Salute!
Good question Trane...
The first battles that leap to my mind are: Eylau - though this was more of a Draw as far as the battle went, with both sides remaining on the field at the close of the fighting, Bennigsen then undertook the calculations of a commander as described in Clausewitz's On War: Darkness brings it to a halt: no one can se, and no one cares to trust himself to chance. The time has come to reckon up how much in the way of serviceable troops is left on either side - troops, that is, which are not yet burned out like dead volcanoes. One estimates how much ground has been won or lost, as well as the degree of security one's rear. The results, along with personal impressions of the bravery and cowardice, intelligence and stupidity that one thinks one has observed in one's own troops and the enemy's, are then combined in an overall impression on which a decision is based: either to quit the field or to renew the fight in the morning. Bennigsen decided to withdraw, and Napoleon was able to claim the field...
Then there is Heilsberg, in the Spring Campaign the following year, when again Bennigsen was able to withstand the fury of Murat's assault, and remain on the field until the end of the day, before again deciding withdrawal was the best option.
Both of these examples are more of tactical checks on Napoleon's armies, with the opponent's retreating eventually.
And finally, the Battle of Maloyaroslavets in the Russian Campaign. Again, more of a tactical Draw, but as the Russians withdrew from the fighting range, leaving Napoleon's army (again) upon the field, things took a different turn, of a decidedly decisive nature: Napoleon took part in a reconnaissance (as was his custom) and had a frightful brush with a band of Cossacks.
This alarmed him so much that he let his emotions get in the way of the necessary martial calculations, and called off further scouting efforts - which would have shown the way was clear before him - and instead made the fateful decision that the Grande Armee would retreat back towards Smolensk over the route taken in the fall - and history well records all that followed.
Regards,
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