whafrog wrote:
Theik wrote:
However, couldn't the exact same thing be said about spears or pikes? Seems pretty hard to me to stab a guy with a 10 foot pole without hitting your own friend if he's dancing in circles.
Thrusting range is only a couple feet max, so you can't have your weapon behind your friend, the spear head is already out in front. Same with pikes, all the points are ahead of the guy in front. If you've trained together you would know how to leverage this and the guy in front would know what to expect from his friend.
I do wish there were rules preventing cross-army spear support, as you should only really benefit from spears held by people you've trained with...but that's another topic.
Training aside, if a pike is long enough to to support your friend from behind another pike user supporting your friend, it is
clearly long enough to injure your friend on the other side if you are supporting him by yourself, so at the very least it'd make sense that a friendly unit on the other side of the fight could get injured if you stab and miss your intended target.
That said, realistically speaking, you would know what to expect if there's a ranged weapon guy behind you as well. For starters they wouldn't loose their arrow/bullet/whatever they shoot until they are certain they won't hit you (although they could very well hit the guy on the other side of the fight who suddenly appears when the intended target ducks or what have you), and generally speaking soldiers do not fire without at least some form of warning to others. They are trained to wait for orders to fire, it'd be more than reasonable to assume that the guy in front of them tells informs them when they have a chance to fire.
The tercio formation was actually a pretty good example of a strategy that combines a melee front with a ranged support, breaking not only the "can't shoot into melee combat" rule as well as the far less confusing base-contact rule by shooting into melee combat from behind several ranks of spearwielders.
However, interesting historical facts alike, thanks for the answers. =)
Seems like the general consensus is that the in-the-way roll from the fight overwrites the never-in-the-way rule from being in base combat. Cheers!