"We may be holding an event in a parking lot somewhere."
So says WWE Chairman Vince McMahon, vowing not to back down to The Denver
Nuggets, The Pepsi Center, or the NBA.
The AP reports:
Kobe Bryant and the Los Angeles Lakers are scheduled
to be at the Pepsi Center in Denver next Monday night.
Problem is, so are John Cena and a bunch of
wrestlers — and they called it first.
World Wrestling Entertainment said it is booked at
the arena for an episode of Monday Night Raw, the same night the Nuggets are
slated to host the Lakers in Game 4 of the Western Conference
finals.
WWE chairman Vince McMahon told The Associated Press
he doesn't believe there was "any malice, just ineptness," on the part of
Kroenke Sports, which owns the team and the building, but can't tolerate the
company "just simply throwing us out on our ear."
Without a quick resolution, McMahon plans to send
his trucks to Denver.
"That's what we intend to do," he said. "We're going
to show up."
WWE spokesman Robert Zimmerman said the organization
secured the Pepsi Center last Aug. 15 and has already sold more than 10,000
tickets for the event. He says the organization expects a sellout, with tickets
ranging from $20 to $70.
McMahon blamed Kroenke for not believing his team
was good enough to still be playing in mid-May.
"The fans in Denver had a lot more faith in making
the playoffs than the owner," he said in a phone interview from Louisville,
where Raw was taking place later Monday night.
Denver is usually done with basketball by now. The
Nuggets had lost in the first round five straight years, but as the No. 2 seed
in the West are in the conference finals for the first time since
1985.
Paul Andrews, executive vice president of Kroenke
Sports Enterprises, issued a statement Monday night concerning the scheduling
conflict, saying: "We are working with the WWE to resolve the situation
amicably."
The league, which handles scheduling during the
playoffs, is leaving it up to the team and the WWE to figure things
out.
"The Nuggets and the WWE understand that the date of
Game 4 of the Western Conference Finals cannot be changed," NBA senior vice
president Mike Bass said. "We are confident that the Pepsi Center and the WWE
will resolve their scheduling conflict."
Zimmerman said the Pepsi Center confirmed in March
with the WWE that the organization wanted to keep the May 25 date, and sent a
contract on April 15 — the final night of the regular season — which WWE signed
and returned. Tickets went on sale April 11.
The conflict didn't arise until Sunday, when the
Lakers beat the Houston Rockets in Game 7 of the Western Conference semifinals.
Had the Rockets won, Denver would have had home-court advantage in the next
round, hosting Games 1 and 2 and putting the May 25 game in
Houston.
As of Monday afternoon, the schedule on the Pepsi
Center's Web site listed WWE for 6:30 p.m. local time and Western Conference
finals Game 4 at 7 p.m. Tickets for the wrestling event could still be purchased
online.
McMahon said he couldn't guess how much he would
make from the show, but that canceling wasn't easy because of how much is
involved in moving his equipment, plus filling its obligated time slot on USA
Network. Litigation is likely — but he plans to be putting on a
card.
"When you do have a date, you plan everything around
it," he said, adding, "we may be holding an event in a parking lot
somewhere."