As they say, "A fool and his money are soon parted."
And so, as someone interested in unorthodox openings and supportive of independent book publishing (self-, print-on-demand, small press), despite previously-given well-founded concerns, I took the leap and bought James Alan Riechel's Chess Openings: New Theory.
The good news is, there is a lot of creativity in those 30 pages. Well, there actually are only 25 pages of Introductions and analysis, as the author starts numbering at the title page. And most of the 10 chapter Introductions are a half-page of print and a half-page of white space. Did I mention that there is adequate white space in the layout?
First off is the York Opening, 1.c4 c5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.Nd5!? Riechel give no indication as to where the name comes from – player, location, literary allusion – and for a few pages I thought that he might have been recalling the English children's nursery rhyme, since White's advance Knight soon gets booted
Oh, The grand old Duke of York,
He had ten thousand men;
He marched them up to the top of the hill,
And he marched them down again.
And when they were up, they were up,
And when they were down, they were down,
And when they were only half-way up,
They were neither up nor down.
But, no. There are chapters on the York Benko, the York-Sandnes MacCutcheon variation in the French Defense. Since the last chapter, on the American Opening, 1.Nc3 c5 2.Nd5!? contains the Riechel Variation, perhaps the nomenclature is person-based after all. (I have not checked my complete run of Randspringer, Myers Openings Bulletin, and Kaissiber magazines, so perhaps the truth is somewhere in there.)
A few general comments.
Using a very-accessible online games database, ChessLab, I tested the "newness" of all of the lines, including the named "theoretical novelties". The "Ts" were usually "N", but most of the openings generally had been trod before (although not by masters, and not necessarily the complete lines the author gives).
The "Danish Gambit" line, as the author calls it (others might think: Center Game), 1.e4 e5 2.d4 Nf6!? is given the name the Alekhine Variation ("Black attacks e4 in the style of Alekhine"). I think the move dates back to Greco.
Brashly, 1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 c5!? ("An unrecognized move in an old, well-established line") is given the name "The French Gambit" by the author. At least a few people (i.e. those who bought The Marshall Gambit in the French and Sicilian Defenses, by Kennedy and Sheffield) attribute the line to Frank Marshall.
As a reviewer, I find myself in a peculiar dilemma: if I quote as much analysis as I usually did in past reviews at Chessville, I will wind up quoting whole chapters of Chess Openings: New Theory. Where does "fair use" cross over into "copyright infringement"? (The whole book would have made a decent contribution to an issue of Gary Gifford's Unorthodox Opening Newsletter.)
Plus, it probably will not matter. If you are a great fan of junk openings, you will probably want the book, even if it mostly sits on your shelf after one reading. If you are not a fan, you probably have not gotten this far in the review, anyhow.
Is it a measure of my "unorthodoxy" that, all told, I am still wondering when the author's next book will come out??
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Bc5 4.Bxf7+ ...and related lines
(risky/nonrisky lines, tactics & psychology for fast, exciting play)
Saturday, November 12, 2011
Friday, November 11, 2011
Entertaining and Educational
An email from Bill Wall, whose Jerome Gambit (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Bc5 4.Bxf7+) and related games are always entertaining and usually educational, to boot:
Wall - Ali
Chess.com, 2010
notes by Bill
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Na5
4.Bd5 Nf6 5.Bxf7+ Kxf7 6.Nxe5+ Ke8
6...Kg8 looks safer.
7.0-0 Nxe4? 8.Re1
8.Qh5+ looks best.
8...Nc5??
8...Qh4.
9.Qh5+ g6 10.Nxg6+ Ne6 11.Nxh8+ Ke7 12.d4 Nc4 13.Bf4 Qe8 14.Qh4 checkmate
From your last blog, I looked at my games with anyone playing 3...Na5. I have had 5 players play it against me. I delayed Bxf7 one move.
Wall - Ali
Chess.com, 2010
notes by Bill
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Na5
4.Bd5 Nf6 5.Bxf7+ Kxf7 6.Nxe5+ Ke8
6...Kg8 looks safer.
7.0-0 Nxe4? 8.Re1
8.Qh5+ looks best.
8...Nc5??
8...Qh4.
9.Qh5+ g6 10.Nxg6+ Ne6 11.Nxh8+ Ke7 12.d4 Nc4 13.Bf4 Qe8 14.Qh4 checkmate
Thursday, November 10, 2011
It's Hero Time!
I freely admit that many of my Jerome Gambit (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Bc5 4.Bxf7+) games are ones in which I give "Jerome Gambit odds", where I use a refuted opening to "level the playing field" against a lower-rated player. Against a higher-rated player, I do not need an esoteric opening to lose, I can do it all by myself, thank-you-very-much.
In the latest batch of games played at FICS, sent to me by Jerome Gambit Gemeinde member and chessfriend Welton Vaz, from Brazil, I discovered the player klanga, who has taken up the Jerome this year, and who plays it, apparently, against all comers. In the following game he takes on someone with a rating almost twice his own.
klanga (864) - TalesdeSousa (1720)
blitz, FICS, 2011
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.Bc4 Bc5 5.Bxf7+
The Italian Four Knights Jerome Gambit. Certainly nothing to worry about, Black figures.
5...Kxf7 6.0-0 Ng4
Let us just get about checkmating this tyro...
7.d4 Bxd4
Perhaps at this slip, klanga chuckled. Why would such a higher-rated player bother wasting a strong move on me, so early in a busted opening?
8.Ng5+ Kg8 9.Qxg4
White has recovered his sacrificed piece. No matter: the stronger player can inflict structural damage on White's pawns, then open up the game and use his superior strategic skills to wrest the point away.
9...Bxc3 10.bxc3 d5 11.Qf3 dxe4
Take that, you misplaced Queen!
12.Qf7 checkmate
The Gemeinde salutes its newest member, klanga!
In the latest batch of games played at FICS, sent to me by Jerome Gambit Gemeinde member and chessfriend Welton Vaz, from Brazil, I discovered the player klanga, who has taken up the Jerome this year, and who plays it, apparently, against all comers. In the following game he takes on someone with a rating almost twice his own.
klanga (864) - TalesdeSousa (1720)
blitz, FICS, 2011
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.Bc4 Bc5 5.Bxf7+
The Italian Four Knights Jerome Gambit. Certainly nothing to worry about, Black figures.
5...Kxf7 6.0-0 Ng4
Let us just get about checkmating this tyro...
7.d4 Bxd4
Perhaps at this slip, klanga chuckled. Why would such a higher-rated player bother wasting a strong move on me, so early in a busted opening?
8.Ng5+ Kg8 9.Qxg4
White has recovered his sacrificed piece. No matter: the stronger player can inflict structural damage on White's pawns, then open up the game and use his superior strategic skills to wrest the point away.
9...Bxc3 10.bxc3 d5 11.Qf3 dxe4
Take that, you misplaced Queen!
12.Qf7 checkmate
The Gemeinde salutes its newest member, klanga!
Labels:
FICS,
Jerome Gambit,
klanga,
TalesdeSousa,
Vaz
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
Betcha Can't Eat Just One
In the 1960s, the Frito-Lay company launched a commercial for its potato chips that featured the challenge "Betcha can't eat just one" because the product was so tasty.
After yesterday's post on this blog, "A Snack", I found the following short game to be irresistible, as well.
maranthiru - FaceOfDeath
standard, FICS, 2011
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Na5
Still a variation without a name.
4.Bxf7+ Kxf7 5.Nxe5+ Kf6
Wow. This move has all of the "calories" of yesterday's 5...Ke7 (the risk of having the King and Queen on the same diagonal, with White's Bc1-g5+ a looming possibility), but none of the "nutrients" (the ability to play ...Nf6 to prevent the White Bishop's skewer).
For the record, there are 42 games in The Database with this position. White scores 83%, which tells you something.
However, in only 5 of those games did White play the "best" move, 6.Qh5, and in those games White scored 80%. (Yes, another typical Jerome-ish outcome: the best move scores worse than the lesser alternatives.)
A cautionary tale: Pokal - Lissi, blitz, FICS, 2011 continued 6.Qh5 Qe7 7.Ng6 [7.Qf5#] Qxe4+ 8.Kf1 Qxg6 9.Qxa5 Qxc2 10.Nc3 Qd3+ 11.Kg1 b6 12.Nd5+ Kf7 13.Qc3 Qe4 14.Qb3 Qe1 checkmate.
6.d4 d6
This move looks as "reasonable" as yesterday's 7.d5, but it ends the game quickly.
Black had little better than the retreat 6...Ke7, when 7.Nc3 is good for White, for example 7...c6 (keeping the Knight off of d5, but stranding his own Knight) 8.b4 d6 (offering a trade of Knights, but White sees further) 9.bxa5 dxe5 10.Bg5+ Nf6 11.dxe5 and White wins back his sacrificed piece, remaining a pawn up with the better position.
7.Qf3+ Bf5 8.Qxf5+ Ke7 9.Qf7 checkmate
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
A Snack
Some chess games, even Jerome Gambit (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Bc5 4.Bxf7+) games, are a veritible banquet of strategy and tactics, sometimes leading to great satisfaction and sometimes leading to indigestion.
By comparison, the following game is a bit of a snack. Yet, it is still filling.
CarlosFonseca - gianbagia
blitz, FICS, 2011
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Na5
Instead of entering the paths of the Giuoco Piano with 3...Bc5 or the Two Knights Defense with 3...Nf6, Black decides to pick on White's light-squared Bishop.
White does well enough, now, with 4.Nxe5, but he chooses an exciting alternative.
4.Bxf7+ Kxf7 5.Nxe5+ Ke7 6.d4 Nf6
White has two pawns for his sacrificed piece, plus one of Black's Knights is offside, and Black's King is in danger and in the way of his pieces.
The game is about even, which means, at the club level in blitz play, that the second player has to be careful.
7.Nd3
Curiously, of the 50 games in The Database with the position given in the above diagram, only one has this very reasonable move.
White's reasoning is impeccible: with the enemy King and Queen lined up on the same diagonal, Bc1-g5+ would be a deadly skewer, if it were not for Black's protective Knight on f6, so why not try to drive the Knight away?
7...d5
What would be a useful move at another time and in another place merely furthers White's plan in the here-and-now.
8.e5 Ne4 9.f3
Black could have left his Knight at f6 and allowed it to be captured with 8...Qe8. Instead, he moved it to a place where it covered the dangerous checking square g5.
Unfortunately, as White's move shows, the Knight is just as vulnerable at e4.
Sadly, Black's best move now is to retreat the Knight to f6, give the piece up, and resign himself to being a pawn down with a still-unsafe King.
Instead, Black resigned
Yum!
(This is my 1,250th post to this blog. I have been posting daily since the first one. I do not know how much longer I will be able to post daily, but even if I "slow down" I will continue to post multiple times per week. - Rick)
By comparison, the following game is a bit of a snack. Yet, it is still filling.
CarlosFonseca - gianbagia
blitz, FICS, 2011
1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Na5
Instead of entering the paths of the Giuoco Piano with 3...Bc5 or the Two Knights Defense with 3...Nf6, Black decides to pick on White's light-squared Bishop.
White does well enough, now, with 4.Nxe5, but he chooses an exciting alternative.
4.Bxf7+ Kxf7 5.Nxe5+ Ke7 6.d4 Nf6
White has two pawns for his sacrificed piece, plus one of Black's Knights is offside, and Black's King is in danger and in the way of his pieces.
The game is about even, which means, at the club level in blitz play, that the second player has to be careful.
7.Nd3
Curiously, of the 50 games in The Database with the position given in the above diagram, only one has this very reasonable move.
White's reasoning is impeccible: with the enemy King and Queen lined up on the same diagonal, Bc1-g5+ would be a deadly skewer, if it were not for Black's protective Knight on f6, so why not try to drive the Knight away?
7...d5
What would be a useful move at another time and in another place merely furthers White's plan in the here-and-now.
8.e5 Ne4 9.f3
Black could have left his Knight at f6 and allowed it to be captured with 8...Qe8. Instead, he moved it to a place where it covered the dangerous checking square g5.
Unfortunately, as White's move shows, the Knight is just as vulnerable at e4.
Sadly, Black's best move now is to retreat the Knight to f6, give the piece up, and resign himself to being a pawn down with a still-unsafe King.
Instead, Black resigned
Yum!
(This is my 1,250th post to this blog. I have been posting daily since the first one. I do not know how much longer I will be able to post daily, but even if I "slow down" I will continue to post multiple times per week. - Rick)
Monday, November 7, 2011
Say, What??
ARUJ - AlanBes, FICS, 2011 |
With White ready to make his 42nd move in the above position, it looks like another successful Jerome Gambit (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Bc5 4.Bxf7+) is about to come to an end with a well-earned "1-0".
The game did end, without further play, as a draw, however, as both players ran out of time.
Oh, well.
Oh, well.
Sunday, November 6, 2011
Sunday Tournament Update
It is clear now that AsceticKingK9 will take top honors in the current ChessWorld Jerome Gambit (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Bc5 4.Bxf7+) Thematic Tournament.
The 15-player, double round robin contest, is over 80% complete, and AsceticKingK9 leads with 25 points out of 25 games (with three games left to complete).
Second place has been sewed up by mckenna 215, with 23.5 points out of 28 games. His 84% score is impressive, as well.
Third through fifth places are still undecided. Knight32 has completed his run, with 18.5 points out of 28 games. Braken has 18.5 points out of 27 games, so, with one final win, he could pass Knight32. However, Rikiki00 has 15.5 points out of 23 games, and could bypass both Knight32 and Braken with enough wins of his own.
The 15-player, double round robin contest, is over 80% complete, and AsceticKingK9 leads with 25 points out of 25 games (with three games left to complete).
Second place has been sewed up by mckenna 215, with 23.5 points out of 28 games. His 84% score is impressive, as well.
Third through fifth places are still undecided. Knight32 has completed his run, with 18.5 points out of 28 games. Braken has 18.5 points out of 27 games, so, with one final win, he could pass Knight32. However, Rikiki00 has 15.5 points out of 23 games, and could bypass both Knight32 and Braken with enough wins of his own.
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