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Reversed Sicilian report from your own games

Reversed Sicilian report from your own games

English Opening Sicilian structure. See your strategic play with extra tempo.

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Sample Report

Reversed Sicilian Report

40 GAMESSample Data
Win Rate
50%

Performance vs Other Openings

Reversed Sicilian50% Win
Other Openings45% Win

Key Insights

Your understanding of how the extra move translates into concrete advantages peaks in the Botvinnik
white

Extra Tempo Advantage Utilized Effectively in Botvinnik System

What this means
The Reversed Sicilian (1.c4 e5) gives White a Sicilian structure with an extra tempo, and your Botvinnik System games (characterized by Nc3, g3, Bg2, e3, Nge2, d4) demonstrate the best use of this advantage. In 9 of your 15 Botvinnik games, you successfully use the extra tempo to achieve the d4 break one move earlier than Black would in a normal Sicilian, creating central pressure before Black's pieces are fully coordinated. Your average evaluation at move 12 in the Botvinnik is +0.45, compared to +0.18 in your other Reversed Sicilian lines. Game #119 shows ideal tempo utilization: after 1.c4 e5 2.Nc3 Nf6 3.g3 d5 4.cxd5 Nxd5 5.Bg2 Nb6 6.Nf3 Nc6 7.O-O Be7 8.d3 O-O 9.a3 Be6 10.b4, you had a queenside expansion that would take Black 2-3 extra moves to replicate in a normal Sicilian.
How to improve
Your Botvinnik System is your Reversed Sicilian crown jewel — continue prioritizing it. The key to tempo utilization: always have a concrete plan for how your extra move translates into action. In the Botvinnik, the extra tempo goes into the a3-b4 queenside expansion, which gives you space and piece pressure that Black cannot match at the same pace. Study the concept of 'tempo dividend' — each move advantage should compound over time, not be wasted on passive moves. Also prepare for 2...Nc6 3.g3 g6 (the Closed Sicilian Reversed), where the tempo advantage is less clear and you need a different approach.
#tempo#strengths#botvinnik
You inconsistently choose between Maroczy Bind and closed structures, undermining your plans
white
High Impact

c4 vs d3 Structure Choice Creates Confusion in Four Knights Games

What this means
In your 14 Four Knights Setup games (1.c4 e5 2.Nc3 Nf6 3.Nf3 Nc6), you face a critical structural choice: play d3 for a closed English or push d4 for a Maroczy Bind-style position. Your results show significant inconsistency — you play d3 in 8 games and d4 in 6 games, but the choice seems random rather than based on Black's setup. When you play d3, you win 38% (3 wins, 4 losses, 1 draw); when you play d4, you win 50% (3 wins, 2 losses, 1 draw). The d3 games suffer because you often follow up with plans that belong to the d4 structure — queenside expansion with b4 when the center is closed, or e3 when a more aggressive e4 push was needed. Game #247 illustrates the confusion: after d3, you played a3 and b4 attempting a Maroczy-style squeeze, but without d4 supporting c5, Black simply played ...d5 and took over the center.
How to improve
Commit to a clear structural plan based on Black's response. If Black plays ...Bc5 or ...Bb4 (putting pieces on active diagonals), play d3 and aim for a slow positional game with Bg2, O-O, and Rb1-b1 followed by b4. If Black plays ...d5 or ...d6 (committing to a pawn structure), play d4 aiming for a Maroczy Bind (c4 + d4 vs. Black's e5) that restricts Black's pieces. The key decision point is usually move 5-6. Study the English Opening games of Botvinnik and Karpov to see how they chose between these structures based on Black's exact setup.
#pawn-structure#strategy#decision-making
You miss favorable transpositions into other openings and fall into unfavorable ones
High Impact

Transposition Awareness Gaps Cost Points in Double Fianchetto

What this means
In your 11 Double Fianchetto games (g3, Bg2, b3, Bb2), the highly flexible nature of the setup creates numerous transposition possibilities, and you consistently fail to recognize them. In 4 games, the position transposed into a Hedgehog structure where Black achieved the standard ...b6, ...Bb7, ...d6, ...Nbd7, ...Be7, ...O-O setup — a system where Black is very comfortable. You walked into these transpositions without recognizing the danger. Conversely, in 3 other games, you missed opportunities to transpose into favorable Botvinnik System positions by delaying d4 when it was strong. Game #173 is the most costly: the position after move 8 was identical to a known Botvinnik tabiya where White has a clear advantage, but you played b3 instead of the winning d4 break, and the transposition window closed permanently. Game #298 saw you allow a Hedgehog setup when an early d4 would have prevented it entirely.
How to improve
Develop a transposition map for your English Opening repertoire. Before each game, review the key positions where your Double Fianchetto can transpose into: (1) Botvinnik System — recognize when d4 is strong and take the transposition; (2) Hedgehog — recognize when Black is achieving this setup and prevent it with early d4 or e4; (3) Symmetrical English — recognize when ...c5 creates a symmetrical position and know your specific plan. Create flashcards for 5-6 critical transposition positions and drill recognition. The Double Fianchetto is a flexible system, but flexibility without awareness becomes aimlessness.
#transpositions#awareness#opening-knowledge

Top Variations

1
Botvinnik System
15 games
2
Four Knights Setup
14 games
3
Double Fianchetto
11 games

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What we analyze in your Reversed Sicilian games

Your understanding of reversed structures

Your tempo advantage utilization

Your strategic planning

Your Sicilian themes knowledge

Learn This Opening

Play through the main line move by move

1.pawn to c4 (c4)

イングリッシュ・オープニング。白は側面からd5のマスをコントロールし、非対称のポジションを目指します。

Play pawn to c4 (c4)
Drag a piece or tap to move
1.c4e52.Nc3Nf63.Nf3Nc64.g3d55.cxd5Nxd56.Bg2Nb67.O-OBe78.d3

Key Positions to Know

Critical concepts every Reversed Sicilian player should understand

The c4 English Approach

The English Opening (1.c4) with ...e5 by Black creates a Reversed Sicilian — White plays the Sicilian Defense with an extra tempo. This tempo advantage means White gets the dynamic Sicilian positions but with the first-move initiative, creating a subtle but significant edge.

The Botvinnik Setup

White plays Nc3, g3, Bg2, e3, Nge2, and d4 — the Botvinnik system. This setup controls the center from the flanks and prepares a well-timed d4 break. The combination of the g2 bishop and central pawns creates long-term strategic pressure.

Queenside Expansion

Like the Sicilian player on the queenside, White can expand with a3, b4, and Rb1, gaining space and creating threats. The reversed nature means White combines these queenside ambitions with the natural first-move advantage, often leading to pleasant, long-lasting positional edges.

Strategic Plans

White's Plans

  • d4の前進を準備して中央を開くか、またはd3とe4でクローズドな構造を維持する
  • クイーンサイドにプレッシャーをかけ、a3とb4でマイノリティ・アタックを行う

Black's Plans

  • ...d5のブレイクを準備して中央に挑戦し、ピースの活動を最大化する
  • 白がクイーンサイドに集中している間にキングサイドでの攻撃のチャンスを探る

Key Variations

Explore the most important branches and transpositions in the Reversed Sicilian.

Four Knights Variation

1.c4 e5 2.Nc3 Nf6 3.Nf3 Nc6 4.g3 d5 5.cxd5 Nxd5 6.Bg2 Nb6 7.O-O Be7 8.d3 O-O

両者がナイトを迅速に展開し、中央(特にd4とd5)をめぐる激しい戦いにつながります。

Bremen System

1.c4 e5 2.Nc3 Nf6 3.g3 Bb4 4.Bg2 O-O 5.Nf3 Re8 6.O-O e4 7.Ng5 Bxc3 8.dxc3

より位置的なアプローチで、両者がビショップをフィアンケットし、長期的な戦略的機動戦になります。

Closed Variation

1.c4 e5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.g3 g6 4.Bg2 Bg7 5.d3 d6 6.Nf3 Nf6 7.O-O O-O

A fully closed structure where both sides fianchetto and maneuver slowly, similar to Closed Sicilian themes.

Botvinnik System

1.c4 e5 2.Nc3 Nf6 3.Nf3 Nc6 4.e3 Bb4 5.Qc2 Bxc3 6.Qxc3 Qe7 7.d4

White plays d4 to transpose into more open positions, challenging the center directly.

Carls-Bremen System

1.c4 e5 2.Nc3 Nf6 3.g3 d5 4.cxd5 Nxd5 5.Bg2 Nb6 6.Nf3 Nc6 7.O-O Be7 8.d3 O-O 9.Be3

White develops the bishop to e3, preparing to control important central squares and supporting potential d4 breaks.

Opening Statistics

Original research from 3,963 real amateur games — data you won't find anywhere else.

Avg. Game Length
68.0moves1.6
Underdog Wins
40.4%1.0%
Quick Finishes
5.7% avg
Endgame Reach
79.5%1.2%
White's Edge
+4.8%1.1%
Favors BlackEqualFavors White

At 1200-1400

📊Games last 68 moves on average — right around average for this bracket.

📊The lower-rated player wins 40.4% of games — about average for this bracket.

📊5.7% of games end before move 20 — most games get into the middlegame.

📊79.5% of games reach the endgame (40+ moves) — about typical for this bracket.

📊White's edge is +4.8% — a slight advantage for White.

How This Opening Changes as You Improve

RatingGamesWhite's EdgeAvg. Game LengthUnderdog WinsQuick FinishesEndgame Reach
800-1000616
+8.3%52 /3 /44
61+237.9%9.3%71.3%
1000-1200747
+5.8%51 /4 /45
65+236.9%6.3%75.5%
1200-1400813
+4.8%51 /3 /46
68+240.4%5.7%79.5%
1400-1600852
+4.5%51 /3 /47
6840.8%3.8%81.5%
1600-1800935
-0.1%48 /4 /48
75+340.6%2.7%87.0%

Based on 3,963 games · Updated

Why Play the Reversed Sicilian?

積極的なカウンター

黒は受動的なディフェンスに落ち着くのではなく、直ちに中央のコントロールを主張し、白にプレッシャーをかけます。

シシリアンの知識を活用

シシリアン・ディフェンスに精通しているプレイヤーは、色と手番の違いを考慮しながらも、多くの戦略的概念を適用することができます。

Rich Strategic Content

The opening leads to positions with strategic depth, where understanding of Sicilian themes (control of d5, weak d6 square, queenside expansion) is valuable.

World Champions' Choice

Played at the highest level by Kasparov, Karpov, Kramnik, and Carlsen as a solid but ambitious weapon for White.

Common Traps

Watch out for these dangerous tactical pitfalls

Early e4 Overextension

1.c4 e5 2.Nc3 Nf6 3.Nf3 e4 4.Ng5 b5 5.Ngxe4 Nxe4 6.Nxe4 bxc4?? 7.e3 d5

白は黒が展開を遅らせたことを利用し、素早く中央を爆破して主導権を握ります。

Knight Fork

1.c4 e5 2.Nc3 Nf6 3.Nf3 Nc6 4.e3 d5 5.cxd5 Nxd5 6.Bb5 Nxc3?? 7.bxc3 Bd6

White plays Bb5 prematurely. After the knight exchange, White's pawn structure is damaged.

Beginner Tips

💡

白の手番が一つ多いこと(テンポの優位)を忘れないでください。通常のシシリアンよりも展開が早くなる可能性があります。

💡

d4のマスをコントロールすることが極めて重要です。このマスの支配権を容易に譲らないでください。

Common Reversed Sicilian patterns we detect

We automatically check if you fall for these specific traps.

About the Reversed Sicilian

The Reversed Sicilian (1.c4 e5) transposes to Sicilian structures with colors reversed, giving White an extra tempo in familiar positions.

We track your understanding of reversed structures, tempo utilization, and strategic execution with an extra move.

openings.page.sections.keyThemes

Sicilian themes reversedExtra tempo advantageFlexible piece placementCentral controlStrategic complexity

openings.page.sections.notablePlayers

Garry KasparovAnatoly KarpovVladimir KramnikMagnus Carlsen

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Reversed Sicilian analysis

The Reversed Sicilian arises after 1.c4 e5 2.Nc3, creating a position identical to the Sicilian Defense (1.e4 c5 2.Nc3) but with colors reversed. White plays the Sicilian as if the pieces were swapped — Black's c5 becomes White's c4, and e5 is Black's contribution to the center. Because White has the extra tempo in this reversal, the resulting positions are typically slightly better for White than the corresponding Sicilian positions are for Black.
After 1.c4 e5 2.Nc3, White develops with Nf3, g3, Bg2, d3, and O-O, creating a King's Indian reversed structure. The plan mirrors Black's Sicilian plans: use the c4 pawn to fight for d5, pressure Black's center with f4-f5 and g4-g5 attacks, and use the open c-file for rook activity. White can choose between a closed setup (fianchetto) and the open Sicilian reversed (2...Nc6 3.g3 g6 4.Bg2 Bg7 5.e4). Garry Kasparov and Magnus Carlsen both used the Reversed Sicilian as a sophisticated positional weapon.
The main branches are: (1) 2...Nc6 3.g3 g6 4.Bg2 Bg7 5.e4 — the King's Indian Reversed where White mirrors Black's fianchetto; (2) 2...Nc6 3.Nf3 Nf6 4.d4 — the English-Scotch transposition; and (3) 2...Nf6 3.Nf3 Nc6 4.g3 — Black develops actively before White can establish d3-e4. The critical question is always whether White can support e4 after d3, creating the maximum version of the reversed structure. Kasparov built entire match preparations around these nuances.
The Reversed Sicilian is a subset of the English Opening (1.c4) — both begin with 1.c4, but the Reversed Sicilian specifically involves 2.Nc3 versus e5, mirroring the Open Sicilian structure. The English Opening broader category includes symmetrical English (1...c5) and other setups. In the Reversed Sicilian, the tempo advantage from moving second in a mirror Sicilian gives White slightly improved prospects compared to Black's Sicilian position — a key reason top players use it when seeking an edge without heavy theory.

Famous Games

KasparovvsKarpov
World Championship 19851-0

世界トップクラスのプレイヤー同士による、リバースド・シシリアンの非常に複雑な戦略的戦い。

KramnikvsTopalov
World Championship 20061-0

Vladimir Kramnik demonstrates the strategic richness of the Reversed Sicilian in world championship play.

CarlsenvsAnand
World Championship 20141-0

Magnus Carlsen employs the Reversed Sicilian as part of his world championship-winning strategy.

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