DONT over 1NT
The Cappelletti convention (also called
Another
popular method, created by Marty
The purpose
of DONT is to be able to compete over the opponents’ opening 1NT with many
hands, yet with some safety. The object of interfering is not necessarily to
get to game, but to try and find a fit and, at the same time, make it difficult
for the opponents to find their own fit. Two-suited hands are the most common
ones that players compete with and at least 5–4 distribution is necessary.
What is the DONT structure?
Double shows
any one-suited hand.
2♣ shows clubs and a higher suit.
2♦ shows diamonds and a major.
2♥ shows hearts and spades.
2♠ shows spades.
Since you can
get to 2♠ by bidding it directly or by doubling first, most pairs play
doubling first is stronger than bidding 2♠ directly.
Responding after partner bids
If partner
doubles, you should bid 2♣ with most hands to let partner pass or name her suit. Bids other than
2♣ show a long
suit and suggest a playable contract. Over 2♣ or 2♦, you can
pass with three-card support. If you don’t have support, bid the next higher
suit to ask partner to pass (if that’s the other suit) or to show the second
suit by bidding it.
Over 2♥ (majors) you can pass or correct to 2♠ if you prefer that suit.
A raise of
partner’s suit is only mildly invitational and usually passed.
With a good
hand, you can bid 2NT asking the DONT bidder to describe his shape and range.
You should discuss this with partner. If the opponents bid over your partner’s
conventional DONT call, double or redouble asks partner to name their unknown
suit.
Examples
What would
you call after a strong 1NT by your opponent holding ♠J 7 ♥A K 8 6 ♦K 7 4 3 2 ♣4 3?
2♦, showing
diamonds and a major.
What would
you call with ♠J 4 ♥K Q J 6 3 2 ♦A 8 6 ♣10 7?
Double, which shows a one-suited hand. Do not bid 2♥, since that shows the majors. Over double, partner can bid 2♣ and you can
name your suit.
Take at look
at some sample responding hands. All start with your left-hand opponent opening
a strong 1NT.
Partner bids
2♣. What would you call with ♠10 8 3 ♥J 3 ♦K 10 7 5 3 ♣Q
10 4?
Pass. You
have found a fit. If you had a fourth club, you could raise. You cannot raise with this hand, however, since partner may
have only four
clubs. Your side has interfered and found a landing spot. Don’t try to improve
the contract.
Partner bids
2♦: diamonds
and a major. What is your call with ♠Q 10 4 2 ♥A 9 6 4 ♦K 3 2 ♣8
4?
2♥, asking
partner to pass or bid 2♠ if that is her second suit. You are sure to have
at least a 4–4 fit or even 5–4 fit in a major, so don’t pass 2♦.
Partner
doubles, showing a onesuited
hand.
What would
you call with ♠K J 3 2 ♥Q 8 6 3 ♦K J 9 7 ♣5?
2♣,
allowing partner to pass or name her suit. While it is
true you only have one club and that is likely partner’s suit, you have no
attractive alternative and the hands could be a misfit. If partner surprises
you and bids 2♦, 2♥ or 2♠, you may raise.
Partner bids
2♥ showing the majors. What would you do with ♠A J 10 ♥K 10 7 4 ♦A 7 3 2 ♣8
6?
Bid
2NT, asking partner to further describe her hand. You may have
game, but you’re not strong enough to bid 4♥ yourself. On
the other hand,
you are too strong to simply raise to 3♥. You should discuss what rebids
by the DON’T bidder mean in this situation. One method is for partner to bid 3♣ with a minimum and all other actions are natural with more than a minimum.
Obviously, more elaborate agreements are possible.
Partner
doubles, showing one suit, and the next hand bids 2♣,Stayman.
What do you call with ♠K J 4 ♥A 5 3 2 ♦Q 8 5 ♣J
10 4?
You have
support for whatever suit your partner has. Double asking her
to bid her suit. It is safe for partner to compete further, so you
should invite her to do so.
Other issues ::- Which is better, Cappelletti or DONT?
There are
advantages to both. For example, DONT allows you to play 2♣ with either a one suited or a two-suited hand.
On the other
hand, when you play DONT, you give up the double showing values since it is
used for the one suited overcall. Some partnerships
compromise by playing DONT only over strong 1NT bids and playing Cappelletti over the weak 1NT (11–14 HCP).