The main objection to Graham's and Lawrence's (and the entire editorial board of the BHGS, to whom, as an American, I owe no fealty) is this. They are insisting that maintaining front edge contact with the initially contacted bases takes precedence over the requirement that the bases pivot/shift the minimum necessary to line up with an enemy base or overlap position. Why is this significant?
Because ending in front edge contact with the initially contacted base is not specifically mentioned in the bullets describing how to conform, nor in the examples illustrated. The bullets refer to lining up each base in contact
*Italics mine.in full front edge contact with an* enemy base, or conforming to an overlap position.
Notice the "an" as opposed to "the". Indefinite vs definite.
This is the simplest application of how to conform, and results in the least distortion in the relative positions of the opposing sides.
And it doesn't require a host of situational caveats, which arise by demanding that bases conform only to those bases initially contacted.
It's really simple.
Pivot from the point of contact until the bases are flush, then adjust to the nearest corner. (This pivoting may be notional, as there may not be room to pivot, then shift.)
The only situation where a base should have to slide more than a half base width is when the only contact with the enemy is a single outside corner, or in the case of contact with a side edge not counting as a flank charge, which is essentially the same thing, but on a grander scale.







