23rd July, 1890
We pick up the action right where it left off, with Detachment Bhisti Dirka Grim of the Yorks & Lancs having alerted the nearby 9th Gurkhas to the presence of survivors from the fall of Chakdara Outpost on the far side of the Malakand Pass...
TURN 1
Sgt. Crood (Regt. No. 201) & his 4 survivors move towards the Pass, Dirka Grim rejoining them en route…
9th Gurkhas advance through the Pass to secure the route for the returning Yorks & Lancs...
Suddenly Sgt. Crood & Co. are CHARGED from the rear by a clan of sword-&-shield-armed Ghazis (20 figs) who were hiding in the rocks at the North end of the Pass…
At the start of the FIRE PHASE a BLACK CARD is drawn and a clan of Pathan Tribesmen (20 figs, 10 w/rifles) pop out of hiding in the scrub-brush along the South bank of the Swat River and FIRE at them from across the river…
The 10 Pathan rifles inflict 1 WIA on their Class II “Open Order” targets...
The 4 remaining British rifles fire back at their Class III “Rough Terrain” targets and also inflict 1 WIA...
The Gurkhas atop Malakand Pass pepper the charging Ghazis with FIRE, scoring 1 WIA + 1 KIA (total 2 casualties)...
MELEE PHASE:
The Ghazis roll to “Close Into Combat” & pass their morale check...
Ghazis suffer 2 WIA, 1 KIA (running total 5 casualties)
Brits suffer 2 WIA, 1 KIA, 3 Fall Backs - incl. Sgt. Crood + Dirka Grim (running total 4 casualties)
Ghazis WIN the melee and occupy enemy’s former position...
TURN 2
RED MOVEMENT CARD is flipped first...
Gurkhas atop Malakand Pass CHARGE down at the Ghazis. Gurkhas roll 4 movement dice...
Their 19” result allows 12 of them to reach the Ghazis & potentially engage them in melee...
MELEE PHASE:
Gurkhas get +1 modifier for higher ground.
Charging Gurkhas & Charging Ghazis both get “win ties” -- these modifiers cancel each other out so ties will simply be re-rolled.
The Ghazi Leader focuses on the Gurkha Officer, hoping to set a victorious tone from the start -- but rolls a "1" and is left KIA by the Gurkha Officer.
The Gurkhas carve up the Ghazis and WIN the melee, suffering 1 WIA, 1 KIA (running total 4 casualties), while the Ghazis LOSE, suffering 4 WIA, 6 KIA, (running total of 15 casualties).
The 5 surviving Ghazis who "Fell Back" from the lost melee now ROUTE 6"…
TURN 3:
British RED MOVEMENT CARD flipped first, GURKHAS move to take up a firing position on the routing Ghazis who are headed for cover in the rocky rough terrain…
TURN 4
Gurkhas move to take a firing position on the Pathan Tribesmen across the river, while the Pathans remain in place in the scrub-brush Rough Terrain...
FIRE PHASE:
RED card drawn first (on this day the cards seemed to favor the Farangis)...
Gurkhas FIRE on Pathans, score 1 x Rifleman WIA; 3 x Swordsmen WIA...
TURN 5
BLACK Pathan movement card flipped first (FINALLY the Baraka swings to the Faithful) -- the Pathan Leader decides discretion is the better part of valor and his unit DISAPPEAR INTO THE SCRUB-BRUSH & move off the table, ending the fight...
CASUALTIES:
Chakdara Garrison (6 figs to start): 1 KIA + 2 WIA = 3 CASUALTIES
9th Gurkhas (20 figs to start): 1 KIA + 5 WIA (including Officer) = 6 CASUALTIES
Ghazis (20 figs to start): 9 WIA + 11 KIA = 20 CASUALTIES
Pathan Tribesmen: (20 figs to start): 5 WIA = 5 CASUALTIES
TOTAL BRITISH CASUALTIES = 9
TOTAL PATHAN CASUALTIES = 25
After the Pathan withdrawal, the Gurkhas stand fast as Sgt. Crood, Dirka Grim & Co. head over the Pass...
On the last stretch of road they are met by a small detachment of 23rd Sikh Pioneers, Dhoolies for the wounded, and a Troop of 12thBengal Cavalry who escort them down the road to the recently-erected Cantonments of 1stBrigade, Peshawar Field Force...
Entertaining battle report and always good to have ghurkhas on your side it seems!
ReplyDeleteBest Iain
Ayo Gourkali! A bloody little scrap. I thought all was up with Sgt. Crood & Co.
ReplyDeleteExcellent storyline and ousting AAR! Very atmospheric, on the Grim indeed sir. Stirling work Kipling Jr.
ReplyDeleteThanks very much for all your comments, guys!
ReplyDeleteAn excellent, evocative narrative Ethan! Gripping stuff.
ReplyDeleteI'd just like to add that your blog has served as somewhat tipping me back towards "colonial" wargaming but this time in another continent; back to the Sudan!
Hey, Darryl, thanks for letting me know! Always makes me happy when I help "tip" or push or subtly encourage fellow gamers to get into -- or BACK into -- colonials! Speaking of the Sudan, I do remember your converted Perry Mtd. Inf., as well as your very well-painted Beja tribesmen. I now look forward to seeing more of their sort!
DeleteIt's (oddly enough) been a Covid thing. Despite the club being back in action- I cannot risk it so I was forced to rethink the sort of games I could play solo.
DeleteI already had a copy of Kevin Calder's excellent Up the Nile - easily playable on the 6' x 4' which is what I have in the house - so a happy accident of sorts. Of course, your blog always serves as inspiration for what is possible.