Hi Ram,
Another approach:
Un-assign all channels from the L/R master, and do assign them to Groups 1 & 2.
Hard-pan the Group-1 master to the left, hard pan Group-2 to right, and send Groups 1 & 2 to the L/R master.
Set the Group1 & 2 masters to nominal 0.
Turn on delay for only Group-2. Use an XLR-Y cable out of the Left master output to your front speakers, and an XLR-Y out of Right for your delay-fills.
Now your L/R master is your overall level control.
You can fine-tune the front/back levels with the Group 1 & 2 masters.
If you want a little more of channel-2 vocal in the rear speakers relative to the front, simply pan the channel a little to the right.
I use this setup in a venue with a mono center cluster and front corner-fills.(And no delay.)
All 6 Auxes are still available for monitor mixes, subwoofer send, two recording mixes, etc.
Properly set the level on the delay-fills and they will nearly disappear.
You may have someone tell you they aren't turned on.
When you turn off the fronts, they will still definitely hear the delays.
Delay-fills are a compromise. More sound sources can mean less intelligibility, because of more sound arrival times.
But properly used, they can add intelligibility, without turning up front speakers.
If possible, sometimes a better approach is getting front speakers up high enough to not blast folks at the front of the hall, and tilting the speakers down to reach the back of the hall.
Another delay-fill issue is there may be significant low-mid frequencies coming off the back of the speakers and going toward the stage.
Sometimes you might want to cut some lows out of delay-fills.
I use delay-fills at more than 50% of my gigs.
Thanks and good health, Weogo