe it.
View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

Michael Davies

Shocking news.

Very creative and cultured gentleman
an awful lot of people will miss him.
Vic Provost

My deepest sympathies to Ians family,
our ranks have suffered a big hit.
Neil Brunger

He was indeed a fine chap. Always
friendly. I never got the opportunity to
play him something I will regret. It will be
sad at INTENSIVE FIRE and HEROES.
It just shows us that the gods play dice
too, and we should live and make the most
of everyday. It has not fully sunk in yet.
Condolences to the family and his extended
group of friends. I am sure they are many.
Luis Calcada

We are devastated by Ians death. May
he rest in Peace. He will be remembered
as a good friend and a fine player and
historian.
Andy Saunders

Very sorry to hear this news. My
condolences.
King Scott

While I did not know Ian personally,
I am saddened to hear this news...a true
loss to our small community. My sincere
condolences to his family.

Rest in peace, Ian.

Semper Fi!
Jerry Simmons

Very sad news indeed. My thoughts are
with his family and friends.
Sam Belcher

Ian was an extremely nice guy. I
stayed in his home in 2001 when I was in
England. He has two girls, ad a lovely wife. I
hope the rest of the family is ok. I feel for
them.

Ian was a PhD, and has written several
books about fighting in Normandy.

But most of all, Ian was a gentleman,
and a good man.
Tom Morin

Ian will certainly be missed. May God
bless him and his family.

Brien Martin

My condolences to Ians family. I had
the pleasure of corresponding with him a
few times over the years, and found Ian to
be a nice guy and keen ASL mind.

He will be missed by all of us, some far
more than others.
Ray Woloszyn

I first met Ian at the Bulge
Rencontre ASL meeting in La Gleize,
Belgium in 1994 where we roomed in the
same cottage. Later on at some of the GB
ASL venues we exchange pleasantries and
memories. Wow, quite shocking news.

He was not a bad scenario designer as
well as an accomplished author.
Chas Smith

This is truly shocking and sad news.
Ian and I periodically discussed historical
matters and such. He will be sorely missed
by the ASL community.
Dave Ramsey

Ian was the very definition of a scholar
and a gentleman. He would happily discuss
his projects, interspersed with fascinating
stories that only a researcher and historian
like he could unearth. I enjoyed our chats
at every tournament we met at and his loss
will be felt at every future event Ill be at.

Weve lost a talented designer, author
and good friend.

RIP, Ian.
Michael Dorosh

What a shock. Aside from the obvious
loss to his family, he had so much more to
contribute to the historical community to
which he had already given so greatly to. He
and his work have touched a lot of people.
Tom Repetti

Ians energy was infectious; you
wanted to drop whatever you were working
on and push out whatever he needed, cuz
you knew he could go fast and far with it.
Operation Sealion is a quintessentially Ian
kinda thing; I really hope its far enough
along for someone to pick up and publish in
his honour-with-a-u.

We will miss him greatly. Our
condolences to his family.
Pete Shelling

So sad.

I had corresponded with him
frequently several years ago, when the idea
of the Normandy Action Pack was in its
infancy.

As humble as was talented in the
scenario design field. A loss all ASL players
should feel.
Steve Pleva

My condolences to his family and
friends. I spent a day with him many
years ago. He was a true gentleman and
an accomplished writer and designer. He
certainly will be missed.
Nick Edelsten

Really sad news. Ian was someone whos
company I really enjoyed and with whom I
chatted and emailed with all the time in my
old ASL days.

Xavier Vitry

I am shocked and deeply saddened.
Last time we talked together was in June,
just before one of his Normandy visits, and
I still have to reply to an email from him
about La Horgne...

My condolences to his family and
friends.

What a loss.
Paul Jones

I have lost a friend but my deepest
condolences go to Ians family to whom he
was completely devoted. It is with a heavy
heart and with tears in my eyes that I must
bid a last farewell to Ian. Rest well my
friend - you will be truly missed by us all.
Nick Ranson

It was a pleasure having known
such a gentleman as Ian, I will miss him,
especially at the next INTENSIVE FIRE.
My thoughts are with his family and close
friends at this sad time.
Gavin White

Ian was my first opponent at my first
tournament and was an absolute gent whilst
giving me a good kicking, blaming my poor
showing on bad luck.

I had been looking forward to further
games at HEROES next year. Sadly not to
be.
Phil Draper

Dreadful, dreadful news.

I played Ian a number of times at the
UK tournaments over the last ten years and
had several warm, enlightening and funny
conversations with him. His enthusiasm for
history, ASL and the place of the British
Tommy within both was passionate and
infectious.

A gentle encouraging man of great wit
and perception I will miss him enormously.
Trev, to you and Shaun who new him so well
my deepest condolences, as well of course
to his family of whom he was so proud.

One of our best has passed and we are
poorer beyond measure for it.
Ray Tapio

I am just back from a weekend away
and just learned about the death of Ian
Daglish in a plane crash yesterday. Right
now I am looking at some old photos,
absorbing this.

Ian and I spoke during July. All was
good, we talked about the impending Kenya
trip for his daughter Hazel (17 yrs. old) and
that she had just passed her drivers test.
He pointed me to a couple of new books
on Finland at war subjects, reiterated his
interest in helping to proof the GWASL
material, and so on.

We got to know one another when Kurt
and I travelled to Bournemouth in 1997 and
I watched his children grow up in annual
photographs that he and Joy included
with their Christmas cards since then. He
was a devout Catholic and doting father.
And a brilliant military historian. He went
from being a salesman and marketing guy
for Continental Tires on the Continent to
foremost tactical-level historian of the
British role in the Battle of Normandy.

Craig Benn

All I can say is I never knew anyone
who had a remotely bad word to say about
him in life or death.

Which is not a bad epitaph really.
Rest in peace fella.
Paul Kenny

WOW, Horrible news. A very sad loss.
My little interaction with Ian showed him
to be a gentleman.

My prayers and condolences for his
family.
Chris Olden

My condolences to Ians family and
friends.
Russell Williams

Thank you for your contribution to
history and to our hobby. My condolences
to his wife and daughters.

My Brother
Andy Daglish


My brother Ian Daglish died at 1am UK
time on Sunday July 31st. He was 59. He was
the pilot of the light aircraft that crashed in
Manchester, England, on Friday lunchtime. He
sustained 80% burns.

He radioed a Mayday - engine failure on
take-off message, which was recorded.

On Google Maps you can find the scene
by searching for City Airport Manchester. My
brother took off from runway 09, and crashed on
Newlands Avenue.

The police & eye-witnesses are suggesting
Ians crash-landing in the middle gap between the
houses was largely successful, as neither he nor
his young passenger suffered any serious internal
injuries or blood loss.

My brothers gaming career began as
a result of our father taking him to see The
Longest Day in Providence, Rhode Island, in
1962, when he was ten years old. Thereafter
he bought a copy of Tactics II. For him, at this
time, America was a toy wonderland, and this
coloured his memories of childhood. On his
return to England he continued his interest in the
hobby with Avalon Hill games of the 1960s such
as Afrika Korps, and Poultron Press editions of
Strategy and Tactics magazine.

Ian read history at Trinity College,
Cambridge, and whilst there won the Bowen
Prize for his essay on Napoleonic invasions of
England. He subsequently gained an MBA from
Manchester Business School.

After a career in marketing, lately working
for Kelloggs as a marketing executive, Ian joined
the ranks of Britains professional military
historians, writing six books on the Normandy
campaign, as well as becoming the British Armys
preferred tour guide to the battlefields of northern
France.

Ian was an early member of the AHIKS
play-by-mail group, regularly attending their
meetings in England. He latterly concentrated on
ASL, designing and testing modules and scenarios,
and attending conventions at home and abroad.

Ian leaves his wife, Joy, and two teenage
daughters, Hazel and Fiona.

View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

In His Own Words



The following was taken from Ians
blog Pete


Well, when I was about four years
old, I was given my first toy soldiers. A
guardsman resplendent in red tunic and
bearskin; a cowboy with a lasso. Both in
fragile metal and - yes - when their heads
inevitably broke off, they were re-attached
with matchsticks. Later came Britains
soldiers and Dinky military vehicles - the
odd mix of scales did not matter much to a
six-year old.

More significant perhaps was the
family move to the USA, which led me
at the age of eight to grade school in
Chickasaw, Alabama. School History
lessons there offered great excitement to
a young boy. History consisted mainly of
fighting the indigenous tribes (*), fighting
the bloody British (**), fighting each
other, and fighting a couple of World Wars.

Local history involved the fort commander


who neglected to close his gates and got
scalped by the Chickasaw Indians; and the
Confederate forts (Fort Gaines and Fort
Morgan) with their big guns, still guarding
the approaches to Mobile Bay, long after
Farragut had damned the torpedoes.
Even a century on, awareness of the Civil
War was acute, with the Stars and Bars
still flying (quite illegally) over municipal
buildings. What is more, the school library
had a copy of that huge tome, the American
Heritage Picture History of The Civil
War with those wonderful perspective
illustrations of the great battles. Perhaps my
most eagerly awaited Christmas present ever
was the big box of Blue and Gray soldiers,
cannon, and terrain.

(*) Cherokee, Chocktaw, Creek, and
Chickasaw

(**) On a school trip to Concord and
Lexington, young Ian was a little disturbed
to see the Stars and Stripes over the grave of
the unknown British soldier, one of three
private soldiers (Thomas Smith, Patrick
Gray, or James Hall of the 4th Regiment
Light Infantry Company) who died at
Concord.


A few years on, and a significant
moment occurred in Woolworths,

Apponaug, Rhode Island, when Ian


discovered Airfix German Infantry and a
few moments later, behind boxes of Guards
Band and Farm Animals, revealed the
box of Infantry Combat Group destined
to fight many a battle against their Teutonic
opponents, supported at first by Roco
minitanks, later by (more appropriately
scaled) Airfix vehicles.

Back in England, at Cheadle Hulme
School the only subject I was really
comfortable with was English, largely
thanks to the inspirational Mr Alan Kelk.
But when I was fifteen, History class
called for an essay on the American Civil
War. Suddenly I realised how many of
my outside interests could be applied in
school. Encouraged by my teachers, Michael
Scaife and Gwynneth Saunders, History
became my subject of choice.


On to university. Trinity College,
Cambridge. The finest college in the world,
and somehow I was admitted. We were
not allowed to specialize very much (had
to keep the medieval dons in work!). But
it was good to cover a broader spectrum
than I might have chosen. And though its
a sad comment on humanity, it helped my
interest that military history is to be found

Left: Ian handing out a play-test scenario at INTENSIVE FIRE 2003 while also play-testing against Roger Cook.
Right: in action at HEROES 2005.

View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

in whatever period one studies. My special


subject was the Revolt of the Netherlands
(Dutch vs. Hapsburgs) and my thesis
Napoleons Invasion of England.

Fast forward to summer 1994. Taking
time off from worldwide marketing for
Rolls-Royce Motor Cars Limited, returning
from holiday in the Dordogne with Joy and
six-month baby Hazel, stopped for a picnic
lunch in the shade of a tree beside the Orne
river. Lets not go through Caen, but do
a detour over this hill. Hill 112, in fact. I
drove slowly over that famous battlefield,
now tranquil, golden corn baking under blue
skies in the hot early-afternoon July sun.
Then the road narrowed, winding steeply
down through a little village on southern
slopes of the River Odon valley. Gavrus...
wasnt that the location where the 2nd
Argylls were besieged, as recounted in John
Keegans book Six Armies in Normandy?
The seeds were sown; the following years
would see many returns to that little place.

The rest was, quite literally, history.

SIMULATIONS AND
WARGAMES


Wargaming is serious business. Ever
since an ancient warrior scratched a battle
plan in the sand, military planners have
combined intelligence about the enemy and
knowledge of terrain to predict and plan the
future.

H G Wells famously wrote his

1913 Little Wars as little more than


entertainment:

A game for boys from twelve years
of age to one hundred and fifty and for that
Left: another game from HEROES 2005.
Right: chatting with friends at HEROES 2005.

more intelligent sort of girl who likes boys


games and books. But even at that time, the
Prussian Kriegspiel had already evolved
into a serious, detailed plan for the conquest
of France and Russia. A century on, some of
the commercial wargame designers of the
1960s and 1970s are to be found advising
the Pentagon. And the value of military
simulations is increasingly recognised
by academia. University military history
courses increasingly employ simulation to
broaden awareness of the subject: exploring
the might have been as well as the narrow
path of what actually happened.

Nowadays, wargaming is a broad
church. Some who take part have little
interest in history; for them the pursuit a
more intricate version of chess, a game
to win or lose. Others however care
passionately, and seek out the wargames
which appear best able to simulate actual
(or likely) historical outcomes. For some,
the gap between wargame designer
and wargame player may narrow, as
commercially available wargames provide
the template for individuals to design and
play out their own researched scenarios.
And to complete the circle, the historian
may gain insights from well designed
simulations.

This author feels it absolutely
necessary to walk any battlefield about
which he intends to write. Likewise, military
historians studying different periods may
find insights from drawing a longbow,
firing a black-powder musket, or sitting in a
Sherman tank. And so too may the historian
gain insights from simulation. Whereas a
book about the Waterloo campaign is most
likely going to end with an Allied victory on
18 June, a wargamer placed in Wellingtons
position on 16 June, with little certainty of
the enemys plans or movements, may gain
a deeper understanding of the options he
faced and the decisions that had to be made.

And now the confessional. Yes, I
greatly enjoy wargaming. Specifically, the
popular and extremely detailed Second
World War tactical simulation called
Advanced Squad Leader. This is a tactical-

level wargame representing individual


leaders and vehicles, and (as the name
suggests) squads of a dozen or so men.
Indeed, it is partly ASL that rekindled a
childhood interest in the Second World War.
As mentioned before, I believe in telling the
story of a battle with reference to low-level,
tactical actions. As I conduct my research
into the details of the Second World War, I
am frequently moved to amuse myself by
translating historical events into playable
ASL scenarios. Great fun, with the added
benefit of fostering interest in the huge
conflict that was the Second World War.

DAGLISH FAMILY


Like many people who bear the
surname Daglish, my fathers family hails
from County Durham. No, not Scotland
(though as my middle name suggests, I can
claim Scots ancestry from the Malcolms on
my mothers side).

When I was approached by the
Daglish One-Name Study to undergo a
DNA test, I was initially suspicious but in
the end relented and was pleased to find no
surprises. All my closest matches appear
to originate in the area of Northumberland
and Durham. Grandfather Daglish always
maintained that the family arrived across
the North Sea centuries ago, and my best
guess is that my forbears settled the area
known as the Danegeld and so became
Danegeldish!

Grandfather Francis Richard (Frank)
Daglish was a machine-gunner with the 10th
Northumberland Fusiliers. Joining-up in
1914, he became expert with his Lewis gun,
so much so that he was offered a place as

an air gunner with the Royal Flying Corps,


just before the aerial Bloody April of 1916.
He had the good sense to decline, otherwise
this website and its creator would probably
not exist. Severely wounded on the Somme,
Frank nevertheless enjoyed telling his war
stories for the rest of his days. My other
grandparents also served in the First World
War; indeed they met on active service in
France. Grandfather George Augustus (Gus)
Dorman was a telegraphist and grandmother
Elizabeth (Betty) Malcolm served with the
Womens Auxiliary Army Corps (WAAC).
(Family tales of her bayoneting Germans
impressed a young Ian, but later in life
he learned to question unsubstantiated
anecdotes.)


Similarly, my parents were brought
together, from Durham and Smethwick, by
the outcome of the Second World War. As
a chemistry graduate (from Trinity College
Cambridge, where he suffered the bomb that
fell in Whewells Court and saw London
burning when firewatching from Johns
College chapel roof), my father Anthony
Fenwick (Tony) Daglish was not permitted
to go for officer training but instead was sent
to the armaments factories of Bishopston,
outside Glasgow.

Only after I had researched the 2nd
Argyll & Sutherland Highlanders for some
years did my dad ask me, one Christmas, if
I knew that they had the biggest cap badge
in the British Army. Of course I knew that.
But I nearly fell off my chair when Dad
announced that he had once worn it. How
could he, as he never joined the Army? Ah,
but he did serve in the Bishopston Home
Guard, under a former Argylls officer who
had his men wear the badge. And, as a
colonel of the Regiment subsequently told
me, Once an Argyll, always an Argyll.

transport; luxury goods to food and drink.


The variety is enjoyable and achieving
visible results in the course of a relatively
short assignment is invariably a most
rewarding experience.

Ian is a Member of the Chartered
Institute of Marketing, the Medmenham
Club, the British Commission for Military
History, and the Alderley History Group.
He is a Commandeur of the Commanderie
de Bordeaux, and a qualified pilot (interests
always pursued separately).

Not, How Did He Die,


But How Did He Live?
Unknown author

ALDERLEY MARKETING
LTD


I am a marketing professional.
Though my interest in history has never
waned, I have enjoyed a fascinating career
in marketing, managing all sorts of brand
names: from Kelloggs Corn Flakes to
Rolls-Royce motor cars.

Right now, I am working in Interim
Management through my company
Alderley Marketing Ltd. This involves
temporary jobs, generally contracts of five
to six months, completing specific projects,
filling senior positions while a permanent
incumbent is recruited, or covering a senior
position for the duration of maternity leave.
Interim managers are typically suitable
over qualified for any position, in order to
be able to adapt quickly to a given role and
deliver results with minimal delay.

I have experience of working in
virtually all industries: from utilities to

Not how did he die, but how did he live?


Not what did he gain, but what did he give?
These are the units to measure the worth
Of a man as a man, regardless of birth.
Not, what was his church, nor what was his creed?
But had he befriended those really in need?
Was he ever ready, with word of good cheer,
To bring back a smile, to banish a tear?
Not what did the piece in the newspaper say,
But how many were sorry when he passed away.

Left: checking the rules while playing against Chris Walton at HEROES 2009.
Right: Clash of the Designers. With both Ian and Shaun on 3000 Crusader Ladder points, a match was played to to seperate them; Ian won.

View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

PREP FIRE

Continued from page 

Ian was the designer of a number of ASL modules set during the Normandy campaign.

Above: battling Simon Taylor at INTENSIVE FIRE 2010.


Below: helping tournament newbie Mike Kinley pick up the game at HEROES 2011.

Scottish Division in the Epsom Offensive


at the end of June 1944. June 1999 saw
two groups play CG3 from STB at Mad Vet
Con, one of Ians favourite ASL memories
(despite being a part of the losing British
side in one of the games!). 2008 saw the
release of probably his finest work, AP4
Normandy (albeit with a couple of scenarios
designed by MMP), complete with revised
wall advantage and bocage rules, an issue
that had been troubling Ian since the early
days of ASL. One of the finest games of ASL
I have ever played was against Ian when we
played Head of the Mace from the pack at
INTENSIVE FIRE 2008, which went down
to the wire (and several bottles, wine in Ians
case, Newcastle Brown Ale in mine :-) ).

Although known as a serious historian
and scenario designer, Ian also had a silly
side. Who else would design a scenario
based on the 1966 World Cup Final between
England and Germany, or write an article on
resurrection and demonic possession! (Both
of these can be found in VFTT8).

As well as ASL, Ian was also
interested in Napoleonic warfare, and
for the past couple of years we had been
trying to arrange to play the old SPI quad
game Napoleons Last Battles. We were
due to play at HEROES this year on the
Wednesday and Thursday, but at the last
minute other commitments meant he
couldnt arrive until the Friday. I even made
a start on turning the game into a VASSAL
module and had completed the Quatre Bras
folio, and sent Ian a copy, but we never got
to play :-(

In memory of Ian, a plaque is
going to be placed on the Memorial
Wall at Bovington Tank Museum. If you
want to donate towards the cost, you
can either send a donation via PayPal to
[email protected] or post
a cheque payable to PETE PHILLIPPS.
Any surplus funds will be passed on to the
family. It is planned that there will be an
unveiling ceremony at Bovington on Friday
28 October (the INTENSIVE FIRE Friday).

Til next issue, roll Low and Prosper.

Pete Phillipps

View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

Ian reviews the SPI quad game Napoleons Last Battles, in the SimPubs magazine Phoenix 11, dated Jan/Feb 1978.

15 Questions Ian Daglish


Ian Willey


This interview with Ian was posted by
Ian Willey on his blog at http://walladvantage.
blogspot.com/ at the end of May 2011, and is
reprinted with permission Pete.


My second British designer on the
bounce, both picked up at HEROES last
March. Ian needs little introduction, not
only has he designed many a scenario both
for MMP and TPP he also is a respected
historian and author of 6 books.
1. Which published scenario of your own
are you most proud of and why?

Probably J68 Unlucky Thirteenth
from ASL Journal 4, balanced, historical,
and I still enjoy playing it (Better to come
soon?)
2. Which scenario that you have not
designed is your favourite?

Of all time: probably E Hill 621
from The General and ASL Classic. But
currently I am a big fan of SP163 First To
Fastov.

10

3. What for you is the most important part of


a scenario design?

Multiple source historical research.

10. What rule would you change if you had


the chance?

Overrun: It is needlessly complex.

4. Have you a favourite subject or theatre?



Normandy 1944 ;-)

11. When was the Golden Era for ASL?



2011.

5. What came first, your interest in ASL or


WWII?

ASL (SL Actually)

12. Which chart do you use IFT or IIFT?



Generally IFT because that is what
British opponents favour. I prefer IIFT.

6. Best or most memorable ASL moment?



First published module (CH All
American)

13. How often do you play (not including


playtests?)

Maybe 20 a year vs. opponents.

7. The ASL moment you most want to


forget?

Mistakes in publishing All American.

14. When you play do you have a movie of


the action playing in your head?

No, I get deeply into what is going on
the map board.

8. What year did you first start to play SL/


ASL?

1978 :-)
9. How many scenarios would you estimate
you have played and had published?

Played 300?

Published 65?
View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

15. Any rule you would like to highlight as a


useful but under used rule?

Tank Riders entering play (and
elite Russians risking bail outs after deep
penetration).

Above: an early appearnce of Ians work on Operation Sealion scenarios from ASL News.
Below: playtesting of more recent designs at INTENSIVE FIRE 2007.

View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

11

Ians workshop, and his published books.

12

View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

Steel Master is a series of model-based turret counters in


supplementing ASL system counters. The latest module, Steel
Master Module B, contains 3 double-side color counter sheets
depicting the full set of 1/2 turret counters for official British
and American AFV plus their variants, some previously omitted.
It functions as an all-embracing marker for skilled players,
reminding all once-forgotten or overlooked turret factors in your
next fierce ASL battle. Victory is always on the side of forwardthinking commander.
DC0040 - Steel Master, Module B (British/America) product info:
- 3 die cut double-side color turret counter sheets (780 turret
counters)
- a turret counter feature menu
- individual plastic package
Regular price: $35
Also available is DC0039 - Steel Master, Module A (German/
Russian) for $35. Or by both modules for the special price of $56.
COMING SOON!
DC0041- SteelMaster, Module C ( Italian/French/Axis minor)
DC0042- SteelMaster, Module D (Chinese/Japanese/Allied minor)
DC0043- SteelMaster, Module E (Finnish)
Our Contact: [email protected]
http://countersmith.blogspot.com/

1. It tells the exact-calculated turret armor factor, both the front and the side/rear.
2. It tells whether each equipment could be operated or not under CE/BU status, i.e. the MA, CMG,
AAMG, sP, SN etc. There is also an reminder for the firing of sM within TAC.
3. It tells all the complicated information on the official AFV counters in a simple way by our separate
turret counter without the worries of studying the back of the official counters and the vehicle note in the
rulebook before each act of tactical move.
4. It tells the allocation of the optional equipment among the same set of counters of a particular model
of AFV without the trouble of writing down the identity letter of each counter manually. We provide two
different sets of turret counters for the same AFV model displaying if there is an optional equipment or
not.
In addition, turret counters with optional AAMG and/or RMG are provided to get rid of the limitation of
the official countermix.
5. It tells if a particular model of the AFV is in the condition dug in and/or armored cupola in the strong
point while there was only the universal turret counter to all the AFV models in the official counter set.
6. It adds a series of the long-omitted AFV variants for connoisseur AFV combat players and creates
new legendry scenarios.

DOUBLE 1 2011
Derek Cox


The weekend started on Thursday
evening, with the early arrivals heading
into Chelmsford town centre for a pretournament meal. The waitressing staff
looked on somewhat bemused as tales of
improbable hits, ambushes, destroyed tigers
and boxcars drifted across the restaurant
just feel sorry for the token female who
had to suffer all of this!

Friday morning saw the start of the
one day minis. This year, two themes had
been chosen, Back in Black (SS versus
the world!) and Best of 2010 (pretty
self-explanatory heading), plus a Starter
Kit mini. Each mini consisted of two
rounds, straight knockout, with 4 entrants
per group. Given that 2011 was the first
year that Double One had been extended to
the Friday, Brendan and I were delighted
to find 20 people wanting to take part in
the Friday minis! A quick straw poll got
5 minis running, and after two rounds of

dice rolling, the following winners were


announced:
Back in Black (1) Pete Phillipps

Back in Black (2) Gerard Burton

Back in Black (3) Sam Prior

Best of 2010 (1) Paul Legg

Best of 2010 (2) Andy Smith

Saturday morning broke with numbers
swelling to 28, with 24 signing up for
the main tournament - Darren Orwin and
Richard Dagnall deciding to tackle one of
the monster scenarios from Valor of the
Guards. The format followed that of last
year, with entrants being divided into groups
of 4, playing each other in a Round Robin
system.

Round 1 featured the stars of the
forthcoming MMP module, Hakke Palle,
with three scenarios involving the Finns.
Surprisingly, although possibly due to
its veteran status in the history of ASL,
Fighting Withdrawal was by far and away

Left: Ian Morris (left) and Sam Prior call for Roadside Assistance in one of the Back In Black minis.
Right: Paul Legg (left) and Miles Wiehahn battle for LAbbaye Blanche.

14

View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

the most popular choice, with many games


going down to the wire (both in terms of
time and turns). The other choices for the
morning session were FRF 18 Through
Fire & Ice and ESG8 Soummussalmi
Sandwich.

Round 2 arrived in the form of
Casey Jones, featuring scenarios with a
railway theme. As this was the Saturday
afternoon / evening session, these scenarios
were slightly longer but, with hindsight,
were probably too long for a tournament,
especially given that one was still going
at 2am on Sunday morning. Note to self
more pre-tournament testing for 2012! The
scenarios arriving at platform 1 were 121
End station Budapest, AP60 Nishne Nyet
and J83 Bloody Nose.

Proceedings were brought to a halt
mid-afternoon by the fire alarm going
off. Everyone duly filed out on the basis
that it was a false alarm, then the sudden
realisation that it might not be and we could

Left: Dominic McGrath (left) and Martin Barker in a friendly game of Last of their Strength on Friday night.
Right: Ian Pollard (left) performs a Fighting WIthdrawl again Brendan Clarks Finnish hordes.

be looking at a very expensive cardboard


bonfire put everyone on their toes for a
quick dash through to liberate ASL kit.
Fortunately, it duly proved to be a false
alarm, caused, we believe, by an errant fly
getting into the smoke alarm system (that,
or the spreading blazes from the fires set in
Fighting Withdrawal earlier that day).

Saturday evening saw the inaugural
Double One quiz, as hosted by the ASLs
world answer to Nicholas Parsons, our own,
our very own, Richard Dagnall. As most
people had already hit the student bar, it was
a fairly uproarious affair. After 3 rounds of
questions based on ASL, WWII and general
history, Mick Essex proved himself the
knowledge master, despite some debate
over the German codeword for the proposed
invasion of Malta! The quiz will definitely
return in 2012, by which time the AV kit in
the bar should be working again


Heavy Weather arrived on Sunday
morning, with rain, mud and snow
presenting challenges to the attendees in
the respective scenarios A83 Last Of Their
Strength, SP176 Smiling Albert and
AP18 Village of the Damned. At this point
in proceedings, only the winner of 1 of the
6 groups had already been decided, so there
were some tense moments, most noticeably
in Group B, where the eventual winner was
decided on the ASL Crusader Ladder Points
that each of the 3 possible winners had
beaten!

The final games wrapped up around
1pm, and the winners were as follows:
Group A Sam Prior

Group B Gerard Burton

Group C Ian Pollard

Group D Wayne Baumber

Group E Martin Barker

Group F Stuart Brant

their 100% record at Double One!



Thank you to everyone who came
along and made the weekend so enjoyable.

Double One 2012 is already booked
for the weekend of June 22nd to 24th.
Already in the pipeline is a curry night at
the local Indian restaurant on the Thursday
evening (21st), themed minis involving
the Desert and the Japanese, a 3 day /
3 round tournament involving monster
scenarios, and the main tournament with
an Olympic theme underlying it all, plus
the now infamous Saturday evening quiz.
Registration fee will be 15, and we will be
publishing the scenarios on the Double One
website at Christmas.

Both Martin and Wayne maintained

Left: Aaron Sibley (left) and Paul Clash battle Through Fire And Ice, using the VASL winter-ised maps.
Right: Darren Orwin (left) and Richard Dagnall in Stalingrad, Storming the Station.

View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

15

Saturday nights quiz winner Mick Essex.

PLAYER RESULTS

Top, left to right: Pete Phillipps,


Gerard Burton, Sam Prior.
Left: Paul Legg.
Right: Andy Smith.

Here are the individual win/loss records.


PLAYER
Michael Allen
Martin Barker
Wayne Baumber
Nigel Blair
Stuart Brant
Gerard Burton
Simon Church
Brendan Clark
Richard Dagnall
Michael Essex
Paul Jones
Indy Lagu
Paul Legg
Dominic McGrath
Ian Morris
Pete Phillipps
Ian Pollard
Sam Prior
David Ramsey
Nick Ranson
Aaron Sibley
Andy Smith
Simon Staniforth
Simon Taylor
Miles Wiehahn

Below, left to right: Sam Prior, Gerard Burton, Ian Pollard.


Bottom, left to right: Wayne Baumber, Martin Barker, Stuart Brant.

P
3
4
3
4
5
5
5
5
1
5
4
5
4
4
5
7
3
5
5
5
6
5
6
3
5

W
2
4
3
1
2
5
2
2
0
2
3
0
1
1
1
3
3
4
2
2
3
4
2
1
3

L
1
0
0
3
3
0
3
3
1
3
1
5
3
3
4
4
0
1
3
3
3
1
4
2
2

THE SCENARIOS
Here is the table of Scenario Win/Loss
records:
SCENARIO
ALLIED
1 Fighting Withdrawal
7
8 The Fugitives
0
A83 Last of Their Strength
2
AP18 Village Of The Damned
2
AP4 LAbbaye Blanche
2
AP41 The Meat Grinder
1
AP60 Nishne, Nyet!
0
DB082 Roadside Assistance
2
ESG69 Brushwood Buzzsaw
1
ESG8 Soumussalmi Sandwich
2
FrF18 Through Fire and Ice
2
FrF40 Sporcks Eleven
0
FrF44 Anhalt Pandemonium
2
FrF45 Totensonntag
1
FrF47 Cutting Off A Hydras Head
1
FrF51 Bite of the Bassotto
1
FrF52 Dying For Danzig
0
J114 The Marketplace at Wormhoudt
1
J125 Everything Is Lost
1
J140 All Down the Line
1
J83 Bloody Nose
1
OA31 With Friends Like These
0
SP176 Smiling Albert
3
SP89 Assaulting Tes
1
TAC62 Panzers Marsch!
0
TOTALS
56
34

16

View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

AXIS
1
1
0
3
2
0
1
0
0
0
1
1
1
0
0
1
1
0
1
0
4
1
2
0
1
22

The Crusaders Open ASL Tournament Ladder


DOUBLE 1 2011 Update
Derek Tocher


DOUBLE 1 2011 was the 35th British
ASL tournament and there are now over
3000 results recorded on the ladder and we
now have 275 players who have participated
at least once. At any one time there are
about 80-90 ASLers attending tournaments
on at least a semi-regular basis. The largest
number of games played over the history of
UK ASL tournaments has been racked up
by Brian Hooper, 166, and there are nine
players with over 100 games recorded, and
another nineteen who have played 50+.
The top 10% of players have ratings of
3280+ while the upper quartile are rated
3160+. Those in the lower quartile have
ratings below 2810 while the bottom 10%
of participants are rated 2665 or less. These

Rank Player
1
Toby Pilling
2
Derek Tocher
3
Steve Thomas
4
Simon Strevens
5
Dave Schofield
6
Mark Blackmore
7
Mike Rudd
8
Fermin Retamero
9
Georges Tournemire
10
Trevor Edwards
11
Michael Hastrup-Leth
12
Aaron Cleavin
13= Peter Bennett
13= Bjarne Marell
15
Steve Linton
16
Paul Haesler
17
Jes Touvdal
18
Gerard Burton
19
Tim Bunce
20= Paul Jones
20= Lars Klysner
22
Sam Prior
23= Ran Shiloah
23= Peter Struijf
23= Martin Vicca
26= Andrew Dando
26= Carl Sizmur
28
Bernt Ribom
29
Craig Benn
30
Phil Draper
31
Joe Arthur
32
Frank Tinschert
33= Philippe Leonard
33= Dominic Mcgrath
35= Will Fleming
35= Ralf Krusat
35= Alan Smee
38
Dave Booth
39
Daniel Kalman
40
Jackson Keddell
41= Daniel Batey
41= Paul Saunders
41= Ray Woloszyn
44
Christain Koppmeyer
45= Ian Percy
45= Tom Slizewski
47= Klaus Malmstrom
47= Nils-Gunner Nilsson
47= Yves Tielemans
50= Francois Boudrenghien
50= Bob Eburne
52
Jean Devaux
53
Armin Deppe
54= Derek Cox
54= Bill Durrant
56= Steve Crowley
56= Jonathan Pickles
58= Grant Pettit
58= Bruno Tielemans
58= David Tye
61
Michael Davies
62= Rodney Callen
62= Mel Falk
62= Tim Macaire
65= Martin Barker
65= Ulric Schwela
67
Jeremy Copley
68= Simon Croome
68= Nick Edelsten

P (W-D-L)
Pts
75 (68--2--5) 4085
125 (94--2--28) 3935
42 (32--1--9) 3755
87 (60--1--25) 3720
151 (110--0--41) 3710
66 (48--0--18) 3665
38 (32--1--5) 3660
13 (11--0--2) 3650
8 (7--1--0)
3640
128 (72--1--55) 3635
45 (31--1--13) 3615
6 (6--0--0)
3565
14 (12--1--1) 3560
36 (26--0--10) 3560
17 (14--0--3) 3545
17 (10--2--5) 3530
24 (16--0--8) 3475
48 (29--0--19) 3425
72 (49--0--23) 3405
41 (22--0--19) 3400
11 (8--0--3)
3400
74 (42--1--31) 3390
11 (7--0--4)
3370
10 (8--0--2)
3370
38 (26--1--11) 3370
48 (27--2--19) 3365
21 (13--0--8) 3365
5 (5--0--0)
3350
62 (43--0--19) 3345
78 (49--2--27) 3330
21 (13--0--8) 3305
15 (10--0--5) 3295
9 (7--1--1)
3285
159 (97-2--61) 3285
3 (3--0--0)
3280
6 (5--0--1)
3280
4 (4--0--0)
3280
7 (5--0--2)
3270
11 (8--0--3)
3245
5 (5--0--0)
3240
4 (4--0--0)
3235
19 (10--0--9) 3235
31 (18--1--12) 3225
15 (8--0--7)
3220
12 (8--1--3)
3215
5 (4--0--1)
3215
4 (3--1--0)
3210
5 (4--0--1)
3210
3 (3--0--0)
3210
3 (3--0--0)
3205
56 (32--0--24) 3205
3 (3--0--0)
3190
13 (7--1--5)
3185
18 (9--0--9)
3180
5 (4--0--1)
3180
47 (21--1--25) 3175
8 (5--0--3)
3175
7 (4--1--2)
3170
3 (3--0--0)
3170
45 (20--0--25) 3170
80 (43--1--36) 3165
6 (4--0--2)
3160
9 (5--0--4)
3160
64 (35--0--29) 3160
25 (12--1--12) 3155
46 (21--1--24) 3155
9 (6--0--3)
3150
59 (31--0--28) 3145
22 (14--1--7) 3145

numbers have remained essentially invariant


over the last ten years and the distribution of
results is essentially Gaussian about 3000.

Performance of the tournament goes
to Ian Pollard, who beat Brendan Clark,
Dominic McGrath and Dave Ramsey to gain
a massive 370 pts taking him from 262nd to
185th on the list. Paul Jones followed up his
5-1 performance at HEROES 2011 by going
3-1 at DOUBLE 1 2011 to gain another 45
pts to enter the top 20. Other players with
significant point gains were Andy Smith and
Martin Barker (both +220 pts) and Wayne
Baumber and Nick Ranson (both +150 pts;
co-incidentally both also beat Pete Phillipps
over the weekend).

Rank Player
70= Paul Odonald
70= David Ramsey
70= Frenk Van Der Mey
70= Andrew Whinnett
74= Chris Courtier
74= Malcolm Hatfield
74= Andy Smith
77
Paul Sanderson
78= Lee Brimmicombe-Wood
78= William Hanson
78= Philip Jones
78= Anthony Oboyle
78= Paul Ryde-Weller
83
Mark Walley
84= Luis Calcada
84= Luc Schonkerren
84= Aaron Sibley
84= Stewart Thain
88
Simon Morris
89
Russ Curry
90= Nigel Brown
90= Marc Hanna
90= Mikael Siemsen
93= Jas Bal
93= Kevin Beard
93= Gary Lock
93= Iain Mackay
93= Peter Michels
93= Simon Staniforth
99
Paulo Alessi
100= Dirk Beijaard
100= William Binns
102= Billy Carslaw
102= Robin Langston
102= Chris Milne
105= Jean-Luc Baas
105= Serge Bettencourt
105= Robert Schaaf
105= Miles Wiehahn
109= Tony Gibson
109= Alexander Rousse-Lacordaire
109= Bob Runnicles
112= Scott Byrne
112= Raurigh Dale
112= Patrik Manlig
115= Stefan Jacobi
115= Bo Siemsen
117 Scott Greenman
118 Steve Pleva
119 Mark Warren
120= Daniele Dal Bello
120= Peter Hofland
122 Ian Daglish
123 Vincent Kamer
124= Colin Graham
124= Andrew Saunders
126= Eric Gerstenberg
126= Allard Koene
126= Ian Willey
129= Nick Brown
129= Thomas Buettner
129= Stephen Burleigh
129= Steve Grainger
129= Martin Hubley
129= Ian Kenney
129= Phil Nobo
129= Duncan Spencer
137= Gilles Hakim
137= Kris Pugh
139= Eric Baker
139= Matt Blackman

P (W-D-L)
Pts
72 (44--1--27) 3135
60 (32--0--28) 3135
4 (3--0--1)
3135
16 (9--0--7)
3135
13 (7--2--4)
3130
59 (26--0--33) 3130
9 (4--0--1)
3130
41 (21--0--20) 3125
12 (8--0--4)
3120
19 (11--0--7) 3120
5 (3--0--2)
3120
3 (2-0--1)
3120
10 (5--1--4)
3120
4 (3--0--1)
3115
43 (21--1--21) 3110
5 (3--0--2)
3110
64 (38--0--26) 3110
24 (12--0--12) 3110
11 (6--0--5)
3105
6 (4--0--2)
3100
26 (11--0--15) 3095
6 (4--0--2)
3095
6 (3--0--3)
3095
5 (3--0--2)
3090
13 (9--1--3)
3090
2 (2--0--0)
3090
43 (22--0--21) 3090
3 (2--0--1)
3090
7 (4--0--3)
3090
6 (4-0-2)
3085
5 (3--0--2)
3080
35 (16-0--19) 3080
11 (4--0--7)
3075
9 (4--2--3)
3075
5 (3--0--2)
3075
3 (2--0--1)
3070
3 (2--0--1)
3070
3 (2--0--1)
3070
32 (16--0--16) 3070
36 (19--0--17) 3065
4 (2--1--1)
3065
3 (2--0--1)
3065
12 (7--0--5)
3060
38 (17--0--21) 3060
16 (9--0--7)
3060
11 (5--0--6)
3050
4 (2--0--2)
3050
8 (3--1--4)
3045
6 (3--0--3)
3035
20 (11--0--9) 3030
4 (1-0-3)
3025
4 (2--0--2)
3025
150 (70--2--78) 3020
4 (2--0--2)
3015
5 (3--0--2)
3010
33 (15--1--17) 3010
13 (8--0--5)
3005
7 (4--0--3)
3005
11 (5--0--6)
3005
3 (1--1--1)
3000
3 (2--0--1)
3000
37 (15--2--20) 3000
8 (4--0--4)
3000
4 (3--0--1)
3000
4 (2--0--2)
3000
11 (6--0--5)
3000
4 (2--0--2)
3000
5 (2--0--3)
2995
14 (6--0--8)
2995
2 (1--0--1)
2985
2 (1--0--1)
2985

Rank Player
141= David Farr
141= Malcolm Rutledge
143= Paul Kettlewell
143= Sergio Puzziello
145= Simon Church
145= John Orielly
147= Elliot Cox
147= Tom Jackson
147= Ben Jones
150 Michael Maus
151 Gavin White
152= Laurent Forest
152= Alex Ganna
152= David Murry
152= Pedro Ramis
156= Paulo Ferreira
156= Wayne Kelly
156= Bob Nugent
156= Jon Williams
160= Derek Briscoe
160= Martin Bryan
162= Andrea Marchino
162= Andy Price
164= Paul Boyle
164= John Sharp
166= Steve Allen
166= Wayne Baumber
166= Brendan Clark
166= Tim Collier
170= Iain Ainsworth
170= Edo Giaroni
170= Nathan Wegener
173= Joel Berridge
173= Brian Martuzas
175= Mark Caddy
175= Ian Gaueman
175= Mike Kinley
175= James Neary
175= Phil Ward
180= Shaun Carter
180= Mat Haas
180= Josh Kalman
180= Martin Mayers
184 Martin Kristensen
185 Ian Pollard
186= Jakob Norgaard
186= Bernard Savage
186= Bill Sherliker
189 Sam Belcher
190= Patrick Dale
190= Hakan Isaksson
192= John Johnson
192= David Kalman
194 Russell Gough
195= Peter Ladwein
195= Lutz Pietschker
195= Neil Piggot
198 Neil Brunger
199 Nick Angelopoulos
200= Keith Bristow
200= Paul Legg
200= John Martin
203 Bill Eaton
204= Mark Furnell
204= Dave Otway
206 Nigel Blair
207 Mike Daniel
208 Mark Chapman
209 Michael Essex
210 Michael Robertson


Of course we also had a number of
significant losers over the weekend. Most
prominent among these were Dominic
McGrath (-210 pts, dropping from 17th to
33rd) and Dave Ramsey (-195 pts, dropping
from 30th to 70th), both due to their losses
to Ian Pollard. Losses to Pete Phillipps also
hurt both Aaron Sibley (-185 pts, dropping
from 33rd to 84th) and Nigel Blair (-170 pts,
dropping from 126th to 206th).

Without further ado here is the full
Crusaders Ladder as of August 2011

P (W-D-L)
Pts
4 (2--0--2)
2980
3 (1--0--2)
2980
89 (42--0--47) 2975
5 (1--0--4)
2975
5 (2--0--3)
2970
5 (2--1--2)
2970
2 (0--1--1)
2960
23 (11--0--12) 2960
49 (23--0--26) 2960
7 (3--0--4)
2955
5 (2--0--3)
2950
3 (0--0--3)
2945
2 (0--1--1)
2945
5 (2--1--2)
2945
6 (3--0--3)
2945
9 (4--0--5)
2940
11 (4--1--6)
2940
3 (2--0--1)
2940
14 (6--0--8)
2940
1 (0--0--1)
2935
19 (8--0--11) 2935
1 (0--0--1)
2930
3 (1--0--2)
2930
5 (2--0--3)
2925
8 (3--0--5)
2925
6 (1--1--4)
2920
76 (35--0--41) 2920
21 (8--1--12) 2920
17 (7--0--10) 2920
1 (0--0--1)
2915
3 (1--0--2)
2915
3 (1--0--2)
2915
3 (1--0--2)
2910
5 (2--0--3)
2910
1 (0--0--1)
2905
3 (1--0--2)
2905
5 (2--0--3)
2905
5 (2--0--3)
2905
5 (2--0--3)
2905
79 (35--1--43) 2900
13 (6--0--7)
2900
10 (5--0--5)
2900
50 (21--0--29) 2900
6 (2--0--4)
2895
123 (48--1--74) 2890
6 (1--1--4)
2885
21 (9--1--11) 2885
38 (18--2--18) 2885
8 (3--0--5)
2880
38 (15--1--22) 2875
9 (4--0--5)
2875
1 (0--0--1)
2870
5 (2--0--3)
2870
81 (45--4--38) 2865
21 (9--0--12) 2860
4 (1--0--3)
2860
4 (1--0--3)
2860
49 (18--0--31) 2855
5 (1--0--4)
2850
69 (39--1--29) 2845
144 (59--2--83) 2845
6 (2--0--4)
2845
21 (8--3--10) 2840
13 (5--1--7)
2835
5 (1--0--4)
2835
141 (53--1--87) 2830
5 (2--0--3)
2825
6 (2--0--4)
2820
38 (18--0--20) 2815
4 (1--0--3)
2810

Rank Player
211= Michael Allen
211= Ian Morris
213= Ivor Gardiner
213= Clive Haden
213= William Roberts
216= Kevin Croskery
216= Alistair Fairbairn
216= Nick Sionskyj
219 Brian Hooper
220= David Blackwood
220= Chris Littlejohn
222 Graham Worsfold
223= Lee Bray
223= Richard Kirby
225 Bill Hensby
226= Andrew Hershey
226= Flemming Scott-Christensen
228 Jonathan Townsend
229 Peter Neale
230 Andy Mcmaster
231 Burnham Fox
232= Rupert Featherby
232= Nick Quinn
234 Gareth Evans
235= Hamish Hughson
235= Chris Walton
237= Steve Cocks
237= Marc Horton
239= Ray Jennings
239= Simon Taylor
241 Steve Cook
242= Indy Lagu
242= Graham Smith
244 Simon Hoare
245 Jeff Howarden
246= Richard Dagnall
246= Pete Phillipps
248 Christain Speis
249 Stuart Brant
250 James Crosfield
251 Pedro Barradas
252 Nigel Ashcroft
253 James Short
254 Adrian Catchpole
255 Adrian Maddocks
256 Arthur Garlick
257= Bryan Brinkman
257= Justin Key
259 Ian Parkes
260 John Fletcher
261= Oliver Gray
261= Neil Stevens
263 Chris Netherton
264 Mike Stanbridge
265 Michael Rhodes
266 Roger Cook
267 Robert Seeney
268 Damien Maher
269 Nick Carter
270 Nick Ranson
271 Paul Case
272 John Kennedy
273 Chris Ager
274 Ray Porter
275 Jackie Eves

P (W-D-L)
Pts
6 (3--0--3)
2805
5 (1--0--4)
2805
17 (8--0--9)
2800
5 (2--0--3)
2800
11 (3--1--7)
2800
16 (6--0--10) 2790
3 (0--0--3)
2790
8 (3--0--5)
2790
166 (59--2--105) 2785
20 (8--0--12) 2780
14 (3--2--9)
2780
3 (0--0--3)
2775
14 (3--0--11) 2770
7 (2--0--5)
2770
31 (10--0--21) 2765
10 (4--0--6)
2760
6 (1--0--5)
2760
4 (1--0--3)
2755
3 (0--0--3)
2750
34 (12--0--22) 2745
23 (10--0--13) 2740
3 (0--0--3)
2735
14 (5--0--9)
2735
4 (0--0--4)
2730
4 (0--0--4)
2725
57 (17--1--39) 2725
4 (0--0--4)
2720
6 (1--0--5)
2720
11 (3--0--8)
2715
21 (7--1--13) 2715
29 (14--0--15) 2710
5 (0--0--5)
2700
46 (17--1--28) 2700
4 (0--0--4)
2690
7 (2--0--5)
2685
4 (0--0--4)
2680
137 (58--0--82) 2680
5 (1--0--4)
2680
13 (5--0--8)
2675
15 (6--0--9)
2670
7 (1--0--6)
2655
52 (19--1--32) 2635
11 (3--0---8) 2630
11 (2--0--9)
2625
12 (3--0--9)
2620
21 (2--5--14) 2615
9 (1--0--8)
2610
66 (25--1--40) 2610
10 (3--1--6)
2595
6 (0--0--6)
2585
15 (4--0--11) 2580
65 (25--2--38) 2580
30 (10--2--18) 2560
47 (13--1--33) 2555
43 (10--0--33) 2545
30 (9--2--19) 2515
5 (0--0--5)
2510
9 (1--0--8)
2485
11 (2--0--9)
2475
44 (7--1--36) 2455
124 (32--3--89) 2445
24 (5--0--19) 2415
26 (7--0--19) 2400
39 (4--0--35) 2375
45 (12--0--33) 2330

Wild Bill Wilder Saving Private Ryan


Module Review
Mark Drake


This review is based on a series of
posts Mark made on http://forums.gamesquad.
com/showthread.php?101049-Saving-PrivateRyan-module-by-WBW-(LONG!). This compilation is printed here with his permission Pete


I recently purchased a copy of Wild
Bill Wilders One Out of Four: The Saga of
Saving Private Ryan and thought I would
write some initial thoughts on this module. I
paid a few dollars for it but am interested in
it as I did design a scenario on the last battle
scene (which Michael Dorosh used in his
Scenario Design Guide.)

First off the module comes with a
cover sheet describing the product contents
on the front side, while the reverse side is
an ad for more of Wild Bill Wilders ASL
modules that he sells on Ebay. The next page
is double-sided description of this product,
part of the Great Movie Series, talking about
the movie itself, which five scenarios are in
the pack, and then the counters and maps.

THE SCENARIOS

18

There are 3 cardstock cards with 5

scenarios. Four of them are based on actual


scenes from the movie. The scenario titled
The 88s is based on the scene where
Miller describes his mission to his CO about
knocking out some 88s. The last battle scene
scenario Millers Last Stand is printed on
both sides of one card and is the largest of
the bunch.

I have not played any of the scenarios
yet but I do plan on comparing WBWs last
battle scene scenario to my version.

COUNTERS


There are 106 counters of various
types included, one of which is the French
family shown in the film which appear in
scenario SPR03 The Square.

Overall the counters breakdown as
follows:

36 info markers

24 SS (4 SMC, 4 1-3-7 Crews, 8 6-58 squads, and 8 3-4-7 HS)

36 US (3 7-5-8 para squads, 5 3-5-7
para HS, 7 7-5-9 ranger squads, 3 3-4-8
ranger HS, 3 3-4-9 engineer HS and 15
SMC)

10 5/8 counters (2 LC, 20L AA Gun, 2

View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

P-51 Mustangs, and 5 German Wrecks)



As you can see the SMC are close to
official ones but most of the unit counters
are a different interpretation of what we are
used to seeing in US and SS OOBs. Not a
big thing to me as I have seen this sort of
variant in other third-party modules. Just
would like to know why these particular
values were chosen for each type of unit.

Did notice that the unit designation
for Pvt. Ryan shows he is a member of the
2nd Rangers thought he was 101st in the
movie.

MAPS


There are 5 cardstock mapsheets in
this module.

One is the bunker complex
overlooking the Omaha beach section where
Miller and his squad landed and attacked.

The second map is a small half-map
with the square in the French town where
Millers squad ran into the French family,
duelled with a German sniper, and shot up
the German HQ with US paratrooper help.

The last 3 mapsheets are of the same

battle the town of Ramelle where the


climactic battle of the film takes place.
One sheet is a small hex map of the section
of town leading to the bridge. Two more
mapsheets are larger hexed maps of the
same battle, but each sheet depicts half of
what the smaller map shows.

Also one of the half-map sheets (the
Square) does have a small overlay of the
radar station for scenario 4, where Millers
squad attacks the German mg nest in front
of the radar station.

a novelty/collectors item then it fits the


bill perfectly. Too bad it is not more on
the playable side. As I expected when
I purchased it, but I also pretty much
thought I can make some modifications to

what is here and play it solo for my own


amusement.

CONCLUSION


Overall I think this is a module that
has potential. The counters are not bad
but could be better. The maps look very
amateurish and there are no rules on the
terrain for example, on the Ramelle maps
how would you handle play in many of the
road/building hexes? On the Omaha map
what is the CA of the bunker?

There are no explanations for these
map issues! This is definitely the weakest
part of the module. Its too bad there are not
even any map SSRs for these mapsheets.

The scenarios look OK at first for an
amateur effort but further in-depth study
shows there are some questions in each
scenario. Ive already mentioned about the
CA of the German bunker in SPR01 Dog
Green; in SPR02 The 88s the German
OOB allows 2 Panzerfausts, and an SSR
allows the Germans to set up mines with
AF4 what is that? Looks like leftovers
from when he designed old SL scenarios.
SPR05 Millers Last Stand the SSR allows
the US side to use HIP and ? how many
set up HIP and Concealed? These are just a
few issues with the scenarios. Its too bad
as I think these scenarios could have been
made into some interesting ones to play in
ASL.

Overall this is a poor effort, which
I expected given the history/quality of
past ASL products from WBW. I think this
module could have been done much better
and even wrote to the producer of these
modules (Tom Tietz) not only asking him to
consider making improvements but offering
to assist in improving the quality of his
modules. No response. Not surprising given
that folks buy his modules at Ebay for a nice
chunk of change (and I am guilty of this as
well, as this is my 4th item I have purchased
but also the one I paid the most for due to
curiosity of what the quality of it may be as
well as the subject matter.)

If you are looking to get this as a
module that you expect to play right out of
the package then you will be disappointed.
There are a LOT of issues just reading thru
this module that require fixes/modifications
if you wish to actually play any of the
scenarios. If you are interested in this as

View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

19

THE BRIDGE AT RAMELLE

ASL SCENARIO MD1

Scenario Design: Mark C. Drake

BOARD CONFIGURATION:

23

BALANCE
only hexrows U-FF are in play

VICTORY CONDITIONS:

German wins by controlling bridge hex 23BB5 at Game


.
End.

US sets up first

German moves first

END

Elements of 101st Airborne C Co., 2nd Rangers [ELR:5] {SAN: 6}

Setup HIP anywhere south of the canal, on/north of hexrow 7, in Building/Rubble/Shellholes [EXC ne HS/SMC but no SW counters, may setup in hex AA8];
No US unit may setup on the bridge.
MMG

2-2-7

3-3-7

Heroic

Heroic

BAZ44
1PP

6+1

7-0

8-0

1-4-9

73-4-7

8-1

9-2

3PP

4-10

X11

8-4

(optional: exchange
1x 1-4-9 with
BAR Gunner SMC)

nd

Elements of 2 SS Panzer Div. [ELR:5] {SAN: 3}

GROUP 1:

GROUP 2:

-/-/3

62-5-8

20L

(6)

2-2-8

2-3-8

PSK
X10

12-4

GROUP 4:

Enter on Turn 4, On/East of Hex BB10:

8-0

VI
Pz

5 -4-8
2

12
11
8

88L

SPECIAL RULES:
1.EC are Moderate. Weather is Clear,with no wind at start.Kindling is NA.The canal (Merderet River) is
deep with moderate flow to east.
2.The bridge in 23X3,aswell as all walls/hedges,do not exist.All Woods are Stone Rubble;all Orchards are
Shellholes.
3.Setup overlays as follows: OG4 on 23X7-X6;X22 on 23Z7; X8 on 23AA8
4.All buildings are Gutted (EXC:Z6, Z7, AA8);buildings Z6 and AA8 are Stone Two-Story Houses;Z7 is
Stone with Ground level and Level 3 Steeple only.Cellars do not exist.
5.Place Sangar in BB4;place Wooden rubble in W6, V6,EE7, AA10; Place Stone rubble in CC7, DD7, Y8,
oY7, X5;place Shellholes in BB6 and BB7.
6.Bridge in BB5 is Two-Lane Stone.It is wired for demolition;can only be demolished from Sangar in BB4 by
any US unit as per normal bridge demolition rules ( A23.7.71).
7.German units are SS;do not have Panzerfaust;AFV crews may not voluntarily abandon AFV.Halftrack may
be unloaded,or Towing/carrying Passengers (German player's choice.) 2-2-8 crewa must setup/possess psk
and Flak 38 at start;Flak 38 sets up Limbered (whether towed or not.)

3/5

62-5-8

AL

9-1

Enter on Turn 2, On/East of Hex BB10:

9-1

GROUP 3:

Marder I(f)

3-4-8

52-4-8

1PP

8-1

AAMG

T7

1-4-9

15PP

1
1

7-0

7-0

38

Marder II

aK

3/5

2-3-7

M 10
Fl

88L

4-4-7

AA

16

1/1

2
25

11
8

Setup between hexrows V and Z with coordinates >= 9:

W
SP

VI
Pz

12

8-0

Setup in hexes BB8-BB9:

8.US units have following: ATMM, Ammo Shortage,Mol (ONCE,and only vs.Vehicle), 1 Set DC in ANY hex
(designate hex/detonating unit before setuprepresents Hawkins mines), 9-2 leader may make/direct PBF as
TPBF ONCE ,as long as 9-2 occupies OG/shellhole/rubble (this represents 60mm mortar rounds as grenades.)
One mmg sets up possessed by 2-2-7 crew,other sets up possessed by 1-4-9 and 7-0.No restriction on who
gets Bazookas.
9.No Quarter and Hand-To-Hand is in effect for both sides.
10.Game starts with US Defensive First Fire phase,with German units having expended all MF/MP in
movement.
11. For expanded game,add following: 2 6-5-8 squads with Group 4.
German reinforcements:enter turn 5 on South edge: 1 6-5-8, 5-4-8, 3-4-8, 7-0
US reinforcements:enter turn 5 on North edge: 3 6-6-6 2 3-4-6 1 jeep, 8-0, mmg ,M4A3 (75w)
If using this option,then number of Game turns is increased to 6,and US will get one '44 FB,with
bombs,arriving on turn 5 during German Mph/US DFFph.
Players must decide before commencing play if option is to be used.

Out of the Sea

A review of KstenJger! Special Forces II


Ian Willey


This review was originally posted on
Ians blog at http://walladvantage.blogspot.com/
and is reprinted here with his permission Pete


KstenJger is the second Heat
of Battle scenario pack to focus on the
actions of a single special forces unit, in
this case the German KstenJger. The
KstenJger Abteilung was the Coastal
Raider Detachment of the Brandenburg
regiment, and undertook several actions in
the Aegean.

The front and back covers
contain a few details about the module, but
the interior pages have a major use. A total
of 4 tables are included, two for designers
of future scenarios which is a nice touch,
but its a shame there is no list of sources.
A table of characteristics, interesting things
like allowed to Self Rally and deploy to
swim (keeping inherent weapons) give
you get an idea of the flavour of the pack
at first brush. The Boat Card break down
is again useful and would be needed each
time you played unless you happened to
play them all on the bounce. What is a
little confusing is that the example shows
the Nationality as American and we only
have German and British cards in the pack,
possibly originally further packs were
planned? Lastly we have the make up of a
Company for Solitaire use (SASL) but with
the lack of a purpose built Random Event
table and as mentioned in the main body of

the rules only one official mission (Recon)


would be suitable and then would have to
have several changes to make it work. So
more of a place to start than a ready to play
addition to the pack. It does not detract from
the pack so no harm but the lions share of
work seems to have been left for any SASL
designer to do.

The overlay is 14 hexes long
(counting both half hexes as .5) and 5.5
hexes deep depicting at greatest a 3 hex
water inlet attached to rising ground rising
to level 3. It looks an interesting overlay
but lacks any ID details so I will write on
the back of mine before laminating. On
the same good quality card is the two boat
cards that come with the system (these
will be laminated as well and thrown in
the same Raaco that the counters will be
kept). Overall the overlay looks like it will
fit in with the boards fine, with the terrain
depictions as per pre-map pack boards. My
only niggle is the stone wall is a little slim
and does not stand out strongly but its just
that a niggle.

A bigger niggle but quite bearable
is that you only get the two boat cards but
three boat types. The third boat card is an
example on the rear page of the rules. This I
will scan, print and laminate. Not perfect but
not a major issue.

The six pages of rules look clear
and not tainted by the odd characters and
View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

typos as per HOBs Kreta module. They


obviously cover the new squad type and
their special abilities. Further rules cover
the Motor Gun Boats (MGB) and the final
4 pages are a condensed set of the MGB
rules which were originally were released
in LFTs St. Nazaire module. Interestingly
again further evidence that maybe the
plans included further expansion as shown
in the rules are images of Swedish and
Russian boat crews. If this is the case lets
hope that HOB do eventually release these
products but word is they have just one
more product to release before closing
down (though restarting at a later date
could be a possibility).

The counter sheet has the
KstenJger squads, half squads,
leaders and boat crews and the required
British boat crews as well. Five boat
counters are supplied with the required
info counters for the various weapons.
An interesting counter is the Reaction
Platoon counter that is used in one of the
six scenarios and covered in the rules.
This counter represents a random force
that is activated during the scenario. The
counters are printed face up as per the
normal convention which is a relief as
HOB have a history of supplying back to
front counters. Another fault from Kreta
was the sizing of some of the counters.
My squads from Kreta were so badly cut
that some of the MMC were much wider
than they should whilst the adjoining

21

counter was substantially thinner leading to


strange shaped counters and in my case a
rather annoyed customer. This counter sheet
suffers from the same poor cut but not to
the same extent and can be lived with. The
quality of the images is nice and crisp, and
are the typical high shine finish which is a
positive or negative dependant on your view.
The counters are white core which will put a
few off I am sure. Another possible issue for
some is that the counters are side punched
rather than edge punched which are harder
to clean up (but I find easier to cut from the
tree). Overall though I am fairly pleased
with them.

The main bones of any pack
though is the scenarios and weighing in
at six scenarios it has to be said is on the
light side. What you automatically get
with these scenarios is extra rules to work
with. Obviously you have the new MGB
rules (though they are not used in every
scenario), but to use the pun you also have
a whole raft of other rules in many cases
to deal with as well. It has to be assumed
you have the whole ASL system and several
other TPP items to get the full use out of the
pack. Given that you only get six scenarios
not having what is required for one or
two scenarios would be a big issue!! But
I feel the subject matter will only be truly
attractive to those that already have a great
deal of kit anyway.

Rule sections and other
requirements needed to play include:
Rules: Early Morning Sun
blindness (F11.6), Huts (G5), Night Rules
(E1.), Beech slopes (G13.22), Wooden Pier
(G13.7), Ocean for deep and shallow, Olive
Groves (F13.5), Vineyards (F13.6), Palm
Debris (and counters).

Equipment: HOB/BFP High
Ground boards, Ocean Overlays, Landing
Craft, HOB SF I, Gavatu Island overlay
(from the ASL Annual 93b).

So plenty of the less used kit
and rules are required which sets this apart

from other recent products and should be


applauded.

SF-7 Deadly Appetici


Nice to see HOB supporting
their previously released boards from High
Ground (and recently re-released through
BFP in their expanded pack). I dont think
enough re-use happens with TPP boards.
Here a combined Italian and British force
has to fend off the Germans who attack
early morning (Sun Blindness) and the usual
Ocean and Beach overlays are in use. 8 turns
makes this one on the long side but with a
total of ten Allied squads vs. six attacking
German the turns should click on.

SF-8 The Guns of Corfu


Plenty of use of overlays (six
in total), a pier and night rules to get you
started!!! The Germans get three Assault
Boats and a Landing Craft. They are trying
to establish the location of two Guns and
face a very superior in numbers British
force. Interesting SSR add plenty of flavour
and the Reaction Platoon counter gets its
outing. An interesting looking scenario.

SF-9 Now its German


First scenario to use the MGBs
and both sides get them! But the Brit one
sets up HIP and can not move. Looks
interesting but again HOB uses a previous
release, this time ownership of SF I is
required as rules and counters representing
SBS (and SAS) are used. I am interested in

how the battle


between the
Brit boats 40L
plus MGs and
the German
lesser MG only
mounted boat goes.

SF-10 False Flag


Last of the four Steve Swan
designs (all above) and this uses the old
Annual map Gavatu Island. This has the
Germans attacking Greeks with six Assault
Boats and a captured British MGB. The
Germans have the tactical puzzle of
attacking two separate islands and only six
turns to do it in. Again another interesting
design.

SF-11 Clash in the Night


This scenario is the first of the
two by Robert Hammond. A second night
scenario but this has the Germans on the
defence and no MGB but they do have
landing craft they need to defend. The Brits
have a choice of three ways of winning.
Looks an interesting scenario.

SF-12 Operation Polar Bear


Germans back on the attack with
Italians as the defenders. Another night
scenario and again lacking the MGBs and
again using the landing craft though these
start beached. The overlay is used in this
scenario and I can say the only pity is that
it is the only scenario that uses it from the
whole pack. Another interesting looking
scenario.

So half the scenarios are played out
at night (as should be expected given the
troops method of getting to the fight), only
two scenarios use the MGBs which is a big
disappointment and I have to admit to being
left wanting more from the pack. Obviously
if all 6 scenarios are fun to play then its
worth it but I would have liked to see more
scenarios and given the specific rules and
components some who purchase it will have
difficulty playing all of them.

22

Caring For Your Tiger


A Review of the latest Haynes Owners Manual

Most people are probably familiar
with Haynes series of owners manuals
covering the maintenance and repair of a
wide range of cars and bikes. In recent years
they have expanded the range with a series
of books on military vehicles and aircraft.
Unlike the normal owners manuals, these
books does not offer detailed information
on maintenance and repair but are more a
general look at the vehicle covered.

The Tiger I tank is the subject of the
latest book in the series, which has been
produced in conjunction with the Bovington
Tank Museum. Much of the book focuses on
Tiger 131, the Tiger tank that is actually on
display at the museum, and which has been
restored to full working order over the past
20 years.

The introduction is written by Peter
Gudgion, who was serving as a Lieutenant

with 48th Royal Tank Regiment on 21


April 1943 when they captured Tiger 131.
He was injured when his Churchill was
knocked out by Tiger 131 just prior to
its capture and after being shipped back
to the UK was transferred to the School
of Tank Technology as an examiner of
captured equipment. In October 1943
Tiger 131 arrived at the school, and he was
subsequently involved in the writing of the
report on the tank that had nearly killed him!

battle damage it suffered as it was captured,


written by well-known ASLer David
Schofield, in his professional role as lecturer
in forensics and crime scene science a
side-effect of this is that he is now claiming
to be a published author! Expect to be bored
to death by him telling you this every time
you play him in future :-) The section ends
with a look at how the tank was then taken
back to Britain and the work that was done
on it in analysing it.


The book opens with a look at the
design history and production of the Tiger
tank. Much of this will be familiar to anyone
with an interest in the Tiger tank, but is
none the less useful. After a general look,
the book proceeds to focus on the history of
Tiger 131, from its completion at the factory
to its deployment in Tunisia, and subsequent
capture by the British. This section is
complete with two pages detailing the


Chapter 3 offers a detailed look at the
anatomy of the Tiger tank. This is lavishly
illustrated with cutaway diagrams and
numerous photos, many of them of Tiger
131 itself. The interior shots of the tank
are particularly invaluable for modellers.
Information is also included on the wading
gear and submersion procedure used
(theoretically; as the book notes, there is no
evidence this was done in action) to cross

View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

23

an itemised breakdown from the invoice is


included. The vehicle never left Germany
due to shipping problems, and ultimately
was loaned back to the Germans.

One minor quibble would be the lack
of scale diagrams of the Tiger, though there
are plenty of other books on the Tiger which
can provide these for anyone who needs
them.

Overall this a great book, well worth
buying. The recommended retail price is
19.99, but it can be found for less; for
example it is available on www.amazon.
co.uk for 12.48. A link can be found on the
VFTT website at www.vftt.co.uk/amazon.
asp, along with links to a range of other
military books of interest to readers.

deep rivers and water obstacles if no bridge


capable of taking the Tigers weight were
available. There is also a detailed section on
the production and application of Zimmerit,
the paste the Germans developed to stop
anti-tank magnetic mines being attached to
their tanks, and how the process was applied
to the restoration of a StuG III.

The next chapter details the work
involved in restoring Tiger 131 to running
order, and the difficulties this involved.
Again it is accompanied by numerous
photos of the restoration work. The book
then looks at the mechanics of running a
Tiger, covering everything from starting
the engine to wheel and track maintenance.
Chapter six is a detailed look at the
Maybach engine used in the Tiger, again
illustrated with numerous cutaway diagrams
and colour component diagrams, and plenty
of detailed information on the workings of
the engine and related components such as
the gearbox and fuel tanks.

Chapter 7 looks at the firepower of
the Tiger tank, starting with the dreaded
88. After noting the origins of the gun,
there is some information of how the gun
was mounted in the turret, and a substantial
amount of information on its operation,
including an article on the aiming and
firing procedure something to remember
next time you make a TH DR with your
tank! Also covered are the various types of
ammunition used, accompanied by several
diagrams detailing how the 92 rounds were

stored in the tank.



The chapter ends with a look at the
bow and co-axial MG mounted on the
tank, and the small arms carried inside the
tank (as standard, just a MP40 SMG no
panzerfausts!).

Having covered the running and
fighting systems, chapter 8 looks at how
the Tiger was used in combat. It opens with
a brief look at the deployment of the Tiger
in independent tank battalions and their
organisation, and how this evolved in the
early months of the tanks use. A brief look
at the tactical use of the Tiger is followed by
a detailed look at the Tigers mobility at the
strategic, operational, and battlefield level
and the different problems each one poses.
An interesting table compares the Tiger with
the Sherman and T34/85, and shows that in
many cases it was as mobile as both.

The Tiger was reputed to be
unreliable, but the book notes once the
initial problems had been worked out,
operational availability of the Tiger was
as good as the Panzer IV and better than
the Panther. The section on repair and
maintenance notes the German approach
to repair differed from that of the Western
Allies who could simply replace a worn out
tank with a new one, whereas the limited
German production meant that local repair
was often the only option, especially in
Russia and North Africa.

The section also includes numerous
anecdotes from Tiger crew members which
offer an interesting insight into what it was
like to live, fight and die in the tank.

The ends with a look at the six
surviving complete Tiger Is, and includes
brief details of their whereabouts and how
they came to be in their current state. The
intriguingly title section Buying a Tiger
is not, unfortunately, about buying your own
but about the Japanese purchase of a Tiger I
from the Germany in May 1943. They paid
645,000 Reichsmarks for the vehicle, and

24

View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

INCOMING

Continued from page 

Nogueiras article on the Japanese, a report


on the local tournament scene, and four new
scenario. Bedouin Blitz is a tournamentsized scenario set in Iraq in 1941 which
sees Bedouin cavalry attack British troops
supported by a couple of armoured cars,
while Atrocities Beget Atrocities is a
Chinese-Japanese action set during the Jinan
Incident in China in 1928. The Streets
of Kharkov is a mid-sized, combined
arms scenario featuring a clash between
SS and NKVD troops during the battle of
Kharkov, and Thunder From Heaven is a
late war scenario featuring a US para-drop
and British glider landing against a mixed
company of German troops supported by 3
20L AA guns, and variable reinforcements.

Four issue subscriptions (starting with
the current issue, number 32, which contains
four scenarios (Lack of Communication,
Jumonji Pass, Get Tito, and No Rest
for the Weary) as well as an analysis of the
HASL version of the scenario In Sight of
the Volga) are available for $15.00 ($18.00
outside the USA). Issues 1 to 20 are now
out of print but PDF versions are available
for free from www.aslbunker.com (note that
the site is currently down after being hacked
but should be up soon). Other back issues
are $4.00 ($4.50 outside the USA) or $35.00
($45.00 outside the USA) for a complete
set of issues 21-32. A complete set of issues
21-31 and a subscription for issues 32-35
is available for $45.00 ($55.00 outside the
USA). Cheques should be made payable
to Vic Provost and sent to Dispatches
from the Bunker, P.O. Box 2024, Hinsdale
MA 01235, or you can pay by PayPal to
[email protected]. You can email
them at [email protected].

INTENSIVE FIRE 2011


27 30 October 2011

INTENSIVE FIRE is the UKs longest running tournament dedicated to the play of Advanced Squad
Leader. 2011 sees us well into our second decade and players of all standards are invited to attend.

FORMAT

The well-established Fire Team Tournament is the main event and offers the chance for competitive play
on the Saturday and Sunday. In addition, the Friday mini-tourneys offer the chance for glory in more specialised fields of warfare. There will also be a Training Camp for inexperienced players.
For those not interested in tournament play, or not able to make it for the whole weekend, there is always
room for pick-up games and friendly play.

VENUE

The Kiwi Hotel, centrally located in Bournemouth, offers both excellent gaming facilities and reduced accommodation rates (40 per night for a single room or 33 for a double room). The hotel is within a short
taxi-ride of Bournemouth rail station and ample parking is available. To book contact the hotel on (01202)
555 889 (+44 1202 555 889 from outside the UK). You can also book online at www.kiwihotel.co.uk.
For foreign visitors, lifts can often be pre-arranged to and from major airports. For those contemplating an extended stay, Bournemouth offers an excellent base for the military historian, being within easy
reach of important military museums at Bovington Camp, Winchester, Portsmouth and Aldershot.

COST

Weekend registration for the tournament costs just 15, or just 10 if you register before 1st October.
The tournament program listing the weekends scenarios and events is available from late September to
anyone registering in advance.

FURTHER DETAILS / REGISTRATION

Contact Pete Phillipps, 9 Pier Road, Kilchoan, Acharacle, Argyll, Scotland, PH36 4LJ. Telephone (01972)
510 350 (+44 1972 510 350 from outside the UK) or email [email protected].

THIS IS THE CALL TO ARMS!



This is the latest edition of the ASL Players Directory. It is broken down by country and then by postal code region. Where a date (in dd
mm yyyy format) is shown at the end of each entry this indicates when it was last confirmed.

England
Joss Attridge, Newtown Linford, Leicester, Leicestershire (14/04/2007)

F. B. Dickens, 62 Yarnfield Road, Tyseley, Birmingham, W. Mids., B11 3PG ()


Billy Carslaw, 52 Spring Lane, Birmingham, B24 9BZ (19/03/2005)
Stuart Brant, 16 Kings Court, 25 Cox Street, Birmingham, B3 1RD (25/10/2007)
Garry Cramp, 25 Ferndale Road, Hall Green, Brimingham, W. Mids, B92 8HP (31/10/1996)
Gary Lock, 7 Dover Place, Bath, BA1 6DX (25/03/2004)
Jeff Hawarden, 9 Laburnum Road, Helmshore, Rossendale, Lancs., BB4 4LF ()
Craig Ambler, 2 Queensbury Square, Queensbury, Bradford, W. Yorks., BD13 1PS (28/02/1997)
Phil Ward, 7 Burnsall Mews, Silsden, Keighley, W. Yorks., BD20 9NY (06/03/2000)
Mat Haas, 8A Farcroft Road, Poole, Dorset, BH12 3BQ (03/09/2008)
Dave Schofield, 11 Longfield Drive, West Parley, Ferndown, Dorset, BH22 8TY (03/09/2008)
Stuart Holmes, 1 Milne Street, Irwell Vale, Ramsbottom, Lancs., BL0 0QP (08/03/2002)
Shaun Carter, 3 Arnside Grove, Breightmet, Bolton, Lancs, BL2 6PL (06/03/2008)
Mike Standbridge, 31 Hunstanon Drive, Bury, Lancs., BL8 1EG (09/03/2006)
Ian Kenney, 53 Withdean Crescent, Brighton, W. Sussex, BN1 6WG ()
Marc Hanna, 42 Sancroft Road, Eastbourne, Sussex, BN20 8HB (10/03/2009)
Graham Smith, 56 Durham Road, Bromley, Kent, BR2 0SW (01/08/2008)
Andy Tucker, 78 Constance Crescent, Hayes, Bromley, Kent, BR2 7QQ (11/11/1999)
Neil Piggot, 2 Beechmount Grove, Hengrove, Bristol, Avon, BS14 9DN ()
Mark Warren, 5 Gazzard Road, Winterbourne, Bristol, BS36 1NR (26/10/2006)
Rasmus Jensen, 17 Berkeley Road, Bishopston, Bristol, Avon, BS7 8HF (29/10/1997)
Gaute Strokkenes, Girton College, Cambridge, CB3 0JG (23/10/1998)
Paul ODonald, 13 Archway Court, Barton Road, Cambridge, Cambs., CB3 9LW (07/08/2002)
Martin Barker, Tradewinds, Wratting Rd, Haverhill, Suffolk, CB9 0DA (17/09/2008)
Ken Watson, 18 Arrendene Road, Haverhill, Suffolk, CB9 9JQ (18/04/2011)
Andrew Eynon, 36 Greenbank Drive, Pensby, Wirral, CH61 5UF (08/07/2005)
Gareth Evans, 29 Hillfield Road, Little Sutton, South Wirral, Merseyside, CH66 1JA ()
Derek Cox, 44 Pines Road, Chelmsford, Essex, CM1 2DL (03/03/2010)
Brendan Clark, 5 Borda Close, Chelmsford, Essex, CM1 4JY (25/10/2007)
Miles Wiehahn, 37 Nursery Rise, Great Dunmow, Essex, CM6 1XW (06/09/2009)
Alistair Fairbairn, 3 School Lane, Brantham, Manningtree, Essex, CO11 1QE ()
Martin Johnson, 16 Wick Lane, Dovercourt, Harwich, Essex, CO12 3TA ()
Matthew Leach, 12 Lodge Road, Little Oakley, Dovercourt, Essex, CO12 5ED (19/08/2002)
Rob Gallagher, 153 Halstead Rd, Stanway, Colchester, Essex, CO3 5JT (31/07/2001)
Nick Ranson, 31 Ashlong Grove, Halstead, Essex, CO9 2QH (24/08/2008)
Derek Tocher, 19 Tyrell Square, Mitcham, Surrey, CR4 3SD (25/10/2007)
Derek Briscoe, 129b Melfort Road, Thornton Heath, Croydon, Surrey, CR7 7RX (18/01/1999)
Joe Arthur, 33 Cedar Close, St Peters, Broadstairs, Kent, CT10 3BU (31/10/1999)
Peter Wenman, 12 Clementine Close, Belting, Herne Bay, Kent, CT6 6SN (26/07/1998)
Andy Back, 21 Elmwood Court, St Nicholas Street, Coventry, W. Mids., CV1 4BS ()
Hubert Noar, 39 Rugby Road, Cifton, Rugby, Warks., CV23 0DE (06/01/2004)
Tim Collier, 71 Kinross Road, Leamington Spa, Warks., CV32 7EN (09/05/2005)
Tony Wardlow, 6 Beech Tree Avenue, Coventry, W. Mids., CV4 9FG ()
Ray Jennings, 4 Dame Agnes Grove, Coventry, West Midlands, CV6 7HL (03/09/2008)
Ian Pollard, 19 Doria Drive, Gravesend, Kent, DA12 4HS (05/09/2008)
Aaron Sibley, 61 Ridgeway Avenue, Gravesend, Kent, DA12 5BE (29/08/2008)
Kris Pugh, 22 Norfolk Place, Welling, Kent, DA16 3HR (25/10/2007)
Carl Sizmur, 81 Millfield, New Ash Green, Longfield, Kent, DA3 8HN (25/10/2007)
Sean Pratt, 19 Premier Avenue, Ashbourne, Derbyshire, DE6 1LH (07/08/2002)
Neil Brunger, 72 Penhill Close, Ouston, Chester Le Street, Co. Durham, DH2 1SG (03/09/2008)
M. W. Jones, 1 Cheviot View, Front St, Dipton, Stanley, Co. Durham, DH9 9DQ ()
Brian Hooper, 38 Ridsdale Street, Darlington, County Durham, DL1 4EG (07/09/2008)
Chris Bunyan, 89 Hallcroft Road, Retford, Notts., DN22 7PY (17/10/1998)
Roy Quarton, 8 Bassey Road, Branton, Doncaster, S. Yorks., DN3 3NS (01/11/2000)
David Farr, First Floor Flat, 259 High Road Leyton, Leyton, London, E10 5QE (25/04/1999)
Larry Devis, 104 The Mission, 747 Commercial Road, London, E14 7LE (21/07/2001)
Michael Chantler, Flat 7, Pickwick House, 100-102 Goswell Road, London, EC1V 7DH (04/05/2004)
Lee Bray, 1 Oakfield Road, Exeter, Devon, EX4 1BA (04/03/2009)
Mike Elan, 26 King Edward Street, St. Davids, Exeter, Devon, EX4 4NY (01/06/2000)
Andrew Saunders, 3 Torbay Court, 221 Devonshire Road, Blackpool, Lancs., FY2 0TJ (29/12/2000)
Nigel Brown, 3 Chepstow Road, Blackpool, Lancs., FY3 7NN (31/10/1996)
Ulric Schwela, 18 Stuart Road, Thornton, Lancashire, FY5 4EE (15/09/2008)
Arthur Garlick, 23 St. Annes Road East, Lytham St. Annes, Lancs., FY8 1TA (04/05/1998)
Michael Davies, 36 Heyhouses Court, Heyhouses Lane, Lytham St Annes, Lancs., FY8 3RF (06/03/2008)
Russell Gough, Bellare, New Road, Southam, Cheltenham, GL52 3NX (09/03/2006)
Tim Bunce, 33 Ryde Court, Newport Road, Aldershot, Hants., GU12 4LL (03/09/2008)
Jeff Cansell, 24a Upper Queen Street, Godalming, Surrey, GU7 1DQ (17/03/1997)
Giuilo Manganoni, 111 Kings Road, Godalming, Farncombe, Surrey, GU7 3EU (30/04/1996)
Simon Croome, 1 Dowling Parade, Bridgewater Road, Wembley, Middx., HA0 1AJ (25/10/2007)
Jackie Eves, 1 Dowling Parade, Bridgewater Road, Wembley, Middx., HA0 1AJ (25/10/2007)
Malcolm Hatfield, 336B Alexandra Ave, South Harrow, Middlesex, HA2 9DB (03/09/2008)
Chris Littlejohn, 214A Field End Road, Eastcote, Pinner, Middx., HA5 1RD ()
Ben Kellington, 12 Clayton Fields, Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, HD2 2BA (21/04/2007)
Fish Flowers, Church Farm, Westerns Lane, Markington, HG3 3PB (27/11/2004)
Paul Kettlewell, 1 Puffin Way, Watermead, Aylesbury, Bucks., HP20 2UG (06/03/2008)
Chris Walton, nb Burgan Pod, Aylesbury Canal Society, Canal Basin, Walton Street, Aylesbury, HP21 7QG
(03/09/2008)
Nick Edelsten, 139 Hivings Hill, Chesham, Bucks., HP5 2PN (05/09/2001)
Malcolm Holland, 57 Westfield Rise, Barrow Lane, Hessle, Humberside, HU13 0NA ()
Ruarigh Dale, 77 Riverview Avenue, North Ferriby, HU14 3DT (27/10/2005)
Steve Balcam, 1 Cornwall Street, Cottingham, N. Humberside, HU16 4NB (01/01/1996)
Mark Furnell, 123 Roycraft Avenue, Thames View, Barking, Essex, IG1 0NS (10/09/2008)
Tony Maryou, 41 Benton Road, Ilford, Essex, IG1 4AU (15/08/2000)
Kevin Gookey, 95 Willingdale Road, Loughton, Essex, IG10 2DD (17/02/2001)
David Austin, 86 Lindsey Way, Stowmarket, Suffolk, IP14 2PD (04/01/2000)
Paul Legg, 21 Grimsey Road, Leiston, Suffolk, IP16 4BW (24/09/2008)
Sam Prior, Flat 8, Wren House, 2B High Street, Hampton Wick, Kingston Upon Thames, KT1 4DP (14/11/2010)
Andy Smith, 31 Egerton Road, New Malden, Surrey, KT3 4AP (01/07/2011)
Craig Benn, 122 Larkfield Road, Aigburth, L17 9PU (03/09/2008)
Damien Maher, 4 Woolton Court, Quarry Street, Liverpool, L25 6HF (05/07/2010)
Andy Ashton, 62 Earlston Drive, Wallasey, The Wirral, Merseyside, L45 5DZ ()
Wayne Kelly, 72 Grassmere Road, Lancaster, Lancs, LA1 3HB (19/03/2005)
Adrian Bland, 15 Blankney Road, Cottesmore, Oakham, Rutland, LE15 7AG (10/12/2004)
Patrick Dale, 28 Bancroft Road, Cottingham, Market Harbourgh, Leics., LE16 8XA (25/10/2007)
Nick Brown, 53 Henley Crescent, Braunstone, Leicester, Leics., LE3 2SA (15/11/1996)
John Overton, 68 Brantingham Road, Whalley Range, Manchester, M18 8QH (18/09/2002)
Bernard Savage, 73 Penrhyn Avenue, Middleton, Manchester, M24 1FP (10/03/1998)
Simon Sayers, 21 Barlea Avenue, New Moston, Manchester, M40 3WL (21/11/2008)
Bob Eburne, 33 Whitton Way, Newport Pagnell, Bucks., MK16 0PR (28/10/2004)
Jamie Sewell, 115 Cresent Road, Alexandra Palace, London, N22 4RU ()
Jas Bal, 63 Gardner Park, North Shields, Tyne and Wear, NE29 0EA (09/03/2006)
Philip Jones, 10 hazeldene, Jarrow, Tyne and Wear, NE32 4RB (09/03/2006)
Steve Jones, 90 Biddick Lane, Fatfield Village, Washington, Tyne and Wear, NE38 8AA (04/04/2005)
Martin Sabais, 36 Chalfont Road, Walker, Newcastle upon Tyne, Tyne & Wear, NE6 3ES (17/09/2008)
Andy McMaster, 29 Kingsley Place, Heaton, Newcastle Upon Tyne, NE6 5AN (06/03/2008)
Andrew Cochrane, 19 Churchburn Drive, Morpeth, Northumberland, NE61 2BZ (04/08/2009)
Mike Rudd, 2 Blaeberry Hill, Rothbury, Northumberland, NE65 7YY (12/03/2002)
Geoff Geddes, 30 Sheepwalk Lane, Ravenshead, Nottingham, Notts., NG15 9FD ()
Ian Willey, 17 Strawberry Bank, Huthwaite, Sutton-In-Ashfield, Notts., NG17 2QG (26/03/2002)
George Jaycock, 51 Burleigh Road, West Bridgford, Nottingham, Notts., NG2 6FQ ()

26

Chris Gower, 7 Boxley Drive, West Bridgford, Nottingham, Notts., NG2 7GQ (28/09/1998)
L. Othacehe, 17 Russel Drive, Wollaston, Notts., NG8 2BA ()
Duncan Spencer, 33 St Anthonys Road, Kettering, Northants, NN15 5HT ()
A. Kendall, 12 Hunsbury Close, West Hunsbury, Northampton, NN4 9UE (13/12/1998)
Nigel Ashcroft, 5 Grasmere Way, Thornwell, Chepstow, Gwent, NP16 5SS (30/03/2011)
Paul Williams, The Cottage, Robins Lane, Devauden, Chepstow, Monmouthshire, NP16 6PB (14/08/2010)
Clive Haden, Holly House, The Street, Swanton Abbott, Norfolk, NR10 5DU (09/05/2005)
Tom Jackson, 40 Keyes Rd, London, NW2 3XA (02/09/2008)
Steve Joyce, 23 South End Close, London, NW3 2RB (31/01/2001)
Peter Fraser, 66 Salcombe Gardens, Millhill, London, NW7 2NT ()
Nick Hughes, 15 Layfield Road, Hendon, London, NW9 3UH ()
Martin Mayers, 41 Frank Fold, Heywood, Lancs., OL10 4FF (28/10/2004)
Stephen Ashworth, 1 Nelson Street, Walsden, Manchester, Lancashire, OL14 7SP (12/12/2006)
Toby Pilling, 51 Wensum Drive, Didcot, Oxon, OX11 7RJ (09/03/2006)
John Sharp, 3 Union Street, Oxford, Oxon, OX4 1JP (23/10/1998)
Simon Stevenson, East Dairy Cottage, Welton Le Marsh, Spilsby, Lincolnshire, PE23 5TA (28/05/2005)
Jason Johns, 26 Hamerton Road, Alconbury Weston, Huntingdon, Cambs., PE28 4JD (22/01/2003)
Alan Anderson, Penmareve, Maddever Crescent, Liskeard, Cornwall, PL14 3PT (11/12/1998)
Nigel Blair, 105 Stanborough Road, Plymstock, Plymouth, PL9 8PG (03/09/2008)
Paul Rideout, 5 Fisher Close, Stubbington, Fareham, Hants., PO14 3RA ()
Keith Bristow, 39 Carronade Walk, Portsmouth, Hampshire, PO3 5LX (25/10/2007)
Simon Strevens, 14 Teddington Road, Southsea, Hampshire, PO4 8DB (25/10/2007)
Justin Key, 25 Hilary Avenue, Portsmouth, Hants., PO6 2PP (03/09/2008)
Simon Hunt, 26 Inhurst Avenue, Waterlooville, Portsmouth, PO7 7QR ()
Steve Thomas, 19 Derwent House, Samuel Street, Preston, Lancs., PR1 4YL (23/10/1998)
Trevor Edwards, 11 Thirlmere Road, Preston, Lancs., PR1 5TR (05/05/2011)
Bill Sherliker, 16 The Heathers, Bamber Bridge, Preston, Lancs., PR5 8LJ (09/09/2008)
Phil Draper, 8 Chesterman Street, Reading, Berks., RG1 2PR (25/10/2007)
Paul Sanderson, Flat 4, Russell Street, Reading, Berks., RG1 7XD (26/03/2000)
Michael Strefford, 3 Walton Way, Shaw, Newbury, Berkshire, RG14 2LL (05/06/1998)
Dominic McGrath, 19 George Street, Basingstoke, Hampshire, RG21 7RN (06/03/2008)
Chris Netherton, 36 Eungar Road, Whitchurch, Hants, RG28 7EY (26/10/2006)
Kevin Croskery, 4 Beechey Way, Copthorne, W. Sussex, RH10 3LT (10/08/2008)
Richard Webb, 14 Kitsmead, Copthorne, West Sussex, RH10 3PW (14/08/2010)
Bill Hensby, 32 The Vineries, Burgess Hill, W. Sussex, RH15 0NF (18/06/1999)
John Barton, 194 Chanctonbury Road, Burgess Hill, W. Sussex, RH15 9HN (08/05/2007)
Gerard Burton, Flat 7 The Beacons, Beaconsfield Road, Chelwood Gate, East Sussex, RH17 7LH (01/07/2011)
Wayne Baumber, 39 Station Road, Lingfield, Surrey, RH7 6DZ (25/10/2007)
Keith Graves, 51 Humbar Avenue, South Ockenden, Essex, RM15 5JL ()
David Higginbotham, 18 Westfield Garden, Brampton, Chesterfield, S40 3SN (03/07/2000)
Andy Osborne, 42 Atlantis Close, Lee, London, SE12 8RE ()
Simon Horspool, 188 Leahurst Road, Hither Green, London, SE13 5NL (03/08/2007)
Martin Edwards, 127 Pepys Road, London, SE14 5SE (02/09/1999)
Michael Essex, 1B Wrottesley Road, London, SE18 3EW (11/06/2009)
David Ramsey, 25 Grenville Way, Stevenage, Herts, SG2 8XZ (03/09/2008)
Chris Milne, 19 Redoubt Close, Hitchin, Herts., SG4 0FP (25/03/2004)
Andrew Dando, 26 Constable Drive, Marple Bridge, Stockport, Cheshire, SK6 5BG (17/09/2002)
Andrew Daglish, 7 The Spinney, Cheadle, Cheshire, SK8 1JA ()
Paul Jones, 11 Irwin Drive, Handforth, Wilmslow, SK9 3JS (04/03/2009)
Pete Bennett, 84 Littlebrook Avenue, Burnham, Slough, Bucks., SL2 2NN (16/09/2002)
Steve Crowley, 2 Mossy Vale, Maidenhead, Berks., SL6 7RX (23/10/2003)
William Binns, 150 Carshalton Park Road, Carshalton, Surrey, SM5 3SG (25/10/2008)
Adrian Catchpole, The Malting Barn, Top Lane, Whitley, Melksham, Wilts., SN12 8QJ ()
Jon Williams, 17 Larch Road, Colerne, Chippenham, Wilts., SN14 8QG (06/12/1998)
William Roberts, 20 Clayhill Copse, Peatmoor, Swindon, Wilts., SN5 5AL (03/09/2008)
Bill Gunning, 14 Eagles, Faringdon, Oxon, SN7 7DT (14/09/1997)
Roger Cook, The Brick Farmhouse, Cleuch Common, Marlborough, Wilts, SN8 4DS (26/10/2006)
James Crosfield, Lower Langham Farm, Langham Lane, Gillingham, Dorset, SP8 5NT (15/02/2009)
John Fletcher, 191 Trent Valley Road, Stoke-On-Trent, Staffordshire, ST4 5LE (23/10/1998)
Robert Seeney, 43 Priory Road, Newcastle Under Lyme, Staffs., ST5 2EN (19/03/2005)
Ronnie Tan, 250 Hydethorpe Road, Balham, London, SW12 0JH (21/07/2001)
Simon Taylor, 81 Valley Road, London, SW16 2XL (05/09/2008)
Julian Blakeney-Edwards, 1 Elmbourne Road, London, SW17 8JS (21/10/1998)
Lee Brimmicombe-Wood, 49 Edgecombe House, Whitlock Drive, Southfields, London, SW19 6SL (03/08/2009)
Christopher Chen, Flat 11, 14 Sloane Gardens, London, SW1W 8DL (25/02/1999)
Jonathan Pickles, 115 Wavertree Road, Streathem Hill, London, SW2 3SN (26/03/1999)
David Tye, 35 Redburn Street, London, SW3 4DA ()
Chris Courtier, 17b Hargwyne Street, London, SW9 9RQ (23/10/1998)
John Sparks, 2 Standfast Place, Taunton, Somerset, TA2 8QG (01/10/2007)
Paul Case, 4 Brymas House, Rockwell Green, Wellington, Somerset, TA21 9BZ (06/03/2008)
Nick Carter, 13 Oak Tree Court, Uckfield, East Sussex, TN22 1TT (03/09/2008)
Mike Batley, 2 The Gables, Argos Hill, East Sussex, TN6 3QJ (29/04/2001)
Bill Eaton, Dart House, 20 Bridgetown, Totnes, Devon, TQ9 5BA (02/09/2008)
Richard Dagnall, 480 Chertsey Road, Twickenham, Middlesex, TW2 6PS (18/10/2010)
Ivor Gardiner, 19 Gibson Road, Ickenham, London, Middlesex, UB10 bEW (03/09/2008)
Aaron Patrick, 9 Arundel Gardens, London, W11 2LN (31/12/2004)
Nick Quinn, 7 Woodgrange Avenue, Ealing, London, W5 3NY (04/03/2002)
Alan Lynott, Woodlands Parkway, Cheshire, WA15 7QU (10/12/2009)
John Kennedy, 2 Hawthorn Road, Hale, Altrincham, Cheshire, WA15 9RG (23/10/2003)
Dave Booth, 47 Dunnock Grove, Oakwood, Warrington, Cheshire, WA3 6NW (07/10/1996)
Paul Ryde-Weller, 44 Farm Way, Watford, Herts., WD2 3SY ()
Robin Langston, 105 Little Bushey Lane, Bushey, Herts., WD23 4SD (19/09/1996)
Sandy Goh, 12 Mornington Road, Radlett, Herts., WD7 7BL (31/10/1996)
Matt Blackman, 10 Alfred St, Wigan, Lancs., WN1 2HL (14/03/2008)
Ian Parkes, 45 School Lane, Standish, Wigan, Lancs., WN6 0TG (23/09/2008)
Michael Murray, 34 Bell Road, Walsall, West Mids., WS5 3JW (30/03/1999)
Andy Evans, 232 Bushbury Road, Wolverhampton,, West Midlands, WV10 0NT (27/04/2010)
Ian Price, 19 Upper Green, Yettenhall, Wolverhampton, W. Mids., WV6 8QN ()
Michael Clark, Wold View, East Heslerton, Malton, N. Yorks, YO17 8RN (12/02/2002)
David Murray, 29 Middle Street, Nafferton, Driffield, S. Yorks, YO25 4JS (02/09/2008)

Scotland
Steven Trease, 2 Charlestown Circle, Cove, Aberdeen, AB12 3EY (17/06/1999)

Tony Gibson, 107 Queens Drive, Hazelhead, Aberdeen, AB15 8BN (06/03/2008)
Steve Cook, 159 Lee Crescent, Aberdeen, AB22 8FH (13/03/2009)
Martin Vicca, 37 Dean Gardens, Westhill, Aberdeen, AB24 2UB (02/09/2008)
Paul Saunders, 59 Grampian Gardens, Arbroath, Angus, DD1 4AQ (03/09/2008)
Michael Green, 27 Rotchell Park, Dumfries, DG2 7RH (12/09/2002)
Mark Chapman, Flat 7, 265 Gorgie Road, Edinburgh, EH11 1TX (01/12/2005)
Garry Ferguson, 30E Forrester Park Avenue, Edinburgh, EH12 9AW (07/12/1998)
Stewart Thain, 77 Birrell Gardens, Murieston, Livingston, West Lothian, EH54 9LF (25/10/2007)
Bill Finlayson, 19 Taymouth Road, Polmont, Falkirk, Stirlingshire, FK2 0PF (16/06/2001)
Andrew Kassian, Flat 14/2, 20 Petershill Court, Glasgow, G21 4QA (01/01/1996)
Ellis Simpson, 4 Langtree Avenue, Whitecraigs, Glasgow, G46 7LW (20/04/1999)
Hamish Hughson, 15 Esmonde Gardens, Elgin, Moray, IV30 4LB (21/03/2010)
Kevin Horner, 11 Bailies Road, Forres, Moray, IV36 1JA (11/10/2010)
Oliver Gray, 117 Upper Dalgairn, Cupar, Fife, KY15 4JQ (04/02/2009)
Garry Marshall, 24 Allardice Crescent, Kirkcaldy, Fife, KY2 5TY (21/05/2001)
Neil Stevens, 4 Grants Crescent, Paisley, Renfrewshire, PA2 6BD (01/07/2011)
Pete Phillipps, 9 Pier Rd, Kilchoan, Argyll, PH36 4LJ (02/09/2008)
Jonathan Swilliamson, Da Croft, Bridge End, Burra, Shetland Islands, ZE2 9LE (01/05/1998)

View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

ON THE CONVENTION TRAIL


There are more and more ASL tournaments cropping up all over the world. In fact, it is possible to be involved in an ASL tournament at least once a month, often
more, if you were so inclined (and had the financial means to live such a life - I wish!).
If you plan on holding an ASL tournament, please let me know and Ill include the details here, space permitting.
If you contact anyone regarding these tournaments, please tell them that I sent you!

OCTOBER

NOVEMBER


When: 2 9 October.

Where: Holiday Inn Airport, 4181 W. 150th St., Cleveland, Ohio 44135, phone 216-252-7700,
fax 216-252-3850 or visit www.holidayinn.com/cle-airport. Rooms are $75.00 plus tax if reservations
are made by 21 Sep - request ASL Oktoberfest to receive this discounted rate. Check the ASLOK web
page for the hotel discount code to book on-line.

Fee: $25.00 in advance, $30.00 on the door.

Format: Same as always. Weekend tournament plus numerous mini-tournaments. There is also an
informal USA vs. World Cup where everyone keeps track of their games and a plaque is presented to the
winning side.

Notes: T-shirts are $10.00 ea (XXL $13.00, XXXL $15.00, 4XL $18.00)

Contact: Bret Hildebran, 17810 Geauga Lake Rd, Chagrin Falls, OH 44023-2208 or by email
[email protected]. Check out the web site at www.aslok.org for the latest details.


When: 10 13 November.

Where: Gstehaus Heimbach, Schulstrae 6, Hergarten. Hergarten is a little town in the German
part of the Eifel. It is 10 Km to Zlpich and around 40 Km to Cologne. There is a railway station in
Heimbach which is the neighbouring town and you can reach it from Cologne by train, which goes every
hour. From Heimbach you need to take a taxi to Hergarten which is about 6 Kilometers. The location
offers sleeping rooms nearly 60 persons, a huge kitchen (where our Marketenderin Andrea will continue
her cooking business for us), a big playing area and an additional separate big room which we will use
for eating. Rooms are mostly three and four bed rooms with shower (you will need to bring a sleeping
bag or blanket and pillows). Bed and breakfast is 45 per night single rooms are 6.50 extra.

Fee: 5 per day.

Format: The tournament will be again a Swiss style five Round tournament. We will offer again
an event for players who dont want to participate in the tournament.

Contact: Christian Koppmeyer, Hagebuttenweg 9, 41564 Kaarst, Germany. You can email him at
[email protected]. Check out the Grenadier web site at www.asl-grenadier.de at for up to
date information.

Grenadier 2011

ASLOK XXVI

INTENSIVE FIRE 2011


When: 27 30 October.

Where: The Kiwi Hotel, West Hill Road, Bournemouth, England, BH2 5EG. Telephone (01202)
555 889 or fax (01202) 789 567 to arrange accommodation. Single rooms are 40.00 per night, double
rooms 33.00 per night per person if booked prior to 1 October thereafter normal rates apply. Remember
to mention INTENSIVE FIRE when reserving to qualify for the special rates. You can also book online at
www.kiwihotel.co.uk.

Fee: 10.00 if registering with the organisers before 18 October, 15.00 thereafter and on the door
(entry is free for those only able to attend for one day). In addition to a discount on the entry fee, players
pre-registering will receive a tournament program in September.

Format: Three round Fire Team tournament (two rounds on Saturday, one on Sunday). There will
also be some single day mini-tournaments on the Friday. Open gaming is available for those who do not
wish to take part in the tournament.

Notes: Prizes are awarded to winning players and the Convention Champion, who is the player
judged to have had the most successful tournament with all games played over the weekend being taken
into consideration.

Contact: For more details or to register contact Pete Phillipps, 9 Pier Road, Kilchoan, Acharacle,
Argyll, Scotland, PH36 4LJ. Phone (01972) 510 350 (evenings only) or email [email protected]. For up to
date information check out the UK ASL tournament web site at www.asltourneys.co.uk.

2012
MARCH

HEROES 2012


When: 8 11 March.

Where: Colwyn Hotel, 569 New South Promenade, Blackpool, England, FY4 1NG. Tel 01253 341
024. Room rates are 31.00 per night for a shared room or 34.00 for a single room and include breakfast.
Bar meals and good beer are also available at the hotel.

Fee: 10.00 if registering with the organisers prior to 1 March, 15.00 thereafter and on the door
(entry is free for those only able to attend for one day). In addition to a discount on the entry fee, players
pre-registering will receive a tournament program in February.

Format: Five round tournament beginning Friday morning (arrangements will be made for those
unable to arrive until Friday afternoon), with three scenarios to choose from in each round. Players will
be expected to have knowledge of the first half of the Chapter G rules to play in the tournament. CG
and friendly games can also be found throughout the weekend. There will also be opportunities for new
players to learn the game and friendly games available.

Contact: For more details or to register contact Pete Phillipps, 9 Pier Road, Kilchoan, Acharacle,
Argyll, Scotland, PH36 4LJ. Phone (01972) 510 350 (evenings only) or email [email protected]. For up
to date information check out the UK ASL tournament web site at www.asltourneys.co.uk.

JUNE

DOUBLE ONE 2012


When: 22 24 June.

Where: Writtle College, Chelmsford, Essex, CM1 3RR. On-site facilities include en-suite and
standard bedrooms, free car parking on application, mini market, cash points, a self-service cafeteria
and licensed bars. Bedroom rates to be confirmed; for 2011 they started at 30.00 for a single room and
breakfast.

Fee: Likely to be the same as 2011; 15.00 if paid before 30 April, 20.00 thereafter.

Format: A two day tournament with two rounds on Saturday and one on Sunday offering a choice
of scenarios. A number of mini-tournaments are also planned for Friday, and friendly games will also be
available.

Contact: For a booking form contact Derek Cox, 25 Cramphorn Walk, Chelmsford, Essex, CM1
2RD or by email at [email protected], or Brendan Clark by email at [email protected].
Check out the web site at http://www.doubleone-online.net/1.html for the latest details.

Londons Advanced Squad Leaders (LASL) welcome ASL/ASLSK players or potential


players. If youre passing through or staying over in London, youre welcome to come
along and take part. Theres no fee for taking part or spectating.
We usually meet on the second Saturday of each month from 10.30am until 5.30pm.
LASLs venue is located in the lower ground floor of Starbucks, 32 Fleet Street, London,
EC4Y 1AA. Its quiet and has space for up to 20 games.
If you want to come along send your name and contact details to [email protected] to arrrange a game and ensure there are no last minute problems.

Wales
Andrew Whinnett, 6 Aquilla Court, Conway Road, Cardiff, CF11 9PA (03/09/2008)

Paul Jones, 9 Cwm Nofydd, Rhiwbina, Cardiff, CF14 6JX (22/11/2002)


Martin Castrey, 1, Thomas Cottages, The Highway, Hawarden, Flintshire, CH5 3DY (03/09/2008)
Kev Sutton, 1 Gorphwysfa, Windsor Road, New Broughton, Wrexham, LL11 6SP (25/02/1999)
Nick Rijke, Aneddfa, Cellan, Lampeter, Ceredigion, SA48 8HY (06/09/2010)
C. Jones, Deer Park Lodge, Stepaside, Narbeth, Pembrokeshire, SA67 8JL ()
Emyr Phillips, 2 Cysgod Y Bryn, Aberystwyth, Ceredigion, SY23 4LR (27/08/2002)


If there are any mistakes, please let me know so I can correct
them for the next edition. If you have Internet access you can also
correct your details on the VFTT web site at http://www.vftt.co.uk/
my_account.asp.

View From The Trenches

83 Sept - Dec 2011

27

HEROES 2012
ADVANCED SQUAD LEADER TOURNAMENT
8 - 11th MARCH (THIRSDAY through Sunday) 2012
hotel skye, south promenade, blackpool, england
th

The Event

Following its success in previous years HEROES continues in 2012 to fill the gap for UK ASL action in the first
half of the year. As normal the action starts on Thursday and continues through to Sunday so you can play in
an ASL tournament and/or play friendly games (or even try your hand at a campaign game if you can find an
opponent). The focus of the weekend will be the main tournament,in which players of like record are paired off
to allow us to determine the winners - depending on numbers attending there will be four or five rounds. The
first round will start on Friday afternoon and each round sees players choose from three carefully selected
scenarios. Main tournament entrants are to be familiar with the rules through to the first half of Chapter G.

BOOT CAMP

Dont worry if you are a new player (someone who hase only ever played five or fewer games against a live
opponent), as a special tournament based on the ASL Starter Kit will be available on Friday. You can learn the
game with an experienced player nearby to offer advice on rules. There will never be a better time to try your
hand at ASL!
Remember, you can also drop in just for part of a day if you cant make it for the full weekend.

THE VENUE

The Hotel Skye is familar to those who have attended in the past and offers plenty of gaming room for the whole
weekend, Meals and good beer are also available in the hotel, and numerous alternative food outlets are close
by. The hotel is easily accessible from the M55 and the train station is a 5 minute walk away.
Bed and breakfast is just 31 per person per night for a shared room or 34 for a single room per night.

The Cost

The weekend, whether you enter a tournament or just play games with the people you will meet, is fantastic
value at only 15.00, or just 10.00 if you register before the beginning of March 2012.

HEROES 2012 HOTEL BOOKING FORM

To book your room simply fill in this form and send it with a cheque for 10.00 to cover your deposit (payable
to HOTEL SKYE) to Hotel Skye, 571-573 New South Promenade, Blackpool, England, FY4 1NG. You can also
telephone them on 01253 343220 to book your room.

NAME
ADDRESS
NIGHTS ROOM REQUIRED FOR (tick each one)
THURS

FRI

SINGLE ROOM
NAME OF PERSON SHARING WITH

SAT
DOUBLE ROOM

SUN

You might also like