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The trouble with FSF followed by 4NT, or NMF followed by 4NT is that partner may show delayed support for your suit. Then he is bound to take 4NT as some flavour of Blackwood. Which is why I would play the immediate 4NT as quantitative on the first and last of these sequences.
Playing 2/1, you are right that you don't need an immediate quantitative 4NT in the second example. But playing slightly weaker 2/1s, I suggest that quantitative is again the best meaning for this jump to 4NT.
Eric
Playing 2/1, you are right that you don't need an immediate quantitative 4NT in the second example. But playing slightly weaker 2/1s, I suggest that quantitative is again the best meaning for this jump to 4NT.
Eric
Hi Eric,
This really is a matter or partnership agreement, and I have no problem with immediate jumps to 4NT as quantatitive. But you don’t necessary need 4NT as quantitative if partner shows delayed support for your suit. Let’s look at two auctions.
1C 1S 1C 1S
2C 2D 2C 2D
2S 3S
Here your partner has separated his “good” 2C rebids from his “weaker” 2C rebids with a jump to 3S or a simple 2S rebid. This sort of takes the need for quantitative 4NT on these auctions away. You can bid a simple 3NT on the first auction, and 6NT on the second. The question that might become worth thinking about is what would 5NT be on the second auction (invite 7NT or ask for quality of spade support for 7S, or pick a slam between 6C and 6S), but we can leave that for another thread.
The same kind of good/bad responses are frequently part of the responses to fourth suit forcing. But, and this is important, after fsf or nmf you have time to temporize before bidding 4NT as blackwood, so you can use immediate 4NT after fsf or nmf as quantitative even if partner supports your suit if you want... that is, you can just define the nmf-any-4NT as quantitative, or fsf-any-4NT as the same. This is how I play it, again, by partnership agreement.
1C 1S
2C 2D
2S 4NT = quantitative,
1C 1S
2C 2D
2S 3H (or 3C or 3D but not 3S)
any 4NT = rkcb… for spades or if 3C bid, two suit rkcb
The secret is to have an agreement, or to at least be on teh same bridge logic as your partner. Generally, I use quantative after a NT bid/rebid, or immediately after a nmf or 4sf.
Ben