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Mexican Defense or Knights' Tango (1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 Nc6)

Want a defense against 1.d4 that’s unusual, flexible and combative? The Mexican Defense —or Knights’ Tango— brings both your knights out to dance from the start. 💃

The main idea

After 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 Nc6, Black develops both knights early to pressure the central squares. You don’t commit your structure yet: you keep every option open.

  • Both knights pressure e4 and d4 right away.
  • It’s low-theory with high surprise value.
  • It often transposes into Nimzo-Indian-type structures.

The first moves

PPractice: Knights' Tango

You play Black. You bring out both knights (Nf6 and Nc6) pressuring the center, then pin with Bb4 Nimzo-Indian style. Flexible and awkward for the opponent.

Who is it for?

For original players who enjoy taking their opponent out of theory. If you like the idea of pinning the knight, you’ll love the Nimzo-Indian Defense.


Related openings: Semi-closed openings · Nimzo-Indian Defense · Bogo-Indian Defense · All openings

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Preguntas frecuentes

What is the Mexican Defense?

It's the reply 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 Nc6, also known as the Black Knights' Tango. Black brings out both knights right away to pressure the central squares e4 and e5, keeping a flexible structure.

Is the Mexican Defense good?

It's a perfectly playable, uncommon surprise defense, which makes it uncomfortable to face. It often transposes into Nimzo-Indian-type positions with ...Bb4. It's not top level, but it gives combative, less well-trodden positions.

Why is it called Knights' Tango?

For the characteristic dance of the two black knights in the early moves (Nf6 and Nc6), moving flexibly to pressure the center before committing to a pawn structure. The name was popularized by GM Georgi Orlov.