We Were Barreling Along in Iron Bottom Sound
This is a Solomons What-If
Watch: 2400 hours Wind: Force 3 Northern Wind Speed: 10 knots
Max Visibility: 20,000 yards Smoke: 1 GT Squalls: Yes/3
Sea Haze: No Moon State: Quarter Sky: Cloudy
Squall Visibility: 4,000 yards Weather Change: Roll Every 5 Turns
Allied Patrol: RAdm Scott
Hvy Cruiser Division 4th DesRon
CA USS New Orleans FF DD USS Selfridge Ldr
CA USS San Francisco 7th DesDiv 8th DesDiv
Lt Cruiser Division DD USS Bagley DD USS Jarvis
CL USS Phoenix DF DD USS Blue DD USS Mugford
CL USS Boise DD USS Helm DD USS Patterson
DD USS Henley DD USS Ralph Talbot
Allied Set Up
Roll D12: 1-3 One Ft in 4-6 two feet in 7-9 three feet in 10-12 four feet in
The Allies are mid-way up the table. Pre-plot a series of headings and distances that cover the patrol pattern you want. You must follow that pattern until contact or acquisition. Your speed is 20 knots.
IJN Supply Run & Escort: VAdm Mikawa
CA Chokai FF 6th DesFlot: Radm Kadzioka
6th Cru Sqdn: Radm Goto CL Yubari DL
CA Aoba SF 29th DesDiv 30th DesDiv
CA Furutaka DD Asanagi DD Mochizuki
CA Kako DD Yunagi DD Mutsuki
9th Cru Sqdn: Radm Kishi DD Yusuki DD Uzuki
CL Oii SF DD Yayoi
CL Kitakami
Japanese Set Up
Designate a 5” x 5” supply drop off point and record its location. It must be on the west table edge (Guadalcanal) and it must be more than half the table from the north edge. Roll as per the Allies to determine where you enter on the north edge. You must pre-plot a series of headings and distances that takes you from your entry point to the supply drop and back off the north edge. Your speed is 20 knots. If you acquire then you can do as you want.
In order to drop off supplies your supply ladened DDs must steam through the drop off point at 10 knots or less. You must deliver at least 4 loads to accomplish your mission.
Supply Laden Combat Restrictions
IJN DDs laden with supply have their gunnery dice halved and cannot fire torpedoes until they drop off their supply load or jettison it. It takes a whole turn to drop off or jettison.
Force Morale
IJN morale is veteran if VAdm Mikawa is functioning. It drops to regular if any of the RAdms succeed to command and to green if all admirals are gone.
USN morale is regular if RAdm Scott is functioning and drops to green if he is knocked out.
Star-Shell
A player firing star-shell places a marker on the table for each star-shell he wants. He then rolls a D12 for each marker.
On a 1-9 Japanese star-shells work
On a 1-6 US star-shells work
All other results are a dud but still inflict the two-column shift for acquisition.
Ships within 500 yards of a star-shell are illuminated.
Ships more than 500 yards from a star-shell, but located between the star-shell and other ship(s) are silhouetted (acquired) but not illuminated.
Responses
When a superior receives a report of an enemy contact that is not corroborated by his own acquisition or radar contact, he must make a morale check to act upon the report during that plot phase. Otherwise, he continues his pre-plot that turn. This accounts for the various delays that occur in rapidly developing situations during periods of darkness.
It was a dark and stormy night or at least it was for RAdm Kadzioka in Yubari heading a long column VAdm Mikawa’s 8th Fleet. They were heading 45 degrees in a squall. Chokai was some 3,000 yards to his rear and barely visible. RAdm Goto’s 6th Cruiser Squadron followed the flagship, then RAdm Kishi (9th Cruiser Squadron) and finally the 29th and 30th destroyer divisions of his 6th DesFlot with their decks laden with supplies in barrels.
At 0024 hours Yubari popped out of the squall. And 6 minutes later Yubari’s masthead reported enemy destroyers off her port quarter and ahead at 12,000 yards. Yubari opened on the lead destroyer to port with everything and? Nothing, not a whiff of a hit for an unengaged ship. And so, it began. RAdm Kadzioka reported the contact to VAdm Mikawa while increasing to 25 knots after making a 2-point turn to starboard.
But Mikawa was confused by the report (he rolled a 12 and he could only see 6,000 yards) and continued straight ahead at 20 knots. Yubari fired again and missed again and Kadzioka intended to engage with his Type 90s but it was not to be. A torrent of fire from what turned out to be 4 Bagley class DDs, 2 Brooklyn class CLs and a New Orleans class CA smothered Yubari, knocking out all her forward guns and exploding her forward magazine before all damage reports had come in. Kadzioka died in the ensuing eruption before he could explain what was happening to Mikawa. Mikawa failed his morale (he rolled another 12) over the loss of the Yubari. This should have ended the fight but it was known that the Japanese had entered the war believing that the Allies could not take a sharp blow without just giving up. RAdm Scott was not going to let the Japanese off that easy and the fight continued.
At the same time RAdm Goto behind Mikawa had seen the leading destroyer on her port quarter and opened on her and missed. The flash of Allied gun fire across Mikawa’s front coupled with the destruction of Yubari woke him to the fact that he was in a battle. Mikawa made a 2-pont turn to starboard and increased to 25 knots. RAdm Goto followed him round, but not before Chokai and the entire 6th Cruiser squadron had fired all their port torpedoes at the destroyers to their port quarter.
Chokai fired at a Brooklyn class cruiser inside 9,000 yards and missed. Aoba fired at a destroyer and missed. Furry Taco (Furutaka) and Kaka engaged destroyers and hit them a couple of times each. The Allied cruisers and several destroyers now smothered Aoba, knocking out all her turrets, causing serious structural damage, setting her afire and then sinking her quickly, killing RAdm Goto. Three non-penetrating 5” hits jammed Kako’s rudder to port. Mikawa responded to the loss of yet another subordinate by failing morale (he rolled an 11). But, RAdm Scott still had lessons to impart and continued the fight (Just how many times do we have to lose to pay for Pearl Harbor?).
Chokai and Furutaka made chemical smoke and turned away. Meanwhile RAdm Kishi had turned to port inside the squall (it seemed very unhealthy to starboard) and increasing speed to 25 and then 30 knots was heading 345 degrees and turned again to 340 degrees. Oi could see the eastern column of Allied destroyers and fired all her starboard torpedoes at them.
As for the torpedoes that Chokai and the 6th Cruiser Squadron had fired; they hit Bagley class DDs, Helm and Henley twice each and Blue once. Helm and Henley practically dove for the bottom while Blue was reduced to 5 knots and suffered other serious damage. It is believed that these destroyers and 2 others fired torpedoes at Mikawa’s heavy cruisers but there is no way to tell from the results. What is certain is that the Allied western column of 4 DDs fired torpedoes at Mikawa’s cruisers and Kaka felt a bump and heard a thud. It is unknown if the suspected torpedo hit caused any flooding as Kako by the point was being pommeled at point blank range the western Allied DD column and was suffering accordingly.
Oi and Kitakami exchanged gunfire with Selfridge and Bagley resulting in minor damage either way before Kishi made smoke and withdrew. The supply laden DDs withdrew with him. Oi’s torpedoes hit both Brooklyn class CLs once each.
As for Kako, her crew in attempting to fix her rudder, broke it beyond repair and she continued to circle to port in what became a downward spiral to the bottom.
Needless to say, the Japanese soldiers on Guadalcanal received no supplies, support or comfort from the Navy’s effort and the Army hatefully pointed that out to them until they all died.
This AAR has been written from the Japanese POV and all mistakes are the author’s.






