Bischoff, as a Junker nobility who had participated in the Bavarian succession fight, possessed a fairly solid military competence.
Although he had much contempt for the Austrians' foolish offensive actions in his heart, he still carefully checked his own infantry line before ordering the skirmishers to strike first, disrupting the enemy's formation, followed up by the infantry line.
The distance between both infantry lines quickly shrank to just over 300 paces, and Bischoff, upon seeing the increasingly disordered Austrian lines—with the movement on the south clearly slower than that on the north and a particularly slow-moving section in the middle, making the whole look like a broken line—put down his telescope and instructed the orderly officer beside him, "Order the second line to press forward as well. We aim to completely crush the Austrians before Colonel Altermann sends in the cavalry to flank."
"Yes, Commandant Sir!"