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English Defense (1.d4 e6 2.c4 b6): double fianchetto and pressure

Want a defense against 1.d4 that seeks imbalance and lets you play for a win with Black? The English Defense (1.d4 e6 2.c4 b6) does exactly that, with a double plan of pressure.

The main idea

Black fianchettoes the bishop on b7 and fights White’s big center with pieces and the break …f5. Black accepts a bit less space in exchange for initiative and active play.

  • Pressures White’s center from a distance.
  • Seeks unbalanced, combative positions.
  • The bishop on b4 can pin in Nimzo-Indian style.

The first moves

PPractice: English Defense

You play Black. You fianchetto on b7 to pressure e4 and, when White reinforces the center, you pin with Bb4 Nimzo-Indian style. Combative and low-theory.

Who is it for?

For combative players with good positional understanding who want to avoid early draws. If pressuring the center with pieces appeals to you, check out the Nimzo-Indian Defense and the Owen Defense.


Related openings: Semi-closed openings · Nimzo-Indian Defense · Owen Defense · Keres Defense · All openings

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Preguntas frecuentes

What is the English Defense?

Despite its name, it's a Black defense: 1.d4 e6 2.c4 b6. Black fianchettoes the bishop on b7 and fights White's center with pieces and breaks like ...f5. It's combative and seeks unbalanced positions.

Why is it called the English Defense if Black plays it?

Because it was popularized by British players like Tony Miles and Raymond Keene in the 1970s. It has no direct relation to the English Opening (1.c4), though they share the spirit of pressuring the center from a distance.

Is the English Defense good?

It's a combative, low-theory option, perfect for anyone who wants to unbalance the game and play for a win with Black. It requires positional understanding because Black usually concedes some space in exchange for pressure on White's center.