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RE: REEK, rhymes with what?

 
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RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/22/2011 10:17:16 PM   
SoliInvictus202


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so no DDs or DEs in the actual TF with the CVE?

(in reply to GreyJoy)
Post #: 2521
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/22/2011 10:31:42 PM   
paullus99


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Actually, given Japan's track record for invading defended beaches during the war, this was what I would have normally expected anyway.

What a massacre! He's bleeding airframes all over the map, losing lots of troops either to isolation or operations like this - it is all downhill from here for him.

_____________________________

Never Underestimate the Power of a Small Tactical Nuclear Weapon...

(in reply to SoliInvictus202)
Post #: 2522
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/22/2011 10:59:14 PM   
Cribtop


Posts: 3890
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From: Lone Star Nation
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GreyJoy, your situation reminds me of the long discussion of culmination points in Canoerebel's thread recently. Basically, and this is a huge oversimplification, at some point offensives run out of steam and are no longer capable of achieving their objectives. It is at this point that the defender can transition to the offensive. The kicker is that the attacker often doesn't recognize that they have culminated, and continues to throw good money after bad. In other words, the attacker's orientation is out of synch with reality and they push a bad bet.

Think about whether this is the case in your game and what to do about it if it is true.

Also, re the subs, the combat report doesn't show everything but the CVE TF seems thin on ASW escorts from what we can see. 8 DDs make any TF much safer from sub attack. Obviously not every TF can have the luxury of that much escort, but if anything should have it CVs and CVEs should be at the top of the list.

_____________________________


(in reply to paullus99)
Post #: 2523
RE: REEK, rhymes with weak - 9/22/2011 11:08:19 PM   
Crackaces


Posts: 3858
Joined: 7/9/2011
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quote:

Attacking force 11795 troops, 71 guns, 8 vehicles, Assault Value = 423

Defending force 18194 troops, 93 guns, 354 vehicles, Assault Value = 288

Japanese adjusted assault: 0

Allied adjusted defense: 522

Japanese assault odds: 1 to 99 (fort level 6)

Combat modifiers
Defender: forts(+), preparation(-), experience(-)
Attacker: shock(+), disruption(-), supply(-)

Japanese ground losses:
12366 casualties reported


I wonder how much FOW is in play? I see only 11,795 troops attacking but over 12K casulites. The next turn will tell you how much was really committed and lost.

Its got to be big and decisive all the same!

(in reply to Canoerebel)
Post #: 2524
RE: REEK, rhymes with weak - 9/22/2011 11:18:29 PM   
JohnDillworth


Posts: 3100
Joined: 3/19/2009
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quote:

so no DDs or DEs in the actual TF with the CVE?

Hey CR.....If he did not escort his CVE's and took a direct course can he be reported to the kangaroo court?
Say it ain't so GreyJoy, say it ain't so?

_____________________________

Today I come bearing an olive branch in one hand, and the freedom fighter's gun in the other. Do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. I repeat, do not let the olive branch fall from my hand. - Yasser Arafat Speech to UN General Assembly

(in reply to Crackaces)
Post #: 2525
RE: REEK, rhymes with weak - 9/22/2011 11:28:16 PM   
obvert


Posts: 14050
Joined: 1/17/2011
From: PDX (and now) London, UK
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If it really was blind faith going in and he now realizes what you've got there, he'll pick up the burnt remains and get out o dodge. Then it's just a lot to rebuild, but not much actually lost.

Some poor Rear Admiral is going to eat his sword for this one.

< Message edited by obvert -- 9/22/2011 11:29:56 PM >

(in reply to GreyJoy)
Post #: 2526
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/22/2011 11:30:20 PM   
Nemo121


Posts: 5821
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Also, the defender can act to effect/force a culmination point. Waiting for a culmination point to come into being is very passive - helping them come about can be more effective ( but much trickier ).

As to what Rader is doing: I think what was said some time ago explains it all. I commented many months ago about the appraisal of his level going on in this thread being inappropriate ( I think he's definitely better than average but I think a lot of the things being ascribed to him or more understandable when viewed with an understanding that glorifying the ability of the opponent acts to forgive one's own failures and magnify one's own victories - after all if the opponent is brilliant then being beaten around the park is less painful than if he is a sub-par player --- a lot of that thinking underpins a lot of the ancient warrior mythos which many of you may have read about from ancient times). I also stated that he didn't appear to have thought through his strategy and didn't appear to know how to use his operational success. At the time each of these three assessments was pretty roundly condemned by thread participants.

I think they do, however, show applicability to the current situation. There's no sense of a grand plan, a limited sense that the operations conducted are part of a cohesive, long-term strategy, limited sense of a killer instinct and, also, rather crucially no sense that there is any innovation in the tactical or operational employment of forces which could have yielded significantly more benefits at less cost. In the Solomons his reaction to your stance has been little more than to bludgeon hopelessly against your forces even when the previous hopeless bludgeoning hasn't worked.

Above average ( insofar as he has operational plans and strategic plans but I don't see that they dovetail well together and amn't convinced his strategic plans are fully thought through ) but not excellent, IMO ( which may not be worth a lot to you but I've been asked to comment so I will ) and I get a sense that simply because an inflated assessment of the threat he poses has been posted for so long people are now struggling to break free from the "anchor" which that assessment has become when ever more clearly the play doesn't merit that anchor.


Right now Rader has culminated and is engaging in strategically ineffectual attacks which give him a sense of operational initiative and well-being. It would be a good time to move over to the offensive and begin messing with his OODA cycles, orientation etc.

However ( and I say this objectively and not as a put-down ) I would advise you to remain on the defence for now. You are very much still learning and only beginning to glimpse entire layers of the game and PBEM play which you were previously unaware of. In addition there's a whole layer of theory underpinning play which I don't think you are familiar with and, most crucially, I don't see, in what you've written, a developed self-awareness ( as it pertains to PBEM/playing against other people in sport etc ). Since playing with OODA cycles etc requires a lot of these higher layers to be fairly well understood I think that you would be best staying on the defensive and just waiting until you have hugely excessive qualitative and quantitative superiority. Then you can afford to make mistakes and not suffer for it. I think that this ability to make mistakes without losing capability is important for you during this basic learning phase.

Already you've moved from being utterly new and really a total walkover to being able to formulate some of the right questions, understand the tactical level of play and achieve a level of competence at the operational level. That's a lot of progress in 1 game. By the end of the game I think you'll have some strategic competence and may begin to be able to properly subordinate operations and conceive them within an appropriate framework.

Next game we'll see whether or not you want to move beyond the basics. So far so good though.



Obvert,
Apologies for the bolding, just wanted to make sure you didn't miss my reply to your post. Yes, Rader can throw a lot of men and planes at anything he wants to BUT does he achieve operational success when he does so? More to the point, if he DOES achieve operational success does it feel like it serves a well-thought out long-term, cohesive plan?

Throwing troops at something is one thing. Actually being effective and achieving worthwhile objectives is another. I know you know this but I think it bears stating with Rader's current play.

< Message edited by Nemo121 -- 9/22/2011 11:36:46 PM >


_____________________________

John Dillworth: "I had GreyJoy check my spelling and he said it was fine."
Well, that's that settled then.

(in reply to Cribtop)
Post #: 2527
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 12:26:41 AM   
obvert


Posts: 14050
Joined: 1/17/2011
From: PDX (and now) London, UK
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quote:

Obvert,
Apologies for the bolding, just wanted to make sure you didn't miss my reply to your post. Yes, Rader can throw a lot of men and planes at anything he wants to BUT does he achieve operational success when he does so? More to the point, if he DOES achieve operational success does it feel like it serves a well-thought out long-term, cohesive plan?

Throwing troops at something is one thing. Actually being effective and achieving worthwhile objectives is another. I know you know this but I think it bears stating with Rader's current play.


I'm completely with you on this one after seeing that this was a complete tactical blunder caused most likely by some combination of hubris and lack of a current strategic plan.

My guess would be that this game gets a lot more quiet for a while after this affair has finished. I think your assessment of Rader's long-term play is fairly accurate for this game. It's not that there wasn't a plan, but that it seems there was doubt in the plan when the most was at stake. If he had pushed through early enough and managed to take Karachi, we'd most likely be talking about a ground war in Australia right now.

If he doesn't shift to the defensive now and use the extra Divisions from China to set up for 44-46, then he'll be in trouble. I'd say for GJ now, it is the time to make sure he doesn't have leisure to easily set up those defenses. To set a clear multi-campaign offensive roadmap for the next year and get the pieces in place to make it happen.

(in reply to Nemo121)
Post #: 2528
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 12:31:45 AM   
GreyJoy


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I've written a long post but lost it when i posted it :-(

Thanks guys for all your comments and thanks to Nemo for the long exaustive and explanation post!

My CVEs were escorted only by SCs cause i didn't have any more DDs to spare at SF...they were preceded by an ASW TF with 3DDs and 1 APD

Rader abbandoned his troops on the beaches...those poor bastards have been all wiped out during the next two days (18,19 July 1943). he simply fled with everything, but he left behind....say what?!...a BB TF composed by BB Kongo and Haruna...those very same BBs that ate more than 150 500lb bombs at Rabaul 3 months ago....how these two beasts can already be 100% operative is beyond my comprehension...
CL Perth came close and at 3000 yards found the jap BBs that crossed the T....few hits of 360mm and my ships were on the bottom... pity!

My B-25s at Shamrya took off and, escorted by P-400 and P-40Ks scored some hits against the fleeing invasion force...there was a little LRCAP by jap CV but we managed to get through...

Our subs were in good position and....say what!?...DUD Torp on the Soryu.... Weren't they supposed to get better!?!??!

Anyway the invasion is repelled...and our 3 CVs+2CVLs will move closer...just to be sure...

he's now preparing something in the Solomons....LOTS of subs coming in from north....sniff sniff....




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Night Time Surface Combat, near Shemya Island at 154,49, Range 3,000 Yards

Allied aircraft
no flights

Allied aircraft losses
Seagull V: 1 destroyed

Japanese Ships
BB Kongo
BB Hiei, Shell hits 2
CA Ashigara
DD Yudachi
DD Takakaze
DD Ishikaze

Allied Ships
CL Perth, Shell hits 3, and is sunk
DD Witte de With, Shell hits 2
DD Kortenaer, Shell hits 1, Torpedo hits 1, and is sunk


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Morning Air attack on TF, near Agattu Island at 153,51

Weather in hex: Partial cloud

Raid spotted at 20 NM, estimated altitude 11,000 feet.
Estimated time to target is 8 minutes

Japanese aircraft
A6M3a Zero x 4
A6M5 Zero x 7



Allied aircraft
B-18A Bolo x 7
B-25D1 Mitchell x 8
P-400 Airacobra x 7
P-40K Warhawk x 9


Japanese aircraft losses
A6M3a Zero: 1 destroyed

Allied aircraft losses
B-18A Bolo: 4 damaged
B-25D1 Mitchell: 1 damaged
P-40K Warhawk: 1 destroyed

Japanese Ships
xAK Ryuko Maru
xAK Sinsei Maru, Bomb hits 2, on fire
xAKL Nitian Maru, Shell hits 2
AK Yamazuki Maru
xAK Tempei Maru, Bomb hits 1, on fire
CM Nuwashima, Shell hits 15
xAK Sumiyoshi Maru, Bomb hits 2, heavy fires, heavy damage
xAK Kosei Maru, Bomb hits 1

Japanese ground losses:
147 casualties reported
Squads: 1 destroyed, 6 disabled
Non Combat: 2 destroyed, 2 disabled
Engineers: 0 destroyed, 1 disabled
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Morning Air attack on TF, near Attu Island at 151,49

Weather in hex: Partial cloud

Raid spotted at 10 NM, estimated altitude 5,000 feet.
Estimated time to target is 2 minutes


Allied aircraft
B-25D1 Mitchell x 8
P-400 Airacobra x 6


No Allied losses

Japanese Ships
SC CHa-54, Bomb hits 1, and is sunk
SC Ch 35
SC Ch 41, Bomb hits 1, and is sunk
SC CHa-59, Shell hits 5
SC Ch 44, Bomb hits 2, heavy fires, heavy damage
SC CHa-49, Shell hits 3
SC CHa-51, Bomb hits 1, and is sunk



Aircraft Attacking:
8 x B-25D1 Mitchell bombing and strafing from low level
Naval Attack: 6 x 500 lb SAP Bomb





--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sub attack near Agattu Island at 152,53

Japanese Ships
CV Soryu
CA Mogami
DD Kawakaze
DD Suresushio
DD Uruyuke
DD Katsutade

Allied Ships
SS Puffer, hits 4



SS Puffer launches 2 torpedoes at CV Soryu


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Ground combat at Shemya Island (154,49)

Allied Bombardment attack

Attacking force 3693 troops, 54 guns, 51 vehicles, Assault Value = 303

Defending force 1461 troops, 4 guns, 0 vehicles, Assault Value = 7

Japanese ground losses:
35 casualties reported
Squads: 1 destroyed, 0 disabled
Non Combat: 2 destroyed, 1 disabled
Engineers: 0 destroyed, 0 disabled



Assaulting units:
198th Infantry Battalion
18th Combat Engineer Regiment
297th Infantry/ 1st Battalion
87th Mountain Rgt /1
197th Infantry Battalion
4th (Sep) Infantry Rgt /1
180th USAAF Base Force
4th USN Naval Construction Regiment
151st USA Base Force
183rd USAAF Base Force
XI US Fighter Cmnd
813th Engineer Aviation Battalion
48th USN Naval Construction Battalion
149th USA Base Force
12th USN Naval Construction Regiment
1/250th Cst Art Bn /4

Defending units:
25th Div /3
21st Ind.Mixed Brigade
7th Ind.Mixed Bde /4
74th Infantry Regiment
77th Infantry Rgt /3
46th Div /2


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Japanese Unit(s) Wiped Out at Shemya Island by attrition!!!


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Afternoon Air attack on TF, near Attu Island at 151,54

Weather in hex: Light rain

Raid spotted at 15 NM, estimated altitude 5,000 feet.
Estimated time to target is 4 minutes

Japanese aircraft
A6M3a Zero x 5
A6M5 Zero x 11



Allied aircraft
B-25D1 Mitchell x 8
P-40K Warhawk x 5


No Japanese losses

Allied aircraft losses
P-40K Warhawk: 1 destroyed

Japanese Ships
xAK Sinkyo Maru, Bomb hits 2
xAKL Shinnan Maru, Shell hits 7
xAK Daisho Maru, Bomb hits 2, heavy fires, heavy damage
xAK Nitimei Maru, Shell hits 10
xAK Nissho Maru, Bomb hits 2, heavy fires
xAKL Kaishi Maru, Shell hits 8
xAK Reiyo Maru, Bomb hits 2, heavy fires

Japanese ground losses:
269 casualties reported
Squads: 3 destroyed, 6 disabled
Non Combat: 4 destroyed, 6 disabled
Engineers: 0 destroyed, 0 disabled
Guns lost 12 (6 destroyed, 6 disabled)

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Ground combat at Shemya Island (154,49)

Allied Bombardment attack

Attacking force 3922 troops, 57 guns, 51 vehicles, Assault Value = 320

Defending force 565 troops, 0 guns, 0 vehicles, Assault Value = 2

Japanese ground losses:
68 casualties reported
Squads: 0 destroyed, 0 disabled
Non Combat: 11 destroyed, 16 disabled
Engineers: 0 destroyed, 0 disabled
Units destroyed 1



Assaulting units:
87th Mountain Rgt /1
197th Infantry Battalion
18th Combat Engineer Regiment
297th Infantry/ 1st Battalion
198th Infantry Battalion
4th (Sep) Infantry Rgt /1
183rd USAAF Base Force
12th USN Naval Construction Regiment
149th USA Base Force
48th USN Naval Construction Battalion
813th Engineer Aviation Battalion
180th USAAF Base Force
4th USN Naval Construction Regiment
151st USA Base Force
XI US Fighter Cmnd
1/250th Cst Art Bn /4

Defending units:
21st Ind.Mixed Brigade
74th Infantry Regiment


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

74th Infantry Regiment Wiped Out at Shemya Island by attrition!!!




And Nemo...i agree with you 100%...i'm not ready yet to start the offensive....i need few more months...but sooner or later my time will come!

Won't comment on your statements about Rader's abilities compared to my own...won't be kind of me.
I just wanna say that Rader's strategy sounds fine to me (even if he has made a couple of mistakes at Tulagi and here)....he has created a strong perimeter and now he can easily sit and wait for me to make my own offensive mistakes...






Attachment (1)

(in reply to Nemo121)
Post #: 2529
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 12:35:41 AM   
GreyJoy


Posts: 6750
Joined: 3/18/2011
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: obvert

quote:

Obvert,
Apologies for the bolding, just wanted to make sure you didn't miss my reply to your post. Yes, Rader can throw a lot of men and planes at anything he wants to BUT does he achieve operational success when he does so? More to the point, if he DOES achieve operational success does it feel like it serves a well-thought out long-term, cohesive plan?

Throwing troops at something is one thing. Actually being effective and achieving worthwhile objectives is another. I know you know this but I think it bears stating with Rader's current play.


I'm completely with you on this one after seeing that this was a complete tactical blunder caused most likely by some combination of hubris and lack of a current strategic plan.

My guess would be that this game gets a lot more quiet for a while after this affair has finished. I think your assessment of Rader's long-term play is fairly accurate for this game. It's not that there wasn't a plan, but that it seems there was doubt in the plan when the most was at stake. If he had pushed through early enough and managed to take Karachi, we'd most likely be talking about a ground war in Australia right now.

If he doesn't shift to the defensive now and use the extra Divisions from China to set up for 44-46, then he'll be in trouble. I'd say for GJ now, it is the time to make sure he doesn't have leisure to easily set up those defenses. To set a clear multi-campaign offensive roadmap for the next year and get the pieces in place to make it happen.



I'm trying to do that mate.... As said: India, Solomons, NW OZ (which is being built) and minor advances in Gilberts and NOPAC (here mainly with a bombing campaign for the moment)...

I'd really need a couple of lucky shot now...a favourable naval battle between BBs...or a sub-CV encounter...something like that....but Rader isn't giving me these opportunities....or when he did i wasn't ready to catch them....




Attachment (1)

(in reply to obvert)
Post #: 2530
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 12:39:59 AM   
GreyJoy


Posts: 6750
Joined: 3/18/2011
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Nemo121

Also, the defender can act to effect/force a culmination point. Waiting for a culmination point to come into being is very passive - helping them come about can be more effective ( but much trickier ).

As to what Rader is doing: I think what was said some time ago explains it all. I commented many months ago about the appraisal of his level going on in this thread being inappropriate ( I think he's definitely better than average but I think a lot of the things being ascribed to him or more understandable when viewed with an understanding that glorifying the ability of the opponent acts to forgive one's own failures and magnify one's own victories - after all if the opponent is brilliant then being beaten around the park is less painful than if he is a sub-par player --- a lot of that thinking underpins a lot of the ancient warrior mythos which many of you may have read about from ancient times). I also stated that he didn't appear to have thought through his strategy and didn't appear to know how to use his operational success. At the time each of these three assessments was pretty roundly condemned by thread participants.

I think they do, however, show applicability to the current situation. There's no sense of a grand plan, a limited sense that the operations conducted are part of a cohesive, long-term strategy, limited sense of a killer instinct and, also, rather crucially no sense that there is any innovation in the tactical or operational employment of forces which could have yielded significantly more benefits at less cost. In the Solomons his reaction to your stance has been little more than to bludgeon hopelessly against your forces even when the previous hopeless bludgeoning hasn't worked.

Above average ( insofar as he has operational plans and strategic plans but I don't see that they dovetail well together and amn't convinced his strategic plans are fully thought through ) but not excellent, IMO ( which may not be worth a lot to you but I've been asked to comment so I will ) and I get a sense that simply because an inflated assessment of the threat he poses has been posted for so long people are now struggling to break free from the "anchor" which that assessment has become when ever more clearly the play doesn't merit that anchor.


Right now Rader has culminated and is engaging in strategically ineffectual attacks which give him a sense of operational initiative and well-being. It would be a good time to move over to the offensive and begin messing with his OODA cycles, orientation etc.

However ( and I say this objectively and not as a put-down ) I would advise you to remain on the defence for now. You are very much still learning and only beginning to glimpse entire layers of the game and PBEM play which you were previously unaware of. In addition there's a whole layer of theory underpinning play which I don't think you are familiar with and, most crucially, I don't see, in what you've written, a developed self-awareness ( as it pertains to PBEM/playing against other people in sport etc ). Since playing with OODA cycles etc requires a lot of these higher layers to be fairly well understood I think that you would be best staying on the defensive and just waiting until you have hugely excessive qualitative and quantitative superiority. Then you can afford to make mistakes and not suffer for it. I think that this ability to make mistakes without losing capability is important for you during this basic learning phase.

Already you've moved from being utterly new and really a total walkover to being able to formulate some of the right questions, understand the tactical level of play and achieve a level of competence at the operational level. That's a lot of progress in 1 game. By the end of the game I think you'll have some strategic competence and may begin to be able to properly subordinate operations and conceive them within an appropriate framework.

Next game we'll see whether or not you want to move beyond the basics. So far so good though.



Obvert,
Apologies for the bolding, just wanted to make sure you didn't miss my reply to your post. Yes, Rader can throw a lot of men and planes at anything he wants to BUT does he achieve operational success when he does so? More to the point, if he DOES achieve operational success does it feel like it serves a well-thought out long-term, cohesive plan?

Throwing troops at something is one thing. Actually being effective and achieving worthwhile objectives is another. I know you know this but I think it bears stating with Rader's current play.



I do agree however that if rader had pushed its strategy to its very deep limit he could have easily taken Karachi in summer 42 and now the war would be much much different.... but, even if i was not prepared to play his kind of game, i think he has shown that he had a good plan in his mind and that plan will surely make him be in a better position than his RL japanese counterparts, which is already a victory for Japan

(in reply to Nemo121)
Post #: 2531
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 1:13:40 AM   
Nemo121


Posts: 5821
Joined: 2/6/2004
Status: offline
quote:

i think he has shown that he had a good plan in his mind and that plan will surely make him be in a better position than his RL japanese counterparts, which is already a victory for Japan


My assessment is that he doesn't have what constitutes a "good" plan in his mind. Yours is that he does. Well, we can agree to disagree.

As to the strategy I ( and I believe Obvert ) are discussing. We aren't limiting it to his push on India. That was one thrust. His strategy since then has been rather unclear and that's where a lot of the issues that have been highlighted became very clear.


quote:

If he doesn't shift to the defensive now and use the extra Divisions from China to set up for 44-46, then he'll be in trouble. I'd say for GJ now, it is the time to make sure he doesn't have leisure to easily set up those defenses. To set a clear multi-campaign offensive roadmap for the next year and get the pieces in place to make it happen.


Aye, the really interesting question is which of Rader or Greyjoy will come up with a cohesive plan first. Rader has experience but hasn't realised he has reached the end point of meaningful offensive operations ( although the sheer extent of this disaster may help him realise that - silver lining and all that ) while Greyjoy will have to battle inexperience and his lack of confidence vis a vis Rader ( IMO he gives him too much credit/respect e.g. "he's outmanoeuvred me, again" etc etc ) AND the fact that offensive operations are a bit more difficult.

My money is on Rader stabilising for a strong defence before the offensives get rolling but only because I think it will take too long for them to co-ordinate and commence. It is all a learning process though.

_____________________________

John Dillworth: "I had GreyJoy check my spelling and he said it was fine."
Well, that's that settled then.

(in reply to GreyJoy)
Post #: 2532
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 1:58:22 AM   
House Stark

 

Posts: 184
Joined: 4/30/2011
Status: offline
I'm not sure if sending a few carriers only is a good idea. Rader should have at least 9 CVs if not more, plus some CVLs. I'm no expert but thats what, something like ~800 aircraft max? You've seen a few in the Solomons, and Kaga was hit recently, but might he use a damaged Kaga, or sprint the Solomons carriers across the Pacific for an ambush? Even he must realize that he'll need numbers for a carrier battle, and probably isn't going to want to fight on even terms. At the very least I'd assume he'd have the Solomons carriers headed north to try to intercept cripples from an Alaska fight headed back towards Pearl/West Coast.

Then again, he has a lot more to lose in a carrier battle then you. If he sinks your entire CV fleet you've still got the original six, and would replace losses by the end of the year. And given his pilot quality, it's unlikely he could get such a one sided result unless he had an extreme advantage in numbers, an 8-hex attack, or several sub hits before the engagement.

(in reply to Nemo121)
Post #: 2533
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 2:06:59 AM   
desicat

 

Posts: 542
Joined: 5/25/2008
Status: offline
quote:

And Nemo...i agree with you 100%...i'm not ready yet to start the offensive....i need few more months...but sooner or later my time will come!

Won't comment on your statements about Rader's abilities compared to my own...won't be kind of me.
I just wanna say that Rader's strategy sounds fine to me (even if he has made a couple of mistakes at Tulagi and here)....he has created a strong perimeter and now he can easily sit and wait for me to make my own offensive mistakes...


If you don't already have theater campaign plans in motion you may want to consider that you can use Rader's earlier successes against him. Some would think that he is over extended and his campaign in the Solomons has bled him plenty.

His forces in India/Burma are only of value if you decide to take them on - you don't really need the resources. Your success in the Solomon's has the makings of a good springboard for further campaign to cut/threaten Japanese SLOC's, and it is a remote enough threat axis to make reacting to a second campaign in a second theater difficult to coordinate.

You have drawn blood in the Aleutians, they are close to Allied supply centers and combat forces, an offensive campaign in this theater renders the bulk of his defensive perimeter irrelevant, the harsh conditions create system damage on his numerically fewer combat units in a greater proportion, the norther approach to the HI's are far removed from the Solomon theater, and the logistical details to begin a campaign in this theater can be put together more quickly than in other areas. You may want to consider a campaign from the north - just my 2 cents.

(in reply to GreyJoy)
Post #: 2534
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 2:16:58 AM   
princep01

 

Posts: 943
Joined: 8/7/2006
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and Reek the Sneak, remember what I said about mass, not dribblets (well, probably Heinz and a lot of others said it first)? You THREW the Perth and those DDs away as sure as my name is Bolton. Do...or not do, go or don't go; but stop with all the dribblets here and droplets there. Mass and STRIKE (with an objective in mind)...preferably where he does not expect you to. Preferably at multiple, widely separated points timed to put him on the horns of a dilema as where he will attempt to intevene. Nothing is more gratifying than watching the KB charge all over the Pacific, only to arrive and find a new fire breaking out on the other side of the Japanese perimeter. Well, maybe flaying a persons toe is more fun......

For wasting the Perth, you owe me a toe, Reek. Now get in there and let's see another good head count or I'll make it two. Unleash the dogs of war on those chumps trespassing on Tulagi.

(in reply to desicat)
Post #: 2535
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 7:09:00 AM   
jmalter

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: GreyJoy
a BB TF composed by BB Kongo and Haruna...those very same BBs that ate more than 150 500lb bombs at Rabaul 3 months ago....how these two beasts can already be 100% operative is beyond my comprehension...

i'll just butt in here to note that BBs (and CAs too) can often shrug off a 500lb bomb hit, which won't penetrate main turret, deck or side armor, or spill the captain's coffee (though radar & AA weapons are easily damaged). Rader obviously felt that these ships were ready for operations. they might not have been at 100% all-round, but they weren't no burnt-out hulks!

kudos to your Shemya defense forces - both air & ground - they kicked some serious asterisks there, thanks to your foresight in keeping them well-supplied, building up their forts, & reacting quickly w/ air-transported reinforcements.

but i don't understand those posters who demand you wipe out the remaining enemy LCUs at Tulagi. Ain't it to your advantage to leave them alone for the present? they can't hurt you, if you eliminate them you'll allow the withdrawn elements to rebuild to full strength. I don't see the need to land-attack these remnants, until the time that your own Tulagi forces are needed elsewhere.

(in reply to GreyJoy)
Post #: 2536
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 7:58:36 AM   
GreyJoy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Nemo121

quote:

i think he has shown that he had a good plan in his mind and that plan will surely make him be in a better position than his RL japanese counterparts, which is already a victory for Japan


My assessment is that he doesn't have what constitutes a "good" plan in his mind. Yours is that he does. Well, we can agree to disagree.

As to the strategy I ( and I believe Obvert ) are discussing. We aren't limiting it to his push on India. That was one thrust. His strategy since then has been rather unclear and that's where a lot of the issues that have been highlighted became very clear.


Yes Nemo, no problem if we disagree for once. However if you consider what Rader had achieved till the "Tulagi mistake" was pretty astonishing (clearly also due to the fact that i was completeley unprepared to play against an experienced player). He had wiped out the whole China safe for Chungking, the whole India safe for Hyderabad and Karachi and had pushed me out of PM when i tried to invade it, inflicting me heavy losses in terms of ground troops(2 divisions) and in terms of naval assets (25 AP/AKs, 1 CVE, 10 Cruisers and more DDs). Then he went overconfident and made the Tulagi mistake and everything changed.
I bet that if he did simply let me live at Tulagi and limited himself in estabilishing a strong perimeter at Bouganville, now our considerations about his overall strategy could be different. We're now past the middle of 1943 and the allies are nowhere close to the RL positions, both on terms of ground conquers (think about India and China) and in terms of naval assets.

quote:

If he doesn't shift to the defensive now and use the extra Divisions from China to set up for 44-46, then he'll be in trouble. I'd say for GJ now, it is the time to make sure he doesn't have leisure to easily set up those defenses. To set a clear multi-campaign offensive roadmap for the next year and get the pieces in place to make it happen.


Aye, the really interesting question is which of Rader or Greyjoy will come up with a cohesive plan first. Rader has experience but hasn't realised he has reached the end point of meaningful offensive operations ( although the sheer extent of this disaster may help him realise that - silver lining and all that ) while Greyjoy will have to battle inexperience and his lack of confidence vis a vis Rader ( IMO he gives him too much credit/respect e.g. "he's outmanoeuvred me, again" etc etc ) AND the fact that offensive operations are a bit more difficult.

My money is on Rader stabilising for a strong defence before the offensives get rolling but only because I think it will take too long for them to co-ordinate and commence. It is all a learning process though.


I agree here. Don't have nor the experience nor the confidence to start an offensive right now. I still need time to move my assets into the right positions. NW Oz isn't building as fast as i'd like and i'm sending in more reinforcements. In India i still have to decide what to do (he's sending more troops there...). The only place where i feel if not ready at least pretty close is the Solomons...but it's also the most obvious place...
But i also agree on the fact that i do feel i'm getting better over time. Don't feel confortable with the grand strategy yet, but operatively speaking i think i grabbed the basics.


(in reply to Nemo121)
Post #: 2537
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 8:01:22 AM   
GreyJoy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: House Stark

I'm not sure if sending a few carriers only is a good idea. Rader should have at least 9 CVs if not more, plus some CVLs. I'm no expert but thats what, something like ~800 aircraft max? You've seen a few in the Solomons, and Kaga was hit recently, but might he use a damaged Kaga, or sprint the Solomons carriers across the Pacific for an ambush? Even he must realize that he'll need numbers for a carrier battle, and probably isn't going to want to fight on even terms. At the very least I'd assume he'd have the Solomons carriers headed north to try to intercept cripples from an Alaska fight headed back towards Pearl/West Coast.

Then again, he has a lot more to lose in a carrier battle then you. If he sinks your entire CV fleet you've still got the original six, and would replace losses by the end of the year. And given his pilot quality, it's unlikely he could get such a one sided result unless he had an extreme advantage in numbers, an 8-hex attack, or several sub hits before the engagement.



He counted on the surprise for that. With the other carriers in the SPWAC i believed the full KB was there and didn't think about a carrier division in NOPAC.He was indeed right on that fact: he took me by surprise! But he surely didn't expect i had fortified the whole Aleutinas Chain so much...

Don't think he knew i had those 3 CVs ready at PH...he probably thought i had already sent my new CVs to Oz...


(in reply to House Stark)
Post #: 2538
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 9:05:28 AM   
GreyJoy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: desicat

quote:

And Nemo...i agree with you 100%...i'm not ready yet to start the offensive....i need few more months...but sooner or later my time will come!

Won't comment on your statements about Rader's abilities compared to my own...won't be kind of me.
I just wanna say that Rader's strategy sounds fine to me (even if he has made a couple of mistakes at Tulagi and here)....he has created a strong perimeter and now he can easily sit and wait for me to make my own offensive mistakes...


If you don't already have theater campaign plans in motion you may want to consider that you can use Rader's earlier successes against him. Some would think that he is over extended and his campaign in the Solomons has bled him plenty.

His forces in India/Burma are only of value if you decide to take them on - you don't really need the resources. Your success in the Solomon's has the makings of a good springboard for further campaign to cut/threaten Japanese SLOC's, and it is a remote enough threat axis to make reacting to a second campaign in a second theater difficult to coordinate.

You have drawn blood in the Aleutians, they are close to Allied supply centers and combat forces, an offensive campaign in this theater renders the bulk of his defensive perimeter irrelevant, the harsh conditions create system damage on his numerically fewer combat units in a greater proportion, the norther approach to the HI's are far removed from the Solomon theater, and the logistical details to begin a campaign in this theater can be put together more quickly than in other areas. You may want to consider a campaign from the north - just my 2 cents.


Yes, i agree. I'm developping the Aleutinas moving lot of fuel and supplies and support forces there. Consider however that he has strong garrisons all over the Kuriles...but for sure it will be a theatre that i will engage in the next 6/8 months.


(in reply to desicat)
Post #: 2539
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 9:19:15 AM   
GreyJoy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: princep01

and Reek the Sneak, remember what I said about mass, not dribblets (well, probably Heinz and a lot of others said it first)? You THREW the Perth and those DDs away as sure as my name is Bolton. Do...or not do, go or don't go; but stop with all the dribblets here and droplets there. Mass and STRIKE (with an objective in mind)...preferably where he does not expect you to. Preferably at multiple, widely separated points timed to put him on the horns of a dilema as where he will attempt to intevene. Nothing is more gratifying than watching the KB charge all over the Pacific, only to arrive and find a new fire breaking out on the other side of the Japanese perimeter. Well, maybe flaying a persons toe is more fun......

For wasting the Perth, you owe me a toe, Reek. Now get in there and let's see another good head count or I'll make it two. Unleash the dogs of war on those chumps trespassing on Tulagi.


:-), yes my Lord. I owe u a toe my Lord....

...indeed i hoped he tried to re-load those units previously landed and so i hoped to catch those large amphib TF and cause some havoc... didn't expect those BBs were already in fighting conditions...

Mass and strike is a good principle, i agree. But timings are important too and i sometimes you have to throw what you have at hand... well...it depends...

However, be sure that for my future offensives i'll try to use Rader's phylosophy..."ALWAYS the HAMMER"

(in reply to princep01)
Post #: 2540
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 9:27:36 AM   
GreyJoy


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July 22, 23 1943

While i lose contact with his retreating CVs and invasion TFs in NOPAC (even the chain of my subs didn't spot a single ship, except for an xAK that was left behind and was sunk by my B-25s with 2000 jap troops aboard ), my BBs in the Solomons came back to Russell/Thousands to hit the place.
Rader has moved back his BBs to Shortland while his CVs remain at Kavieng...i sent a couple of subs to hunt them but in shallow waters i only achieved a sunk sub

The first P-47 Squadron is now operative in the Solomons, while a couple of Marine Hellcats Squadrons are withdrawn ().

We have placed a couple of crack ASW squadrons in the Solomons and they managed to badly hit (i think sinking them) a couple of jap subs guarding the accesses to Rekata Bay.

His planes got back to Rekata Bay in the meanwhile, while intel says that 3 more AA units are being sent to India....




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Night Naval bombardment of Thousand Ships Bay at 114,136 - Coastal Guns Fire Back!

121 Coastal gun shots fired in defense.

Allied Ships
BB Massachusetts
BB Indiana, Shell hits 2
BB Washington, Shell hits 2
CA Hawkins
CA Wichita
CL Santa Fe
CL Boise

Japanese ground losses:
446 casualties reported
Squads: 0 destroyed, 5 disabled
Non Combat: 11 destroyed, 12 disabled
Engineers: 9 destroyed, 7 disabled
Guns lost 6 (1 destroyed, 5 disabled)



Airbase hits 5
Airbase supply hits 2
Runway hits 13
Port hits 5
Port supply hits 4

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Night Naval bombardment of Russell Islands at 113,136 - Coastal Guns Fire Back!

Japanese aircraft
no flights

Japanese aircraft losses
Ki-46-II Dinah: 2 damaged
Ki-46-II Dinah: 1 destroyed on ground
E13A1 Jake: 3 damaged

94 Coastal gun shots fired in defense.

Allied Ships
BB Mississippi
CA Chester, Shell hits 1
CA Houston
CA Northampton
CA Indianapolis
DD Shaw
DD Mahan
DD Craven
DD Helm
DD Morris
DD Anderson
DD Gansevoort

Japanese ground losses:
304 casualties reported
Squads: 0 destroyed, 0 disabled
Non Combat: 8 destroyed, 25 disabled
Engineers: 11 destroyed, 22 disabled
Guns lost 5 (1 destroyed, 4 disabled)
Vehicles lost 2 (1 destroyed, 1 disabled)



Airbase hits 17
Runway hits 30
Port hits 10
Port supply hits 2

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Afternoon Air attack on TF, near Agattu Island at 151,55

Weather in hex: Overcast

Raid spotted at 16 NM, estimated altitude 2,100 feet.
Estimated time to target is 4 minutes


Allied aircraft
B-25D1 Mitchell x 5
P-40K Warhawk x 8


No Allied losses

Japanese Ships
xAK Taibun Maru, Shell hits 11, Bomb hits 6, and is sunk

Japanese ground losses:
2080 casualties reported
Squads: 56 destroyed, 18 disabled
Non Combat: 6 destroyed, 40 disabled
Engineers: 10 destroyed, 2 disabled
Guns lost 41 (37 destroyed, 4 disabled)






(in reply to GreyJoy)
Post #: 2541
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 9:32:59 AM   
GreyJoy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: jmalter


quote:

ORIGINAL: GreyJoy
a BB TF composed by BB Kongo and Haruna...those very same BBs that ate more than 150 500lb bombs at Rabaul 3 months ago....how these two beasts can already be 100% operative is beyond my comprehension...

i'll just butt in here to note that BBs (and CAs too) can often shrug off a 500lb bomb hit, which won't penetrate main turret, deck or side armor, or spill the captain's coffee (though radar & AA weapons are easily damaged). Rader obviously felt that these ships were ready for operations. they might not have been at 100% all-round, but they weren't no burnt-out hulks!

kudos to your Shemya defense forces - both air & ground - they kicked some serious asterisks there, thanks to your foresight in keeping them well-supplied, building up their forts, & reacting quickly w/ air-transported reinforcements.

but i don't understand those posters who demand you wipe out the remaining enemy LCUs at Tulagi. Ain't it to your advantage to leave them alone for the present? they can't hurt you, if you eliminate them you'll allow the withdrawn elements to rebuild to full strength. I don't see the need to land-attack these remnants, until the time that your own Tulagi forces are needed elsewhere.




As i said, i completely agree with u. Those 17k men at Tulagi won't be touched for the moment. I wanna leave them there to rot...so that his units won't be able to take more replacements!
Kongo was reported with heavy fires...doesn't those fires damage the sys of the ship?!... however i'm pretty sure we're gonna have a terrible clash of BBs when our first landings will take place....

If i'm not mistaken in the failed Shamrya assault he lost or got disabled the equivalent of 2 divisions... not bad considering how much he has already lost at Tulagi...

(in reply to jmalter)
Post #: 2542
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 9:48:28 AM   
String


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From: Estonia
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Regular sys damage (not major) can be repaired quite qucikly in a large shipyard.

_____________________________

Surface combat TF fanboy

(in reply to GreyJoy)
Post #: 2543
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 9:50:18 AM   
Nemo121


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quote:

Mass and strike is a good principle, i agree. But timings are important too and i sometimes you have to throw what you have at hand...


And, as this AAR shows, when you go with insufficient force which just happens to be nearby you tend to lose it, creating the necessary conditions for having insufficient force available the next time ( since you lost ships which could have been present next time and made a sufficient force ). It is a cycle of negative outcomes. Against a truly good player you would face situations designed to invite you to continue this wastage of forces time and again.


As to your other reply in which you talk about Rader's play prior to Tulagi and after Tulagi... I'd point out that some people in this thread clearly pointed out his lack of killer instinct and cohesive planning long before Tulagi came into being. I'd also point out that given your level of inexperience when the game began his reaching so deep into India really cannot be taken to be a sign of brilliance.

Vs a child even a one-armed man seems like a man capable of great feats. When this game started you were, in AE terms, a child. You can't say that his success against you then is a sign of being a very good player. You really can't. In addition when push comes to shove and the Tulagi operation is analysed it'll be clear that at Tulagi he ended up playing into your hands and defeating himself. That's not a sign of brilliance either.

_____________________________

John Dillworth: "I had GreyJoy check my spelling and he said it was fine."
Well, that's that settled then.

(in reply to GreyJoy)
Post #: 2544
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 10:05:11 AM   
GreyJoy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Nemo121

quote:

Mass and strike is a good principle, i agree. But timings are important too and i sometimes you have to throw what you have at hand...


And, as this AAR shows, when you go with insufficient force which just happens to be nearby you tend to lose it, creating the necessary conditions for having insufficient force available the next time ( since you lost ships which could have been present next time and made a sufficient force ). It is a cycle of negative outcomes. Against a truly good player you would face situations designed to invite you to continue this wastage of forces time and again.


As to your other reply in which you talk about Rader's play prior to Tulagi and after Tulagi... I'd point out that some people in this thread clearly pointed out his lack of killer instinct and cohesive planning long before Tulagi came into being. I'd also point out that given your level of inexperience when the game began his reaching so deep into India really cannot be taken to be a sign of brilliance.

Vs a child even a one-armed man seems like a man capable of great feats. When this game started you were, in AE terms, a child. You can't say that his success against you then is a sign of being a very good player. You really can't. In addition when push comes to shove and the Tulagi operation is analysed it'll be clear that at Tulagi he ended up playing into your hands and defeating himself. That's not a sign of brilliance either.



Well, obviously my view is affected by my "subjective" point of view, cause even if i admit i was a child when the game begun it's difficult for me to draw a line that tells till what point it's because of Rader's abilities and till which other point it's my own deficiencies. I feel (but i understand and i grab the idea that this feeling isn't correct) i haven't done any major idiocy in India (differently from China where i screwed myself) so i tend to give Rader lots of merits for that campaign. Also i liked a lot his ability to move 15 divisions from India to the Solomons in a month and defeat me at PM cause i never had dared such a move.

It's also clear that the more Rader is considered a strong player, the more my EGO is gratified when i manage to finally stop his advance...so i'm not really the one who can express an objective statement

About the "hammer" theory... i agree only to some degree. I believe that sometimes you just have to stand and fight, no matter what you have at your disposal. At the gates of Moscow or Stalingrad the russians stand and fought...at Tulagi, when lots of people suggested me to retreat back to NZ or OZ, i standed and fought with what i had and, with some luck, i managed to resist and live... i think it all depends on trhe situations...which are never the same.
However i agree that the loss of CL Perth was a stupid one of my side...the presence of a SCTF was foreseenable (sp!?!?) even if i hadn't spotted it...as you said, i'm still learning and the best way to learn is to break your own horns on the wall


(in reply to Nemo121)
Post #: 2545
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 10:06:09 AM   
GreyJoy


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quote:

ORIGINAL: String

Regular sys damage (not major) can be repaired quite qucikly in a large shipyard.



Kongo got 78 500 lbs hits and large and extensive heavy fires... too fast i'd say! but probably i'm a victim of FOW here...

(in reply to String)
Post #: 2546
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 11:58:15 AM   
Miller


Posts: 2226
Joined: 9/14/2004
From: Ashington, England.
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: GreyJoy


quote:

ORIGINAL: String

Regular sys damage (not major) can be repaired quite qucikly in a large shipyard.



Kongo got 78 500 lbs hits and large and extensive heavy fires... too fast i'd say! but probably i'm a victim of FOW here...


In normal WITP, Jap CAs were immune to 500lb bombs, even 200 hits would have led to maybe 2 sys damage

Going off my exp in AE, his BBs would probably have taken around 50 sys damage and maybe he got this down to 30ish before sending them on their latest voyage, as String said any non-major damage can be repaired quickly in a large shipyard.

(in reply to GreyJoy)
Post #: 2547
Blissfully Ignorant - 9/23/2011 2:48:09 PM   
Crackaces


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Nemo: I would not say that GreyJoy was like a "child," Rather he, (like me too) as a beginner to a very complex game was blissfully ignorant of what he did not know. And this game not only has little nuances one must know and understand to be sucessful, but combinations of these concepts that can seem contradictory.

One developmental step from "child" to "adult" is the ability to synthisize information and extend that information into new environments. As I read this thread from beninging to end, I observe very closely the synthesis of knoweldge and application to different situations. This maturity is still not realized by Rader, and it continues to result in disaster. So rather than a comparision of a "child to a man" ... I would just say a better comparision is blissfully ignorant vs. Rader's arrogantly ignorant. The former requires simple appreciation and synthesis of the experince. The latter requires deep self-examination and rebirth of the learning process.

This situation is very much like the IJ thought pattern in real life, and led to the arrogance of Midway.

All the experts in this forum can see quick ends to the means, but GreyJoy continues to advocate his methdodical plodding game of attrition rather than a quick strike to end this game. However, I would contend looking at the game and his strategy -- his strategy is not as bold but it still gets the prize at the end. Which is victory. A funny thing .. no matter the "brillance" of Rader's early moves or that GreyJoy did not understand the game early and was unable to counter with precision .. right now if you look at things in this thread everybody agrees this game is decided and it is only a matter of course. Reinforcing my point that GreyJoy has synthisized a lot of information and is putting it to good work agasint a more experienced player.

GO GET 'EM GREYJOY!

(in reply to Miller)
Post #: 2548
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 3:13:50 PM   
Smeulders

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: GreyJoy

My CVEs were escorted only by SCs cause i didn't have any more DDs to spare at SF...they were preceded by an ASW TF with 3DDs and 1 APD



Having an extra ASW group in front of your carriers is always a plus, but if you don't have the DD to provide both an escort and an ASW group, the escort should get priority. SC just don't cut it for escorting highly valuable ships.


_____________________________

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(in reply to GreyJoy)
Post #: 2549
RE: REEK, rhymes with what? - 9/23/2011 3:49:58 PM   
obvert


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From: PDX (and now) London, UK
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quote:

One developmental step from "child" to "adult" is the ability to synthisize information and extend that information into new environments. As I read this thread from beninging to end, I observe very closely the synthesis of knoweldge and application to different situations. This maturity is still not realized by Rader, and it continues to result in disaster. So rather than a comparision of a "child to a man" ... I would just say a better comparision is blissfully ignorant vs. Rader's arrogantly ignorant. The former requires simple appreciation and synthesis of the experince. The latter requires deep self-examination and rebirth of the learning process.


While he may have lacked a killer instinct in certain places during this contest, I wouldn't say that Rader's play is arrogantly ignorant, or that he hasn't shown the ability to synthesize information from one context and use it in another. I think he plays the player more than most of us realize. In the quoted AAR 'Taming the Bear' of Rader's game with Jzanes earlier, he realized early on his last opponent was fairly cautious and he wanted to play a game that would both take advantage of that trait and not take advantage so much that the game ended abruptly.

From the reading I've done in both of his two recent incomplete AARs he seems more than anything to want the game to reach 1946 with the Japanese still having a fighting chance. This also means he does not want the game to end early. I'm not sure why he chose to play a relatively inexperienced player in a Scenario 2 game unless it was to try out some ideas of how to get to the finish line with some limbs and an eye still intact, and because a new player with GJ's enthusiasm and humility wouldn't be likely to quit no matter how dark the early years became, (unless Rader was just seduced by GreyJoy's use of the English language).

So in some sense (if this assumption is correct) we can excuse him for not putting everything into complete and utter destruction of the Allied cause in India. Few games make it to 46, and I for one want to get there as well, which is why I became interested in Rader's early aggressive style and later transition to defense.

There is some evidence that in the game against Jzanes he has continued to hold strong nearly half way through 45, although the Allies are picking up steam and both AARs are sporadic (but great when updated). I wouldn't say he has collapsed in that game. He's quite ahead of the RL schedule. (I can hear Nemo with all kinds of evaluations of the possibilities inherent in the positions of that game that various parties haven't taken advantage of).

I'm just trying to point out that while we judge a player on what we hear about, we may not know ultimately why that player is continuing to pursue a certain course when we don't know their ultimate reason or enjoyment in playing the game.

(But the Aleutians debacle was just a silly move in a moment of complacence, I suspect. We all need those every once in a while to wake us up and send us back to playing more judiciously and with a greater strategic purpose. We just hope we don't lose any CVs in the meantime).

(in reply to Smeulders)
Post #: 2550
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