No, when someone is strafing the town there are usually plenty of people capping the field, score potatos or not. So you are still going to get vulched, right?
Right. But if you read my play by play, compare and contrast, before and after, breakdown at the beginning part of this thread. It's not this simple. You're looking at one particular phase of the base taking process in non-fluid isolation. That would be like wanting to teach your child what a pet dog is like, but instead of buying her a puppy you bring home a dead dog from the side of the road. When you look at just that one phase, in hermetic isolation, of a dynamic and fluid process, you kill it, it becomes a non-living artifact.
In case you don't have the patience to go back and read my breakdown, I will sum up the important part for you...
-More defenders will be there initially during the early phases of the attack.
-The defenders will be able to more realistically get up after being shot down in the early phases before really tight CAP is in place.
-While the local reactionary defense performs this stalling action and the CAP tightens, other defenders now have time to come from a proximate field to assist.
-When the supporting forces arrive the tight CAP will loosen and the reactionary defenders will have some room to breathe perpetuating the fight at least a bit longer.