Tonight's Run of the ECMWF does have that taking place.


And it also has the block near England, retrograding back across the Atlantic. the 50/50 low however seems to be slightly displaced southeast of Newfoundland, which is the position you would want it to be for optimal effect on the synoptic pattern.
The 50/50 low should sharpen the wavelengths and possibly help to turn the NAO slightly negative. But most of that will depend on where the retrograding block ends up.
The Polar vortex is in a climatological position over baffin Island, and relatively weak, so there would not be that strong of a jet in the confluence underneath it to prevent shortwaves from digging. There is also some evidence of a PNA ridge across the western part of North America. With the 50/50 low in place, that is one of the three features which we need to see for the s/w coming into the rockies to be forced further south, to get around it.
Also on day 6, we have a closed low just west of spain which could be siggnificant too.

The ECMWF tonight, has been taking a step in the right direction, with keeping the surface low further south than what the operational GFS runs have recently, and does re-develop it off the coast on Day 7.

The 12z GFS had the same thing, but the 50/50 low was not as developed.

Anyway, my theory is simple, the mid week system bombs out and becomes the new 50/50 low, which causes the s/w coming out of the plains to take a more southeast track. The initial system moves to the Eastern Great Lakes region, and then re-develops along the east coast. We should have a better idea on whether or not this is going to happen once we see what transpires with the mid week storm.
This afternoon's 12z UKMET had the weekend system taking a much more suppressed track than the operational GFS,
