I think if the bodacious Blackmar Diemer Gambit (1.d4 d5 2.e4 dxd4 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.f3) can be referred to as a "high school for tactics" then the Jerome Gambit (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Bc5 4.Bxf7+) can at least be dubbed a "pre-school for tactics". Every once-in-a-while I wonder if playing the Jerome ishelping or hurting my chess play. Then I play a game like the following, and I stop worrying (for a while, anyhow).
A recently-completed game in the ongoing Chess.com Italian Game tournament gave me the opportunity to apply something that I learned from the Jerome Gambit to the Black side of the Evans Gambit. Let me explain. EduardoMilanez - perrypawnpusher Chess.com, Italian Game tournament, 2015 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Bc5 4.b4
The Evans Gambit. We have looked at the Evans Jerome Gambit a good number of times in the past - but not today. 4...Bxb4 5.c3 Ba5 6.d4 exd4 7.O-O Nge7 8.cxd4 d5 9.exd5 Nxd5
As Black I was happy with better development and an isolated Queen pawn to play against. 15.Rd1 Rfe8 16.Be3 Re4 17.Qg3 Nxd4 18.Bxd4 Rxd4
I was happy to win the pawn, but what was really nagging me was White's Knight still at home on b1, blocking in his Rook at a1. It reminded me of how much trouble Black gets into when he faces the Jerome Gambit, and he doesn't develop his light-squared Bishop, in turn blocking in his Queen's Rook. So many Jerome Gambit attacks have succeeded against defenders who left those pieces in the "garage" too long. I started playing to keep the Knight buried in my game. 19.Rf1 Rd3 20.Qf4 Re8 21.h3 Re4 22.Qc1 Rc4 23.Qb2
My next move lets the Knight out, but at a cost. 23...Bb624.Na3
Rg3 White resigned
White will have to give up his Queen for a Rook, i.e. 25.Qxb6 axb6 26.fxg3 Qxc5 snagging the hapless steed. So: I was asking myself at one point in this game "What plan should I have?" and I thought about a lesson I had learned from the Jerome Gambit! And: perhaps at times in the game my opponent underestimated me - which is also something I have dealt with repeatedly while playing the Jerome Gambit.
Knowing a lot about the Jerome Gambit, Bill Wall can fight against it, when he has to. How strange: he makes it look easy with the White pieces, and he makes it look easy with the Black pieces!
After my last game with Philidor1792 (see "A Flurry of Punches"), of course we had to have another, and, of course, he had to play the Jerome Gambit... My experience was something like being flattened by a steam roller. Philidor1792 - perrypawnpusher Chess.com, 2015 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Bc5 4.Bxf7+
9.d5Ne7 10.d6 An excellent idea - the pawn is well invested. 10...cxd6 11.Nc3 Ng6 It was probably better to complete "castling" with 11...Kg8 - if not on this move, then the next one. 12.Qb3+ d5 13.Nxd5 Nxd5 14.Qxd5+ Ke8
Not only is Black's King back in the center - look at his locked-in light-squared Bishop, a clear sign of danger in the Jerome. 15.Bg5 Ne7 16.Qd6 Bc7 17.Qa3 h6 18.Bh4 g5 19.Bg3 Bxg3 20.hxg3 Qb6 21.Rad1 Rf6
I was not making much progress. Philidor1792 calmly continued. 22.e5 Rc6 23.Nd4 Qc5 24.Qd3 Qxe5 Silly. Black doesn't need material (or open lines against himself). He should pursue exchanging Queens with 24...Qc4. 25.Rfe1 Qf6 26.Nxc6 bxc6
Black's position is wretched, despite some returned material. 27.Qa3 d5 28.Re3 Kd7 29.Rde1 Nf5 30.Rf3 Qd6 31.Rxf5 Qxa3 32.bxa3 Kc7
The Queens are finally off the board, but Black is down the exchange, and only his King is developed. 33.Rf6 Bd7 34.f4 gxf4 35.gxf4 h5 36.Rf7 Re8
This silly blunder ends the suffering. Even the more appropriate 36...Kd6 would have led to a complicated endgame where White could be expected to continue to outplay his opponent. Black resigned
Years ago I read a first person account by a small time boxer who managed to wrangle some sparring time with Muhammad Ali. After some warm up exchanges, The Champ was momentarily distracted by a loud noise - a slamming door, a falling chair - and the author landed a solid punch on him. I hit Ali! I hit Ali! the writer enthused. Of course, that was all he remembered, as Ali almost immediately returned a knockout punch... Imagine my excitement when the Chess.com app on my phone indicated that Philidor1792 wanted to play a game. Sure! I thought. We took more time on our moves than some of the 3 0 games of his that I have posted here, but the result was still the same: a flurry of punches and a KO. perrypawnpusher - Philidor1792 Chess.com, 2015 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Bc5 The Busch-Gass Gambit, which can turn out similar to a reversed Jerome Gambit, a move down. 3.Nxe5 Nc6
Chiodini's Gambit. 4.Nc3 I don't know if this move is good or not, but there was no way that I was going to follow along with Black's offer of 4.Nxc6. which would lead to a kind of reversed Boden Kieseritzky Gambit. Instead, I would prefer to see something calm now like 4...Nxe5 5.d4 Bd6 6.dxe5 Bxe5 7.Bd3 Nf6, a reversed Italian Four Knights. No such luck. Philidor1792 came to complicate. 4...Nf6 5.Nf3 Nd4 6.e5
This risky pawn move is good, but I did not appreciate why. 6...Ng4 7.Bc4 I had anticipated Black's upcoming sacrifice, but I would have done better to prevent - not provoke - it with 7.Ne4, protecting f2. 7...Nxf2 8.Kxf2 d5
9.Bxd5 Nxf3+ 10.d4 Nxd4 11.Be3 O-O
Here it looked for a moment like the game might settle down, after exchanges on d4 and a pin-and-win on d5, to a positional advantage for Black. Ha! 12.Bxd4 Qh4+ 13.g3 After the game Stockfish "reassured" me that 13.Ke3 would have led to an even game, or one where Black had only a slight advantage. I don't think it would have helped me much, though. 13...Bxd4+ 14.Kg2 Qh3+
A significant part of the Jerome Gambit box of tactics is the often vulnerable enemy Bishop on c5 - a proper Queen check by White, and the next move (or the one after) it can fall. In the following game, Bill Wall waits - and waits - and waits for a Jerome, finally sacrificing his Bishop, anyway. Black never develops his dark-squared Bishop, but he drops a piece to a Queen check, any way. Wall, Bill - DrivingJoint Internet, 2001 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 h6 The Semi-Italian Opening. 4.O-O a6 5.Nc3 b5
It is not a Jerome Gambit proper, but this is enough provocation. 6.Bxf7+ Kxf7 7.Nxe5+ Nxe5 8.Qh5+ Ng6 9.Qd5+
A different kind of "nudge". 9...Ke8 10.Qxa8 c6 11.d4 N8e7 12.f4 Kf7
Preparing to castle-by-hand? If so, it is untimely. 13.f5 Nh4 14.g3
White commands his not-quite-a-Jerome-gambit with skill, until his attention wavers - and his game disintegrates. Eyes on the prize, folks! BOGuk -CrisChess standard, FICS, 2015 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 h6 The Semi-Italian opening. 4.Nc3 Nf6 5.Bxf7+
White gives up waiting - if he was, indeed, waiting at all - for Black to play ...Bc5, and fires off his Bishop. An ounce more of patience was to be found in 5.0-0. 5...Kxf7 6.d4 exd4 7.Nxd4 Bb48.O-O Bxc3 9.bxc3 Nxd4 10.cxd4 d6
Here we have a Jerome-like position, with Black (with the less safe King) holding an extra piece, and White (with the better pawn center) holding an extra pawn. The gambiteer must attack fearlessly. 11.Qf3 Bg4 12.Qf4 g5 13.Qg3 Be6 14.e5
dxe5 15.dxe5 Nh516.Qf3+ Kg7
Black has systematically exchanged pieces, and then harassed White's Queen. This last move, however, looks like a mouse slip, as the alternative, 16...Kg6 would have protected the offside Knight. 17.Qxh5 Rf8
The second player's loose castling-by-hand gives his opponent the correct idea: attack the pawn at g5 with a pawn; exchange to open lines. 18.f4 This is the right idea, however, with the wrong pawn. What White should have been looking for is 18.h4, and even after 18...Qe8 19.Qxe8 Raxe8 20.hxg5 he would be clearly better. 18...Qd4+ Didn't see that coming. 19.Kh1 Qxa1 20.fxg5 So there! 20...Rxf1 checkmate
Speaking of "Discouragement", I have to report that the second round of the Chess.com "Italian Game" tournament has started (two sections, one with 6 players, one with 7) and I have 4 games with the black pieces, 2 games with the white pieces - and no Jerome Gambits. At least, not yet. Not every one of my opponents in this round will defend with the Two Knights, will they?? I hope not. In the meantime, some things to think about: "Jerome Gambit vs Two Knights Defense (Part 1), (Part 2), (Part 3) and (Part 4)".