10. Robert Plant/ Led Zeppelin
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Current Odds: 25-1 While many of the acts at 2014 seemed to play some underwhelming sets, Robert Plant was simply mesmerising, striding the stage with a vigour that would have embarrassed many of the younger bands out there. While the Eavis family have in past years preferred to have at least one major, current British band amongst the headliners, they seem to have developed a fondness recently for heritage acts. Who could reasonably be bigger news than Led Zep? While the idea has been mooted for years and widely derided, the idea of Led Zeppelin reforming seems less unlikely now than it would have done even six months ago. Jimmy Page has went on record as saying that he and John Paul Jones were all for playing together again and that it was only Plant's reticence to reunite again that has held the prospect back. It seems to be very much a ploy by Page to force Plant's hand, in a it's-now-or-never fashion. Whether or not it works is entirely down to Plant's attitude towards his former bandmates - he often speaks of how he feels that Page looks down upon him as a "country bumpkin". As magnificent as a full Led Zep reunion would be, a solo Plant headline slot would be a terrific consolation prize. His solo work and records with Alison Krauss are sublime and the man constantly rewrites his own legacy.