daveharty, on 2012-April-26, 17:21, said:
I agree completely. The "forcing" part is simply a corollary of the "artificial" part, as responder needs another chance to clarify his intentions. But that's not the case here. I don't really know if Norman Squire would have called the use of 3C in the OP "4SF" or "Fourth Suit Artificial" or whatever; every example I've ever seen of the convention's use is at the 1- or 2-level and is used when no other convenient forcing bid is available, but it's really not very important what you call it. The reason I took issue with 32519's post was that he recommended the use of "4SF" in an auction where it wasn't necessary for two reasons: a game force already existed, and a more descriptive (even, as cherdano says, textbook) bid does exist.
I think you’re fussing unnecessarily here. If after 3
♣ (let’s call it 4th Suit Artificial as suggested by yourself),
1. Opener does hold a 5th
♥, then responder raises to 4
♥ and opener maintains control over any RKCB sequence. Responder doesn’t have any honours in the
♥ suit. So who better than opener to decide at what level to end the auction?
2. Opener denies holding a 5th
♥, he simply returns to the
♠ suit and responder plays 3NT.
You end up in the same place.
To stick rigidly to “text-book” bids won’t solve the myriad of problems that inevitably arise at the table. So now you need to “manufacture” a bid when an option for merely finding game versus a possibility of finding slam exists (albeit a small possibility).