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    New Minor Forcing (and Two Way New 
    Minor Forcing) - After  opener rebids 1 Notrump (or 2 Notrump), New 
    Minor Forcing operates similar to Stayman.  New Minor Forcing allows 
    the 11+ point responder 
    to explore a game fit by discovering the length of opener's major suit 
    holdings and specific strength.  The bid says nothing about the new 
    minor, the bid is strictly conventional (alertable), both artificial and 
    forcing. 
    The idea behind New Minor Forcing is that opener's 1 Notrump rebid shows a 
    balanced hand with values beneath 1 Notrump opening values (or above 1 
    Notrump opening values for those who open a weak or mini Notrump).  Subsequent 
    New Minor Forcing is used to locate 
    a major 4-4 or 
    5-3 major suit fit. 
    Opener's 1 Notrump bid typically shows 12-14 points (or a bad 15), where the responder often has 11-12 points.  
    After responder's New Minor Force, opener is captain signaling  a 
    negative or one of several positive responses to find game (although responder may already have game values seeking 
    the best fit or even initiating a slam try).  The responder normally 
    holds 5 cards in the bid major or at least 4 cards in the opposite major 
    (Hearts).  
     
    Many variations are possible playing New Minor Forcing (see below) including 
    whether responder's follow-up bids are forcing or invitational.
 
      
        | 1D - 1S;1N - 2C
 | 1C - 1H;1N - 2D
 |  
        | 1D - 1S; 2N - 3C
 | 1C - 1S; 2N - 3D
 |  
        | Some play New Minor Forcing on over major suits, too: |  
        | 1H - 1S; 1N - 2C
 | 1H - 1S; 1N - 2D
 |  
    The New Minor Forcing bid asks opener to show major support and strength.  
    With 4 in the opposite major, responder first bids the new suit, belatedly 
    showing 3 card support of responder's major if necessary.  Playing a 4-4 major fit 
    often takes more overall tricks by promoting responder's 5 card side-suit.  
    Opener's prioritized rebids are:
 
      
        | 1. | Minimum | 2 level of the other major 
        with 4 cards in suit |  
        | 2. | 2 level of responder's 
        major with 3 cards support  |  
        | 3. | Maximum | 3 level of the other major 
        with 4 cards in suit |  
        | 4. | 3 level of responder's 
        major with 3 cards support  |  
        | 5. | Minimum | 2 Notrump |  
        | 6. | Maximum | 3 Notrump |  
    Examples of New Minor Forcing:
 
      
        | Bidding | Meaning |  
        | 1C - 1S;1N - 2D;
 2H//3H
 | Responder queries NMF with 4 Hearts 
        or 5 Spades or both:With a minimum 12-13 point hand and 4 Hearts, opener rebids 2H.
 With a good 14-15 points and 4 Hearts, opener rebids 3H.
 |  
        | 1C - 1S;1N - 2D;
 2S/3S
 | Responder queries NMF with 4 Hearts 
        or 5 Spades or both:With a minimum 12-13 point hand and 3 Spades, opener rebids 2S.
 With a good 14-15 points and 3 Spades, opener rebids 3S.
 |  
        | 1C - 1S;1N - 2D;
 2N/3N
 | Responder queries NMF with 4 Hearts 
        or 5 Spades or both:Opener has does not have 4 
        Hearts or 3 Spades.
 With a minimum 12-13 point hand, Opener bids 2N - Opener's only 
        available bid to show minimum values.  However, responder maintains 
        captaincy and may continue forcing bids.
 |  
        | 1D - 1S;1N- 2C;
 2H - 2S;
 | Responder's 2S is "checkback", 
        asking opener to belatedly show 3 card Spade support if applicable 
        (responder's first obligation was to show 4 card support of the other 
        major). |  
        | 1D - 1S;1N - 2C;
 2D
 | Partnership agreements vary 
        when opener bids 2D, however Opener typically has a highly 
        unbalanced hand (5-4-3-1, 5-5-2-1) or a hand clearly without a stopper 
        in one suit. |  
        | 1H - 1S;1N - 2C;
 | Many play "New" Minor 
        Forcing applies even after major suit bids. |  
        | 1H - 1S;1N - 2D;
 3D
 | Assuming New Minor Forcing 
        is "on", opener may raise responder's minor with 4 card support and an 
        unbalanced hand and less than 3 card support for responder's major suit. |  
        | 1C - 1S;1N - 2D;
 2H - 3S;
 | A jump bid as responder's 
        third bid is game forcing, promising a very good 5 card or reasonable 6 
        card suit. |  
        | 1D - 1S;1N - 2S;
 | Signoff, responder has a two-suited (black) 
        hand |  
        | 1C - 1H/S;1N - 3D;
 1D - 1H/S;1N - 3C;
 | Most play responder's jump 
        minor rebid as natural, showing a two-suited hand with weak values (6-11 
        points); responder has 4+ cards in the bid major and 5+ in minor.  
        This method allows responder to signoff (since a two-level bid would be 
        New Minor Forcing). However, the legacy 
        treatment (Bill Root, "Modern Bridge 
        Conventions", pg 66) consider these 
        sequences game forcing. |  
        | 1m - 1H/S;1N - 2om;
 any - 3om
 | Some partners play 
        responder's minor suit rebid ("om" = other minor) shows a two-suited invitational 
        hand.  Other advanced partners prefer to play rebidding a new minor 
        is artificial and slam invitational. |  
    Two Way New Minor Forcing An popular 
    alternative to simplify some of the confusion is the Two Way New Minor 
    Forcing structure.  This treatment always uses 2C 
    to show an invitational game with 2D to show game forcing values.  
    Thus, bidding 2D allows partnerships to bid naturally and use other 
    system treatments ("slow shows - fast denies", cue bidding controls, etc). 
      
        | 1C/D - 1M;1N      - 2C;
 | 2C is always 
        invitational |  
        | 1C/D - 1M;1N      - 2D;
 | 2D is always game 
        forcing |  Areas requiring partnership agreement: 
      
        | 1. | Interference by opponents - 
        many play NMF  is "off" |  
        | 2. | New Minor by a passed hand 
        - many play NMF is still on |  
        | 3. | New Minor after opener's 
        2N rebid - many play NMF is "on" |  
        | 4. | "New" Minor when 
        opener's 
        first bid was a major as1H - 1S; 1N - 2C;  Many play this sequence as NMF "on";
 Responder's minor, 2C or 2D, shows the stronger minor
 |  
        | 5. | Opener's 2D second 
        rebid after 1N - many play a highly unbalanced hand or without a 
        stopper in one suit |  
        | 6. | Responder's 3 level minor 
        rebid (third bid) - some play this shows responder's two-suited 
        game invitational values.  Some advanced partners play this 
        sequence is artificial and slam invitational. |  
        | 7. | Responder's 3 level minor 
        rebid (second bid) - many play this as a two-suited signoff; the legacy 
        treatment considers this sequence as game forcing. |  
        | 8. | Two-way New Minor Forcing - 
        determine affects on NMF invitational 2C sequences |  Examples of
    Two Way New Minor Forcing:
 
      
        | Bidding | Meaning |  
        | 1C/D - 1S;1N - 2C;
 | Responder queries 2C as 
        invitational Two Way NMF with 4 Hearts or 5 Spades or both.Regardless of opener's initial minor suit bid, responder's 2C bid is 
        artificial and only 1 round forcing.
 |  
        | 1C/D - 1S;1N - 2D;
 | Responder queries 2D as 
        game forcing Two Way NMF with 4 Hearts or 5 Spades or both.Regardless of opener's initial minor suit bid, responder's 2D bid is 
        artificial and game forcing.
 |  Note: as described above, NMF has several permutations requiring 
    partnership agreement.  Other treatments include 
    Checkback Stayman and the 
    X-Y-Z convention.
 |