Igor Bondari and Dan Middlemiss tipped me off that ChessBrah - Canadian Grandmaster Aman Hambleton - has posted another (be sure to see the first hilarious video) YouTube video on the Jerome Gambit, this time on the Jerome Gambit Declined. (You might want to check out "Jerome Gambit: First Steps [Part 5]" for some basics).
It seems that someone dared play the Jerome Gambit against the GM. You can guess how that went.
Actually, you don't have to guess, as here is the game.
dontcallmelab - ChessBrah
3 0 blitz, Chess.com, 2021
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Bc5 4.Bxf7+
4...Kf8
The Jerome Gambit Declined.
For the record, The Database has 340 games with this position, with White scoring 56%. However, only one of those games - this one - included a Grandmaster, with White scoring 0%. Just a bit of perspective.
5.Bb3
Well, all right. If this were a Grandmaster vs Grandmaster game, I would put my money solidly on White. However, given that GM Hambleton is playing someone he might very well be able to give Queen odds to - I'll hang onto my Social Security, I think.
5...Nf6 6.Nc3 d6 7.d3 Bg4
8.h3 Bh5 9.O-O Nd4
FaithBreaker_@chessbrah don't forget to send the declined theory to the blog guy
10.g4 Nxg4
alec044 Gotta send this match in to the blog
Instructive. Black wants to checkmate White's King, and so sidesteps the simple win of the "minor exchange" with 10...Nxb3 11.axb3. (If White survives, he can point that move out in the post mortem.)
11.Nxd4 Bxd4 12.Qf3+
Actually, the Knight offer by Black is worth it in terms of the anxiety it produces, as well as the loosening up of White's Kingside. Besides, someone started the game off with an opening that often sees him sacrifice a couple of pieces for the heck of it, right? I am pretty sure we left Kansas a while back.
12...Nf6
"How are we going to prosecute this?"
13.Qg3 h6 14.Ne2
Challenging the Bishop on d4 with an already developed piece. He might have considered 14.Be3 blunting the piece's impact on the diagonal.
14...Bb6
15.Re1 g5 16.c3 Rh7 17.Bc2 Rg7
"My Bishop is going to be part of the mating attack this game, and you guys are going to understand why I kept that piece on the board, why I kept it on h5. Trust me, it will become apparent right now."
18.Kh2 Kg8
The piece was more helpful where it was, not where it is going - to f3. More lines are going to open - for Black's pieces.
20...Rf8 21.Bd2 exd4
Opening the diagonal for the Bishop.
23.exd6
A double attack on the enemy Queen.
White's last chance - which might only last for a move or two - was 23.Bb3+ Kh7 24.exf6 Qxf6. Black's position still looks quite menacing.
23...Qd7 24.Bb3+ Kh8 25.Nf3
Black generously surrenders the Knight, anyhow. The rest is the stuff of nightmares.
26.Rxe4 Rxf3 27.Qg2 Rxf2 28.Qxf2 Bxf2 29.c4 Qxd6+ 30.Kh1
"Guys do you remember when I said this Bishop on h5 was going to win me the game?"
30...Bf3 checkmate
Gulp.
A bit reminiscent of the finish to Blackburne's treatment of the Jerome.
Hats off to dontcallmelab for challenging the Grandmaster. I would not have lasted half as long.
you sir are a legend.
ReplyDeleteThis is what Jerome would have wanted!
ReplyDeleteFor Jerome
ReplyDeleteFOR JEROME
ReplyDelete