The convention
DONT can be used with low hand strength, but intervenor must have good suits when . DONT features the following calls: *Double – shows any single suit (six or more cards); advancer bids 2, after which intervenor corrects to his actual suitor or Passes if it is clubs. *2, 2, 2 – shows the bid suit and any higher-ranking suit *2 – shows spades (six or more cards) Preferences vary as to the use of the 2 bid. Some treat it as weaker than the sequence of a double followed by 2; others play it as showing a solid (runnable) spade suit; other treatments are possible and partnership discussion and agreement is necessary. DONT is normally applied as a defense to strong notrump opening bids, but some people have created various modifications to DONT to apply them to weaker notrump openings. The difference is that the bidder shows opening-bid values and the partner of the doubler may pass to convert the single-suited hand into a . Against the mini-notrump opening bid which shows 10-12/13 HCP (also known as the Kamikaze 1NT): * Double is for penalty and shows 13+ points with any shape. * 2 shows any single suit; partner bids 2, after which the intervenor corrects to his actual suit. * 2, 2, 2 shows the bid suit and any higher-ranked suit, with clubs as the highest-ranking suit.Responses
There are variations in the agreed responses, and partners should establish a clear agreement. One common system of responses is: *Pass – Advancer is willing to play in the suit bid. Advancer will often have shortness in a higher-ranking suit or suits. *Bid of the next cheapest suit (e.g. 1NT – 2 – Pass – 2) – Advancer asks overcaller to bid his other long suit, or pass if the bid is in that suit. Advancer will usually have at least 3-card length in all higher-ranking suits. If Advancer asks for overcaller's other suit and then rebids 2NT after overcaller shows it, advancer is making a strong game invitation in the second suit. **However over a 2 bid (1NT – 2 – Pass) a bid of 2 is simply a preference for the other known suit, and shows much the same strength as would a raise of the heart suit. Similarly a bid of 3 (1NT – 2 – Pass – 3) would tend to be preemptive. *Bid of a new suit that is not the cheapest suit (1NT – 2 – Pass – 2 or 2) – Natural, showing advancer's own 6-card or strong 5-card suit. *A raise of overcaller's 2 or 2 overcall or rebid tends to be preemptive. *A raise of overcaller's major-suit overcall or rebid is mildly invitational. 2NT shows the strong invitation. **Others treat this as weak also, and insist that all invitational sequences go through 2NT. *2NT – A strong game invitation that asks overcaller to bid the other long suit at the 3-level (or 4-level, if the second suit is a major and overcaller is strong enough to accept the invitation). Advancer promises excellent support for all higher-ranking suits.Over strong club opening bids
When the opponents play Precision Club or other strong club system, 1 usually describes a 17-19 point hand. Accordingly, DONT can also be employed over these types of systems. * Double shows any single suit; advancer bids 2♣, after which intervenor corrects to his actual suit * 2, 2, 2 shows the bid suit and any higher-ranking suit * 2 – shows spadesVariation
A variation of the system, claimed to provide additional disturbance of the notrump auction, calls for the partner of the intervenor to bid his cheapest doubleton when the intervenor has shown a single-suited hand. This relies on the Law of total tricks to find adequate protection at the three level. In this auction West has a strong hand (17+ points) and East has shown a positive response (8+ points) so they must be in the game zone. West's double of 2 is not clear. It might mean that he has a heart suit, but how long of a suit is it? South is known to have at most two cards in that suit. North and South meanwhile have found a minimum 9-card club fit (North with 6 and South with 3+ clubs). In an auction like this, East may just have to bid 3NT and hope for the best. The variation does have a few risks, for example if the partner of the intervenor has two short suits the fit in the agreed suit may be deficient.See also
* List of defenses to 1NTNotes
Citations
Further reading
* Lawrence, Mike (1995). ''Disturbing Opponents' No Trump''. C & T Bridge Supplies, 45 pages; *External links