In rotating viscous fluid stars, tidal torque leads to an exchange of spin
and orbital angular momentum. The horizon of a black hole has an effective
viscosity that is large compared to that of stellar fluids, and an effective
tidal torque may lead to important effects in the strong field interaction at
the endpoint of the inspiral of two rapidly rotating holes. In the most
interesting case both holes are maximally rotating and all angular momenta
(orbital and spins) are aligned. We point out here that in such a case (i) the
transfer of angular momentum may have an important effect in modifying the
gravitational wave ``chirp'' at the endpoint of inspiral. (ii) The tidal
transfer of spin energy to orbital energy may increase the amount of energy
being radiated. (iii) Tidal transfer in such systems may provide a mechanism
for shedding excess angular momentum. We argue that numerical relativity, the
only tool for determining the importance of tidal torque, should be more
specifically focused on binary configurations with aligned, large, angular
momenta.Comment: 5 pages, 2 figure