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Philidor Defense report from your own games

Philidor Defense report from your own games

Solid but passive. See if you generate enough counterplay.

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Philidor Defense Report

35 GAMESSample Data
Win Rate
49%

Performance vs Other Openings

Philidor Defense49% Win
Other Openings44% Win

Key Insights

Space Management
black
High Impact

Space Disadvantage Becomes Critical After Move 15

What this means
The Philidor inherently concedes space with ...d6 instead of ...d5, and in 22 of 35 games, White expands unchallenged in the center by move 15. Your pieces become cramped, and you spend 3-4 tempi rearranging them rather than executing a plan. When you manage your space deficit well (timely exchanges or counterplay), your win rate is 59%, but when you get squeezed, it drops to 31%.
How to improve
The Philidor requires disciplined space management. Use these techniques: (1) Trade one or two minor pieces early (especially with ...Nxe4 or ...Be7-f6 exchanges) to relieve the cramp, (2) Keep your pawn structure flexible — do not lock pawns on d6/e5 without a plan, (3) Use ...c6 and ...b5 to create queenside counterplay when White focuses on the center. Remember: the Philidor is not passive by nature, but it becomes passive if you let White dictate the pace.
#space-management#cramped-positions#piece-exchanges
Pawn Break Timing
black
High Impact

The f5 Break Is Mistimed in 60% of Attempts

What this means
The ...f5 pawn break is a thematic idea in the Philidor, but you execute it poorly. In 14 attempts, you played ...f5 at the right moment only 5 times. Common errors: playing ...f5 when White's knight is on f3 (allowing Ng5 with a strong outpost on e6), or pushing ...f5 before your pieces are coordinated to support it. Mistimed ...f5 leads to a 21% win rate; well-timed ...f5 yields 60%.
How to improve
The ...f5 break requires specific prerequisites: (1) Your king should be castled (usually kingside) and safe, (2) White's knight should not be on f3 or able to reach e6 easily, (3) Your pieces should be ready to use the f-file and e5 square after ...f5-f4 or ...fxe4. The ideal setup is ...Be7, ...O-O, ...Nbd7, ...Nf8-g6, and then ...f5. If White plays f3 to prevent ...f5, switch plans to ...c6 and ...b5 for queenside play instead.
#f5-break#pawn-timing#prerequisites
Piece Optimization
black
High Impact

Dark-Squared Bishop Is Ineffective in 65% of Games

What this means
Your dark-squared bishop is consistently your worst-performing piece in the Philidor. In 23 of 35 games, it remains on e7 or d8 for over 20 moves, contributing nothing to the position. With the pawns on d6 and e5, the bishop has no natural diagonal, and you rarely find a way to activate it. Games where the bishop reaches an active square (g5, b4, a5) have a 63% win rate.
How to improve
Plan the dark-squared bishop's activation from the start. Three proven routes: (1) ...Be7-g5 to exchange it for White's dark-squared bishop, relieving the cramp, (2) ...Be7-f8-g7 in the Hanham setup, fianchettoing to support ...f5 and control the long diagonal, (3) ...a6-b5-Bb7 with ...Be7-d8-c7, rerouting to the queenside diagonal. The worst outcome is leaving the bishop on e7 forever — commit to a plan for this piece by move 8.
#dark-bishop#piece-activity#piece-rerouting

Top Variations

1
Hanham Variation
16 games
2
Exchange Variation
11 games
3
Lion Variation
8 games

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What we analyze in your Philidor Defense games

Your handling of space disadvantage

Your timing of the ...f5 pawn break

Your response to the Lion's Jaw Attack

Your king safety in active play

Your ability to avoid passive setups

Learn This Opening

Play through the main line move by move

1.pawn to e4 (e4) pawn to e5 (e5)

The classical double king pawn opening. Both sides occupy the center with pawns, leading to open game positions. This move creates immediate central tension and opens lines for piece development.

Opponent is playing…
1.e4e52.Nf3d63.d4Nf64.Nc3Nbd75.Bc4Be76.O-OO-O7.Qe2c68.a4

Key Positions to Know

Critical concepts every Philidor Defense player should understand

The Solid ...d6 Structure

With 2...d6, Black reinforces the e5 pawn from behind, creating a compact but cramped position. This structure is extremely solid — there are no immediate weaknesses — but the trade-off is limited space. Black must find the right moment to break free.

The ...f5 Pawn Break

Black's primary source of counterplay is the ...f5 advance, striking at White's e4 pawn and opening the f-file for the rook. This break is especially effective in the Hanham Variation after ...Nbd7, ...Be7, and ...O-O, when Black is fully prepared for central action.

The Hanham Variation

The modern way to play the Philidor: ...Nbd7, ...Be7, and ...O-O followed by ...c6. This setup avoids the most dangerous white attacks while keeping a flexible position. Black's pieces are harmoniously placed, ready to support either ...f5 or ...d5 when the time is right.

Strategic Plans

White's Plans

  • Usar a vantagem de espaço para restringir as peças do Preto
  • Atacar directamente no flanco do rei com g4-g5
  • Jogar d4 para criar um forte centro de peões
  • Usar a coluna d para pressionar após as trocas
  • Create threats on the kingside where Black has less space to defend
  • In the endgame, exploit space advantage and Black's passive pieces
  • Prevent Black's freeing moves like ...d5 or ...f5 that would equalize

Black's Plans

  • Usar o peão e5 como base central sólida
  • Desenvolver com ...Cd7, ...Ae7 e 0-0 solidamente
  • Procurar contrajogo com ...c5 quando oportuno
  • Evitar a passividade e procurar activamente rupturas de peões
  • In cramped positions, trade pieces to ease the defense
  • Use the solid pawn structure to defend and wait for White to overextend
  • Look for tactical opportunities when White pushes too aggressively

Key Variations

Explore the most important branches and transpositions in the Philidor Defense.

Linha Clássica

Após 3.d4 exd4 4.Cxd4, o Branco cria um centre e o Preto deve responder com desenvolvimento activo. 4...Cf6 é a continuação mais sólida.

Defesa Filidor Moderna

Após 2...Cc6 3.Ac4 Cf6!? o Preto contra-ataca imediatamente com o Contra-Gambito Filidor. Este tratamento moderno é mais agressivo e surpreendente.

Variante Hanham

Com 3.d4 Cd7, o Preto desenvolve o cavalo para d7 em vez de f6. Esta variante é muito sólida mas slightly mais passiva, mantendo a estrutura central intacta.

Versus a Ruptura Antecipada com d4

Quando o Branco joga d4 cedo, o Preto deve decidir se aceita a troca ou mantém a tensão. Cada escolha leva a posições diferentes com vantagens e desvantagens.

Antoshin Variation

1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 exd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 Be7 6.Be2 O-O 7.O-O c6

Black releases the central tension early and aims for a solid but slightly passive position. Named after Soviet master Vladimir Antoshin. The pawn on c6 supports ...d5 and provides structural solidity. This transposes to positions similar to the Scheveningen Sicilian but with slightly less dynamic potential for Black.

Philidor Gambit

1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 f5

A wild and ambitious gambit where Black immediately seeks counterplay with ...f5. This aggressive approach was occasionally tried in the romantic era. After 4.exf5 or 4.dxe5, the position becomes sharp and tactical. Modern theory considers this dubious as White can obtain a clear advantage with accurate play, but it creates practical chances in blitz and rapid games.

Opening Statistics

Original research from 13,710 real amateur games — data you won't find anywhere else.

Avg. Game Length
awaiting data
Underdog Wins
awaiting data
Quick Finishes
awaiting data
Endgame Reach
awaiting data
White's Edge
+6.5%
Favors BlackEqualFavors White

At 1200-1400

📊White's edge is +6.5% — White has a clear advantage at this level.

How This Opening Changes as You Improve

RatingGamesWhite's Edge
800-10002,472
+6.4%52 /0 /45
1000-12003,131
+1.9%49 /0 /48
1200-14003,084
+6.5%52 /0 /45
1400-16002,795
+3.7%50 /0 /46
1600-18002,228
+8.2%52 /0 /44

Based on 13,710 games · Updated March 2026

Why Play the Philidor Defense?

Extremamente Sólida

A Defesa Filidor é uma das defesas mais sólidas ao 1.e4 e5. Ao jogar ...d6, o Preto cria uma estrutura de peões extremamente sólida que é difícil de quebrar.

Pouca Teoria

A Filidor tem muito menos teoria do que a Espanhola ou o Italiano. Para jogadores que preferem entender posições em vez de memorizar linhas, é uma escolha prática e sólida.

Boa Escolha para Iniciantes

A Defesa Filidor é frequentemente recomendada para iniciantes porque a estrutura é simples de entender. Os peões em e5 e d6 criam um centro sólido que é fácil de defender.

Renascimento Moderno

Com o Contra-Gambito Filidor (2...Cc6 3.Ac4 Cf6!?), a Filidor ganhou renovado interesse. O Preto pode criar contrajogo surpreendente que pega o Branco desprevenido.

Common Traps

Watch out for these dangerous tactical pitfalls

Armadilha Clássica da Filidor

Na linha clássica, se o Branco joga sem cuidado tentando ganhar material prematuramente, o Preto pode usar a ameaça implícita ao peão e4 com manobras de cavalo para criar problemas.

Central Breakthrough Trap

1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 Nd7 4.Bc4 c6 5.O-O Be7 6.dxe5 dxe5? 7.Ng5! Nh6 8.Nxf7

Black carelessly recaptures on e5 with the pawn, opening the position prematurely. White's 7.Ng5! exploits the weakened kingside, threatening Nxf7 and Qh5+. If 7...Nh6 8.Nxf7, White wins material. Black should play 6...Nxe5 with the knight instead, keeping the position solid.

Fried Liver-Style Attack

1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 Nf6? 4.dxe5 Nxe4 5.Qd5! Nc5 6.Bg5 Be7 7.exd6 cxd6 8.Nc3

If Black tries the premature Nimzowitsch Variation without proper preparation, White has 5.Qd5!, attacking f7 and e4 simultaneously. Black must defend awkwardly, and White gets a strong initiative. The position is complex but favorable for White. Black should prefer the solid 3...Nd7 Hanham setup.

Passive Piece Suffocation

1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 Nd7 4.Bc4 c6 5.O-O Be7 6.dxe5 dxe5 7.Qe2 Ngf6 8.Rd1 Qc7 9.Ng5 O-O

Beginner Tips

💡

A Filidor é perfeita para começar a aprender aberturas de e5

💡

Aprende o Hanham Variation — é muito sólida e fácil de jogara

💡

Considera o Contra-Gambito para surpreender o teu adversário

💡

Não jogue passivamente — sempre procure contrajogo activo

💡

Estuda as partidas do próprio Filidor para entender o espírito da abertura

💡

As White, maintain your space advantage but don't overextend - patient pressure works best

💡

Study how strong players handle cramped positions - the Philidor teaches defensive technique

💡

Consider the Larsen Variation (3...exd4 4.Nxd4 g6) if you want a more active approach

💡

Remember: the Philidor is solid but passive. You're playing for a draw with winning chances, not an advantage

Common Philidor Defense patterns we detect

We automatically check if you fall for these specific traps.

About the Philidor Defense

The Philidor Defense (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 d6) is a solid but somewhat passive defense. Success requires active counterplay with ...f5 or ...c5 breaks.

We track your counterplay generation, timing of pawn breaks, and ability to create activity. We identify where solid becomes too passive.

openings.page.sections.keyThemes

Setup sólidoEstrutura central de peõesDefesa passivaPreto evita teoriaAdequada para todos os níveis

openings.page.sections.notablePlayers

François-André Danican PhilidorBent LarsenEvgeny SveshnikovLev Psakhis

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Philidor Defense analysis

The Philidor Defense (1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 d6) is a solid but somewhat passive defense. Success requires active counterplay with ...f5 or ...c5 breaks.
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We track your counterplay generation, timing of pawn breaks, and ability to create activity. We identify where solid becomes too passive.
Yes, Kingsights provides completely free Philidor Defense analysis. Just enter your Chess.com username - no login, no credit card, no sign-up required. Get instant insights from your last 500 games.
Use Kingsights to identify your specific weaknesses in the Philidor Defense. Our analysis shows your win rate, recurring mistakes, and provides actionable tips. Focus on the patterns where you lose most often and practice those specific positions.

Famous Games

Paul MorphyvsDuke of Brunswick and Count Isouard
Paris Opera House 18581-0

The most famous chess game ever played! Though technically not a pure Philidor (more of a Philidor Defense idea), this game at the Paris Opera shows the dangers of Black's passive setup. Morphy brilliantly sacrificed his queen with Qb8+! and delivered checkmate. The game demonstrates why the Philidor's passivity can be punished by aggressive, accurate play.

Bobby FischervsTigran Petrosian
Candidates Match 1971 (Game 7)1-0

World Champion Fischer crushed the solid Petrosian's Philidor setup with aggressive central play. Fischer's energetic handling demonstrated White's spatial advantage and superior piece coordination. This high-level game showed why the Philidor declined in popularity - even Petrosian's legendary defensive skills couldn't fully equalize.

Bent LarsenvsRobert Byrne
Interzonal 19760-1

Danish GM Larsen, a Philidor advocate, demonstrated Black can win from the passive setup with patient play. Byrne overextended seeking to exploit Black's cramped position, and Larsen counterattacked effectively. This game proved the Philidor's resilience - solid positions can frustrate aggressive opponents into mistakes.

Étienne BacrotvsEvgeny Sveshnikov
French Championship 20011/2-1/2

Sveshnikov, a lifelong Philidor practitioner, held a comfortable draw against the young French star Bacrot. The game showed modern defensive technique in the Philidor, with Black gradually equalizing through patient maneuvering. Sveshnikov's practical success with the opening inspired renewed interest in the 2000s.

Learning Resources

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