Lurpoa, on 2011-June-05, 03:47, said:
Indeed, of of those sequences where you never know how a pick-up partner might will react.
All partnerships should have very clear agreements on the of 4NTquantitative.
Concerning SAYC:
4NT quanti only defined after a direct raise of of the 1NT and 2NT openers, or after a 2NTrebid after a 2♣ opener.
And for BWS2001 2/1 defaults:
QUOTE
If an non-discussed but clearlyforcing non-competitivefour-notrump bid might logically be interpreted as more than one ofthese alternatives, the priority order of interpretation is
(1) ace- or key-card-asking convention,
(2) offer of general slam encouragement,
(3) control-showing bid.
UNQUOTE
So, in the proposed sequence: ace asking.
All partnerships of course sit down and form very clear agreements on every possible sequence.
Suuure they do!
SAYC is not "Standard American". BWS is a variant of 2/1, but it does not define "standard" 2/1. Your conclusion is not a correct answer to my question.
Regarding "may not be well defined". Responder can't have a fit for partner's suit. He can't have a five card suit of his own (he would reverse, or jump shift, or make some other forcing call). He has a balanced hand. As for HCP, if he had 21-22, he'd just bid 6NT, so he has 19-20. All of that is just bridge logic, but we
have at least agreed on the point range and that the hand will be balanced.