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Van Halen Closing in on Orioles
08/12/2005 7:57 PM, E! Online Joal Ryan
If Van Halen was a sports franchise, the argument could be made
it'd be the dysfunctional, "Bronx Zoo" version of the New York Yankees.
In which case the Baltimore Orioles might be in trouble.
More often than not, the Yankees of that era beat the Orioles.
A showdown between Van Halen, the hard-rock supergroup, and
the Baltimore Orioles, the fourth-place baseball club, is on after a
judge rejected the team's attempt to bench the band's lawsuit challenge,
the Baltimore Sun reported Friday. The start of the trial, set
for Los Angeles, is "imminent," a Van Halen lawyer told the Associated
Press.
The rivalry dates back to last year, when Van Halen
filed a federal lawsuit alleging the Orioles reneged on a deal to bring
the then-touring band to the team's Camden Yards. The would-be Sept. 2,
2004 concert would have been a first for the baseball-only facility.
Presumably more important to Van Halen, the concert would have brought
it about $1.5 million, plus an 80 percent cut of ticket and merchandise
sales, the band claimed in the suit.
Technically, the
suit is being pursued by Van Halen's management company, the newspaper
said. The firm seeks at least $2 million in payback from the Orioles.
Even without a stop in Baltimore, Van Halen hit 80 cities
during its 2004 tour. Billed as a new beginning for the veteran band,
with "Right Now" singer Sammy Hagar back on vocals, the road trip ended
with Hagar and guitar god Eddie Van Halen coming close to a
bench-clearing brawl, Hagar recently told Billboard.
"It was a horrible way to end the whole thing," Hagar said in the
music-industry magazine. "So, I just say, 'Man, that's it for me. I'm
not playing with people like this.'"
Van Halen, the band,
has been on hiatus as a recording and touring act since the tour ended
last November, leaving bassist Michael Anthony time to touting the
pending release of his two new barbecue sauce varietals, Mad Anthony's
Original and Extra Hot. ("Reinforce the asbestos underwear," Anthony
wrote on his Website this month.)
Meanwhile, Hagar, out on
the road again this summer as a solo act, occasionally backed by
Anthony, told Billboard he held out hope that Van Halen, the
rocker who used to be "a fun guy," might "change back, and then we can
do it again."
After all, comebacks are part of baseball.
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