Set-up - Seleucids defending |
Ryan advanced his cavalry forward early, while I tried to patiently move my line forward. I supported the scythed chariot with my light horse and a psiloi, moving the light force on the right flank
Ryan's calvary General advance managed to pull one Knight out of the line, in an attempt to push the mounted back and protect a psiloi from a quick kill. The elements locked, and the other Thessalian cavalry still managed a kill on the Psiloi.
The Knight was eventually flanked and killed by other cavalry that advanced across the front. Meanwhile, my main line was essentially squeezed out of play.
The Seleucid scythed chariot finally managed a kill - a spear element - after five or six games. The light house provided an overlap, helping with the odds. A turn later, the light horse hooked behind the spear. Unfortunately, I learned an important lesson the hard way: never place your light horse in a position that could cause it to flee off the board. It did.
Ryan continued to use his cavalry to good effect, but I was able to flank and kill one cavalry element with Pike. Of course, this broke up my main effort even more.
I was able to clean up the ranks and advance. My Knight General pushed back a cavalry, and I was hoping to pin it against the Thessalian spear line. I also resumed my forward march, hoping to get the Elephants into play against the horse
BUT, the Thessalian cavalry attacked my unprotected pike flank, ending the game.
This was a close game. Thessalians killed four elements, and Seleucids killed two. I'm slowly getting the hang of this heavy army. For a change, we matched up Ryan's Thessalians against Later Hoplite Aitolians for the second game. More on that wacky game in a later posting.
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