Chess Grand Slam
According to reports in several Spanish papers, including El
Correo Digital and La
Marca, the town of Santurtzi in the Bilbao region of Spain hosted a
very exclusive meeting on Friday the 8th. The organizers of a majority of the
world's top tournaments came together to form the Chess Grand Slam Association,
a project mentioned a few months ago at the MTel
website.

MTel, Linares, and Corus are obvious, but the inclusion on the list of the
Spanish city of Bilbao is something of a surprise. Morelia and Dortmund are
mentioned as potential candidates for inclusion, as well as "maybe a Russian
city." Bilbao has been the home of the human-machine
rapid tournaments over the past two years. Apparently the ambitious
Bilbao organizers, who hosted this meeting, have bigger plans.

Silvio Danailov was there for MTel; Antón Madariaga, Juan Carlos and
Josu Fernández for Bilbao, and Linares mayor Juan Fernández sounded
excited: "We are delighted with the idea. It's something that's been missing.
It will bring a new dimension to chess and create more resources. This sports
needs to modernize. It needs greater diffusion and better marketing and the
union of all the big tournaments will help this be achieved." The Morelia
and Wijk aan Zee organizers were there by telephone.
Here
are a few key excerpts and quotes from the available reports. A few of the items,
particularly that of standardizing the tournament format, aren't yet clear and
we await official comments for clarification.
"To assure the participation of the biggest stars in all the Grand
Slam tournaments, the members of the Association reached a fundamental agreement:
the four top players in the world ranking must play in all four of the events
or they won't be allowed to play in any of them." ...
As things stand now, the organizers of each GS tournament have the freedom
to use whatever format they like. It will be necessary to establish a common
format, say the principals. ...
There will be a single main sponsor and a shared scoring system (10 points
to the winner, 6 for second, 2 for third) by which a yearly champion will be
found. ...
What's more, the Chess Grand Slam Association will make a common front against
internet piracy, where every day there are more servers that copy the
games from the server that bought the rights. ...
A minimum of six and a maximum of 14 players will take part in these international
tournaments. "The winners of each tournament will take place in the Masters,"
added Madariaga, who said the winner would get "a purse of 300,000 euros."
In 2006, only world #1 Veselin Topalov and Etienne Bacrot participated in Corus
Wijk aan Zee, Morelia/Linares, and the MTel in Sofia, Bulgaria. #2 Anand didn't
play in Linares; #3 Svidler missed Corus; #4 Aronian didn't play in Sofia. (Using
the January 2006 list in effect when those events were played. Invitations for
Corus and probably Linares would likely use the list from the previous calendar
year.)
The Association of Chess Professionals has its own Tour point system. The old
Grandmaster Chess Association had a World Cup series of events that ran from
1988-91, but those were new tournaments, not a confederation of traditional
ones.