9th December 2025
Grey Power Urges Extreme Caution for Seniors Attending Major Sporting Events After Assault Outside Auckland Stadium
Grey Power is urging older New Zealanders to take extreme care when attending major sporting events this summer, following a disturbing incident in which one of its members was harassed and assaulted outside an Auckland stadium.
The member, a 62-year old football supporter, was leaving Western Springs Stadium on Saturday evening when he was followed by four young men who subjected him to a prolonged barrage of verbal abuse, including misogynistic and homophobic slurs, and attempted to provoke a physical confrontation.
“This was not harmless rowdiness,” says Grey Power President Gayle Chambers. “It was targeted intimidation. Four men followed one of our members and subjected him to a vile torrent of abuse as he was leaving the stadium. No one should feel unsafe simply for attending a sporting event.”
Despite the seriousness of the incident, the victim was advised that police do not have the resources to investigate the matter to pursue the offenders. Grey Power says this raises wider concerns about public safety around stadiums, particularly during the busy summer events period and on high-risk days involving heavy alcohol consumption.
“We’re advising our members to take extreme care when attending large sporting events,” Chambers says. “Please ensure you are well supported, travel in a group where possible, and avoid isolated areas when leaving a venue.”
The organisation also noted the growing connection between binge-drinking rituals — such as the unofficial “Crate Day” celebrations which took place on Saturday, December 6 — and behaviour that creates unsafe environments for seniors and families alike.
“What happened to our member reflects a broader cultural problem,” the spokesperson said. “Alcohol-fuelled bravado and pack behaviour are increasingly spilling into places where people should feel safe. Sporting events are community occasions, not arenas for intimidation.”
Grey Power is calling for:
• Stronger, visible security and policing outside major stadiums;
• Improved crowd-management planning on high-risk weekends;
• A national conversation about alcohol-fuelled aggression and the social norms that enable it.
“Respect should not end at the stadium gate,” Chambers says. “Older New Zealanders deserve to enjoy public events without fear. No one — and certainly no senior — should be left vulnerable because a small group decides that humiliation is a sport.”
Kind regards,
G.Y. CHAMBERS
Gayle Chambers
National President