1st Grand Slam Masters Final (2008) The inaugural Final was composed of Tata Steel joint winners
Magnus Carlsen and
Levon Aronian, Linares winner
Viswanathan Anand, M-Tel Masters winner
Vassily Ivanchuk, M-Tel runner up
Veselin Topalov and third placed
Teimour Radjabov. Topalov convincingly won the tournament with 17 points, Carlsen beating Aronian to second place. Had Topalov lost to Ivanchuk and Carlsen defeated Anand in the last round, there would have been a tiebreak rapid match. Anand finished in last place ahead of his World Championship defence against
Vladimir Kramnik. :
2nd Grand Slam Masters Final (2009) The second Final consisted of
Sergey Karjakin, the winner of 2009 Corus,
Alexander Grischuk, winner of Linares,
Alexei Shirov, winner in M-Tel Masters, and Aronian, second place at Pearl Spring, replacing Topalov who declined the invitation. Aronian emerged as the clear winner, winning the event with one round to spare. :
3rd Grand Slam Masters Final (2010) The third edition featured four players and took place in the
Alhóndiga Bilbao. It was a
category 22 tournament, the highest rated tournament in history. Qualifiers for the Final were Carlsen (winner of Corus, Bazna Kings and Pearl Springs events) and Anand who was seeded through due to the cancellation of M-Tel Masters that year. Topalov had qualified as winner of Linares 2010 but withdrew from the Final. A tournament was held in
Shanghai,
China consisting of Kramnik, Aronian, Shirov and
Wang Hao in order to fill the two spots. Alexei Shirov and Vladimir Kramnik - by defeating Aronian in an
armageddon tie-break game - qualified. Kramnik then went on to win the Masters Final. : : :
4th Grand Slam Masters Final (2011) In contrast to Grand Slam Masters Finals in the last years, the organizers decided to return to a six-player
double round robin without a special qualification tournament. The first half of the fourth edition was played in
São Paulo from September 25 to October 1, and the second in
Bilbao from October 5 to October 11. The players invited to the Grand Slam Masters Final 2011 were Anand as second-place at Pearl Spring and the Tata Steel, Carlsen, as winner of Bazna and Pearl Spring,
Hikaru Nakamura as winner of Tata Steel and Aronian as highest rated player not qualified, third in the FIDE ratings. Kramnik, the winner of the 2010 Final, and Karjakin, second at Bazna - declined to play and were replaced by Ivanchuk and local player
Francisco Vallejo Pons. Carlsen dominated the Bilbao half of the 4th Final Masters and finished level with Ivanchuk who played so well in the first half. Carlsen won the event after defeating Ivanchuk in a blitz playoff 1.5-0.5. : :
5th Grand Slam Masters Final (2012) The format was a six-player
double round robin. The first half of the fifth edition was played in
São Paulo from September 24 to September 29, and the second in
Bilbao from October 8 to October 13. After Carlsen and Fabiano Caruana tied for first place a tiebreak match took place, which Carlsen won 2–0. : :
6th Grand Slam Masters Final (2013) The sixth Grand Slam Chess Masters final was held on 7–12 October in Bilbao as a double round robin with four players. :
7th Grand Slam Masters Final (2014) The seventh Grand Slam Chess Masters was held from 14 to 20 September in Bilbao as a double round robin with four players. Viswanathan Anand emerged as the winner. :
8th Grand Slam Masters Final (2015) The eighth Masters tournament was held from 26 October to 1 November in Bilbao as a double round robin with four players.
Wesley So won the tournament after beating
Anish Giri in a tiebreak match (blitz playoff). : :
9th Grand Slam Masters Final (2016) The ninth Bilbao Masters Final was held on 13–23 July as a six-player double round-robin with
Magnus Carlsen,
Hikaru Nakamura,
Anish Giri,
Sergey Karjakin,
Wesley So and
Wei Yi taking part. As in previous Bilbao Masters tournaments, the scoring was 3 points for a win, 1 point for a draw, and 0 points for a loss. The games between
Magnus Carlsen and
Sergey Karjakin were highly anticipated, as they would face off at the
World Championship match in November; because
Norway and
Russia were not paired with each other in the
2016 Chess Olympiad, this was the last time the two played each other prior to the
World Championship match.
Hikaru Nakamura defeated
Magnus Carlsen for the first time in standard time controls in the first round and
Magnus Carlsen defeated
Anish Giri for the first time in standard time controls in the penultimate round. : ==References==