Sicily: Ponte Dirillo, 1400hrs*
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Date: 10th July 1943*
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Location: Ponte Dirillo, near Gela, southern Sicily, Italy*
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Type: US vs. German meeting engagement*
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Design: Marcin "SaS TrooP" Kaluza*
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During allied summit at Casablanca in January 1943, Allies decided that landings in Europe will occur in Sicily, in order to known Italy out of the war.
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Plan was prepared and on 10th of July, 1943, Allied troops landed on Sicilian coast. Landings were divided between British and American sectors. British troops landed to the east, near Syracuse area, while American 7th Army under command of general Patton landed in central Sicily.
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While to the north US forces were clashing heavily with Hermann Goering division's panzer regiment, Conrath's infantry force had jumped off at 1400 near Ponte Dirillo, right behind Biscari village. They had promptly lost communications with division headquarters, and had run into the 1st Battalion, 180th Infantry, which, together with some paratroopers picked up along the way, was moving toward Biscari.
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Their attack blunted by the relatively small American force supported by one battery of the 171st Field Artillery Battalion, the Germans came to a halt by 1530. Though the terraced terrain was well suited for infantry operations, dense groves of olive trees interfered with the movement of the heavy Tiger tanks that were part of the column. Moreover, some of the Tigers, among the first produced, had defective steering mechanisms, and those that dropped out blocked the others. Inexperience among junior officers and some of the troop units, failure to get the Tiger tanks forward, and American tenacity on the ground stopped the German attempt.
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Regaining communications later that afternoon, General Conrath relieved the task force commander. After much prodding from Conrath and under a new commander, the infantry-heavy force regrouped and jumped off again. This time the German attack was better co-ordinated. The Tiger tanks led off, followed closely by foot soldiers. Breaking through the thin American lines, the Germans overran the positions of the 1st Battalion, 180th Infantry, and took prisoner the battalion commander, Colonel Schaefer, and most of the surviving troops. The remnants of the battalion streamed south toward the coastal Highway 115.
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The way seemed open for German exploitation that would endanger the 1st Division beaches, when the 3d Battalion, 180th Infantry, suddenly appeared. Released from corps reserve to counter the German attack, this American force took defensive positions and held fast. Imminent American disaster was averted as the Germans unexpectedly panicked. German soldiers broke and ran in wild disorder, their officers finally stopping the rout just short of Biscari. The Americans were content to remain along a line paralleling the south side of Highway 115. 
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This scenario is historical with little augmentations for gameplay reasons. German regroup is simulated by incoming German reinforcements, so expect having two heavy battles instead of just one.
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Historically, 1st Battalion, 180th Infantry was decimated during that battle, but 3rd battalion saved the day and stopped entire German advance from reaching Gela beaches. It must be said that this fight - together with impossibly brave stance of defencers of Piano Lupo (previous scenario) allowed operation Husky to succeed in its first days.
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Source: http://ibiblio.org/hyperwar/USA/USA-MTO-Sicily/index.html*