- Rice Gambit
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Position after 8. 0-0.The Rice Gambit is a
chess opening that arises from theKing's Gambit Accepted. An offshoot of theKieseritzky Gambit , it is characterized by the moves 1. e4 e5 2. f4 exf4 3. Nf3 g5 4. h4 g4 5. Ne5 Nf6 6. Bc4 d5 7. exd5 Bd6 8. O-O (instead of the normal 8.d4). White offers the sacrifice of the knight on e5 in order to get his king to safety and prepare a rook to join the attack against Black's underdeveloped position.The Rice Gambit was heavily promoted by wealthy German-born, American businessman
Isaac Rice towards the end of the 19th century. He sponsored numerous theme tournaments where the diagram position became the starting point of every game played. Such giants of the chess world asEmanuel Lasker ,Mikhail Chigorin ,Carl Schlechter ,Frank Marshall , andDavid Janowski were among the participants.Soltis, p. 165.] These events stretched fromMonte Carlo ,Saint Petersburg , andOstend , toBrooklyn andTrenton Falls . In a 1905 Pillsbury NationalCorrespondence Chess Association event, 230 amateurs played the gambit by mail. So obsessed was Rice with his pet line, he formed The Rice Gambit Association in 1904, at his home in New York.Sunnucks, p. 404.] With Dr. Lasker as Secretary, the Association even published a book of all the games played in the theme tournaments.However, concrete analysis has long since shown the gambit to be "neither good nor necessary".Hooper and Whyld, p. 340.] Consequently, it has been abandoned in serious play and stands only as a grotesque monument to Rice's vanity. The
Encyclopedia of Chess Openings (1997) analyzes 8...Bxe5 9.Re1 Qe7 10.c3 Nh5 11.d4 Nd7 12.dxe5 Nxe5 13.b3 0-0 14.Ba3 Nf3+ 15.gxf3 Qh4 16.Rxe5 Bf5 (or 16...Qg3=) 17.Nd2 Qg3 18.Kf1 Qh2 19.Bxf8 g3 20.Bc5 g2+ 21.Ke1 Qh4+ (or 21...g1(Q) 22.Bxg1 Qxg1+ 23.Bf1 Ng3 with an unclear position) 22.Ke2 Ng3+ 23.Kf2 Ne4+ with a draw byperpetual check , attributing this analysis to Capablanca,Amos Burn , andEdward Lasker . ["Encyclopedia of Chess Openings", Volume C, 3rd edition 1997, p. 209 n. 28.]Footnotes
References
*cite book | author=Hooper, David and
Kenneth Whyld | title=The Oxford Companion To Chess | publisher=Oxford University Press | year=1996 | id=ISBN 0192800493
*cite book | author=Soltis, Andy | title= Chess to Enjoy | publisher=Stein and Day | year=1978 | id=ISBN 0-8128-6059-4
*cite book | author=Sunnucks, Anne | title=The Encyclopaedia of Chess | publisher=Hale | year=1970 | id=ISBN 0709110308
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