Here continues the Jerome Gambit article that I wrote for Kaissiber, a decade ago.
Mention of the Jerome Gambit in
chess books, thereafter, is sporadic, usually simply as the name of the opening
played in a Blackburne miniature (perhaps with a suggested
move or two); but sometimes serving as part of a dire warning, as in Chernev
and Harkness’s An Invitation to Chess (1945) “Mistakes in the Opening”
chapter, or Gerald Abrahams’ The Chess Mind (1951)
...Objectively
regarded, every winning position, and every
losing position, is an unbalanced
position; a position in which a
player has a great advantage in
tempo, or in space, or in the capacity
to bring great force to bear
effectively on a given point…
Chess opinion has
convincingly condemned many extravagant
unbalancing attacks, such as the
once popular Jerome gambit…which
yield the unbalancer nothing but
loss against good defense.
Still, there were exceptions.
Fletcher’s wonderful Gambit’s Accepted, A Survey of Opening Sacrifices
(1954) included the Jerome Gambit, and his selection of the example Club Game
“Anonymous – Anonymous” impishly suggested a need to shelter from public
scrutiny those who would play such openings
Every inventor
must have considered his gambit as a winning
one, so in this Part all gambits
are won by White, and all counter
gambits by Black. One game for each
of the eighty-four openings is
included, being numbered according
to the classification tabulated in
Part I, and, as far as possible,
short games have been selected from
master play. This was not as easy
as might be imagined, for so often
an otherwise suitable tournament or
match game was not won by the
proper colour required for our
purpose. In several cases, therefore, it
has been necessary to search for
games outside first-class circles, and,
in the thirteen selections when
this has been done, the names of the
players have been suppressed and
the contest given as a Club Game.
Fletcher
also tossed out 9.d4 as a possible counter to Blackburne’s refutation of the
Jerome Gambit, and even included the over-familiar
The opening is
frankly unsound but Black's task is by no
means easy and he can quite likely
go wrong
Harding
dismissed the Jerome Gambit in the 1970s, Zuckerman touched briefly on the
Jerome in a column in Chess Life in the early 1980s, Gambit Revue
had an article on it in the late 1980s, and Randspringer had one in the
early 1990s. Tim Harding again made a passing reference in 2001 to “the manic
Jerome Gambit” in his 4-part series on the Giuoco Piano in his “The Kibitzer”
column at the on-line ChessCafe (www.chesscafe.com).
That the Jerome Gambit’s status had
descended of late to being the representation of bad form is illustrated by a
couple of Internet newsgroup postings
Even the Jerome
Gambit, which is probably the worst
recognized gambit in all of chess,
does offer some reasons for
analysis. However, this sequence of
moves you give here is
simply a blunder with no redeeming
social value...
Even if the raison d'etre for the committee is deader than the
Jerome Gambit...
In the last few years, however the
Jerome Gambit has been rescued from obscurity by Eric Schiller, who covered it
in his Unorthodox Chess Openings (1998, 2002), Gambit Chess Openings
(2002), and Survive and Beat Annoying Chess Openings (2003). He gave a
little of what is rare - new analysis in the last 50 years - but his attitude
was less tongue-in-cheek than thumb-in-eye.
This is another
cyberspace gambit. Virtually no attention
was paid to this reckless move
[4.Bxf7+] until its supporters started
talking about it on the Internet.
It can't be found in recent tournament
games, and there is a good reason:
It stinks. White whips up a brief
attack, easily parried, and then
spends a long time trying to justify the
sacrifice. A popular gambit in
cyberspace, but in the real world, it
only succeeds in games where Black
is a very weak player.
Schiller noted, quite accurately,
that the Jerome Gambit is “awaiting a hero!”
Brian Wall, and his protégé Tyrin Price, published a
definitive analysis of Whistler’s defense to the Jerome Gambit
(http://games.groups.yahoo.com/group/BrianWallChess/message/80 ) In passing it
can be noted that Price’s opinion of the Jerome returns the proper humorous
perspective
The
Jerome Gambit ... now *that* is coffee house ... fully caffeinated - extra
strength (use only as directed for prompt temporary relief of quiet games [if
conditions persist seek professional guidance]). :-)
Most
recently, International Master Gary Lane
has been entertaining Jerome Gambit
questions from readers of his “Opening
Lanes” ChessCafe column (http://www.chesscafe.com/lane/lane.htm), and went so
far as to annotate an amateur’s game. The discovery of the serious
Yettman-Farmer, Arizonza, USA 2006 Jerome Gambit match (see box) shows that,
however feeble, the Jerome Gambit still lives!
[to be continued]
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