Are your traps landing? Discover if the Eric Rosen special delivers results in your games.
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Your trap success rate and accuracy
Your piece activity and development speed
Your win rate when traps are avoided
Your handling of the resulting pawn structure
Your attacking pattern recognition
Critical concepts every Stafford Gambit player should understand
After 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nf6 3.Nxe5 Nc6 4.Nxc6 dxc6, Black has a doubled pawn on c6 but gains development and piece activity. The key is that White's knights have been chased away, and Black's pieces are ready to attack immediately with Bc5 and h5.
Black's most dangerous follow-up is 6...h5! — threatening ...h4 to trap White's knight if it goes to g3, or creating a direct kingside attack. This move forces White to make an immediately difficult decision about piece placement under time pressure.
The Stafford is famous for its multi-layer traps. If White tries to return the pawn with d3, ...Bg4 pins the queen. If White plays naturally with Be2, ...Nd5 forks aiming at f4. Every natural-looking move for White can fall into a tactical refutation that Black has prepared.
We automatically check if you fall for these specific traps.
The Stafford Gambit (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nf6 3.Nxe5 Nc6 4.Nxc6 dxc6) is a sharp pawn sacrifice popularized by Eric Rosen. Black gives up a pawn to gain rapid piece development and set a series of dangerous traps that often catch White off-guard. At the club level it scores very well.
We track which specific Stafford traps you attempt and how often they succeed. We identify when your gambit play crosses from creative to careless.
Common questions about Stafford Gambit analysis
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