Can opener bid Fourth Suit Forcing
#1
Posted 2017-July-09, 12:58
#2
Posted 2017-July-09, 13:23
Liversidge, on 2017-July-09, 12:58, said:
It doesn't matter if it's called fourth suit forcing; it doesn't make sense for it to be natural (on the other hand, 1D-2C-2D-2H-2S could be natural because opener could be 4-4-5-0) so it is artificial and forcing.
I only remember seeing one reference to fourth suit forcing by opener. Most of the times it refers to responder's first rebid. However, if the prior bidding has ruled out partner's call being natural (because he has already denied possession of the suit) then logic says it has to be artificial, and therefore forcing.
Of course, there are exceptions to everything. In a recent set of bidding problems, I had the auction: 1C-1H-2C-2H-2S.
Opener can't possibly have spades (so my prior statement would say that it should be artificial and forcing) but logic again comes to the rescue to tell us otherwise. Both partners have minimum hands and there is apparently a misfit, so 2S can't be artificial and forcing; therefore it has to be something like 3-0-4-6 giving partner a chance to bail in 2S if responder has four spades and a club void. Yes, I realize that is not the fourth suit.
On your auction, I can't dream of a time that opener would want to suggest 3H as a final contract, so it has to be forcing. Since 4H isn't really a viable option on this auction, I would think it would also be artificial; as opener can just bid an appropriate number of notrump with real hearts (even four small should be a stopper on length when neither opponent has mentioned hearts.)
#3
Posted 2017-July-09, 13:24
Liversidge, on 2017-July-09, 12:58, said:
The main question is, what is meant by FSF.
The Acol school, which I prefer, will name any bidding of the 4th suit by either reponder / opener FSF,
in short it is some kind of meta agreement, applicable in lots of scenarios.
The North American style will usually only call it FSF, if the bid showes up in a seq. like
1D - 1S
2C - 2H
If the 4th suit gets bid by responder after a 2/1 response, they will treat it as natural,
and it wont be FSF.
In short, FSF is a convention applicable in a very tightly defined situation.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#4
Posted 2017-July-09, 13:34
#7
Posted 2017-July-10, 23:41
If responder has shown values (either with his 2nd bid or with his first if opener's first rebid was forcing, e.g. 1H-2C-2D) opener can have enough to force to game on the 3rd round and 4sf is as normal.
If responder has not shown values and made a simple 1 level response and a simple 2 level preference or suit religion or rebid 1nt, then opener can't have enough to GF (he would have GFed already at his 2nd bid), so now a bid of the 4th suit is (semi-)natural and forward going, e.g. 1D-1H-1S-1NT-2C (responder has shown nothing and opener didn't jump to 2S over 1H so he hasn't got a GF hand).
#8
Posted 2017-July-11, 05:48
I wonder if the source has mislabelled the example. That would explain the contradiction with the Larry Cohen article.
#9
Posted 2017-July-11, 09:59
In America, there is a widely held school of thought that the fourth suit later in the auction should be natural, sometimes called an Eastern Cue Bid. This difference makes it more important to differentiate properly between 4SF proper and other fourth suit cases.
In short, you should not worry too much about it and continue bidding the way you and your partner did in the first place. Whether you call it 4SF or not is also irrelevant. However, regardless of whether you call it $SF; a Western Cue Bid, or just a generic stopper ask, you have to alert it in the EBU. it is not the name of the convention that makes it alertable but rather the non-natural nature of the call.
#11
Posted 2017-July-11, 12:37
Liversidge, on 2017-July-11, 11:54, said:
2S is forcing.
It is certainly a matter of agreement, if 2H was only forcing upto 2NT / 3D,
but 2S is forcing due to the fact, that 2H created a force upto ...
If it is natural, and responder has a 4 card suit, the partnership should be
able to play 3S or higher.
If responder has no 4 card suit, than for heavens sake, 2NT should have similar
play as 2S in a 4-3 fit.
....
2S natural, ok, I am not repeating my joke about the increased freq. of 5440 hands,
that materialize in N/A., ..., in fact I did, I could not resist, but you can agree
to play 2S as natural.
Given that I have a reasonable alternative with 2NT, I prefer 2S as art., asking for
further description, esp. about a possible stopper, but 2S nat. is ok.
Finally: The promised strength of the 2C bid matters, even in N/A 2C is not GF, but it
is inv.+. If you play a style, that includes the possibility, that you have only half
of the deck, even after the forward going 2H, you need all the brakes you have for stopping
as low as possible.
With kind regards
Marlowe
Uwe Gebhardt (P_Marlowe)
#12
Posted 2017-July-11, 13:34
This question would not arise after a bid of the fourth suit by responder on his second bid. Opener would simply alert every time.
Am I dancing on a pin here or is my question valid? Please bear in mind that I am a novice and am now feeling a bit out of my depth following the responses.
#14
Posted 2017-July-11, 22:32
Zelandakh, on 2017-July-11, 09:59, said:
In America, there is a widely held school of thought that the fourth suit later in the auction should be natural, sometimes called an Eastern Cue Bid. This difference makes it more important to differentiate properly between 4SF proper and other fourth suit cases.
In short, you should not worry too much about it and continue bidding the way you and your partner did in the first place. Whether you call it 4SF or not is also irrelevant. However, regardless of whether you call it $SF; a Western Cue Bid, or just a generic stopper ask, you have to alert it in the EBU. it is not the name of the convention that makes it alertable but rather the non-natural nature of the call.
I don't think you can have a cue bid, either eastern or western, in an uncontested auction.
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#15
Posted 2017-July-12, 09:50
blackshoe, on 2017-July-11, 22:32, said:
You are right on the proper nomenclature and it illustrates the point perfectly that the name you use is irrelevant when it comes to alerting. For all of these 4th suit cases, the EBU regulation is clear - you alert if the bid is not natural (ie showing length in context) and do not alert if it is. You also alert if the call is natural but has a potentially unexpected meaning in addition.
The case where there is no agreement and you are unsure if the bid is natural or not is also clear in the EBU. You alert if any of the potential meanings are alertable. In practice, this means that you pretty much alert every potentially dual-meaning bid below 3NT.
#16
Posted 2017-July-16, 21:33
This is a simple rule. Probably not "standard" and not optimal either, though, as there are some auctions, for example
1♦-1♥
1♠-1NT
2♣*
where the fourth suit is best played as natural and non-forcing (albeit probably encouraging).
I think the best advice to beginners and intermediates is to play it as always artificial, and then at some stage you can make exceptions for specific situations like the one above.