The New Zealand Herald

Lions fans roar into Wellington

- Nikki Preston

The All Blacks v Lions test in Wellington saw the biggest increase of internatio­nal guests to a New Zealand town during the tour with a whopping 245 per cent more people visiting the capital than in previous weeks.

Auckland also benefited from hosting the two other test matches seeing 60 per cent and 40 per cent rises respective­ly in numbers for the first and second games, according to figures provided by location insights provider Qrious.

The number of visitors to cities hosting a Lions game were compared with an average visitor number calculated during the past six weeks prior to the match.

The smaller towns also saw massive increases.

Hospitalit­y New Zealand general manager of communicat­ions Rachael Shadbolt said the presence of Lions supporters in Wellington between the Hurricanes game on the Tuesday and the All Blacks game on the Saturday was evident.

Bar tills near the stadium were ringing before both games and Courtenay Place was heaving after.

She said bars and restaurant­s were prepared for the crowds after learning from the event 12 years earlier and had reaped the benefits.

Shadbolt said the series also provided a big boost for smaller regions who would not have normally benefited during the low June season.

“In general the Lions tour was a really good boost in our off-season which is in general where you want major events to land.”

But the spike in internatio­nal guests visiting Auckland during the All Blacks games was a stark contrast to the Blues game earlier in the

The Lions tour was a really good boost in our off-season which is in general where you want major events to land. Rachael Shadbolt, Hospitalit­y NZ

series which failed to bring in any additional overseas guests to Auckland on the night they played the Lions.

Shadbolt said this could have been due to the game being early on in the series, on a weekday and because the Auckland market was an anomaly.

Auckland always had a high occupancy so the visitor figures were not likely to be as drastic.

There had also been a large number of corporate visitors getting business done in the city before the tour combined with the Masters Games held at the end of April.

Whereas smaller cities such as Whangarei and Hamilton saw a massive spike as a result of hosting the NZ Barbarians and Chiefs games.

The figures showed Whangarei had just 620 more visitors to the city on the night of the NZ Barbarians game — the first in the series — but it was a 91 per cent increase on the same time last year.

A further 12,000 domestic visitors were also in Whangarei for the first game, during Queen’s Birthday weekend — a 150 per cent increase.

Northland NZ general manager of regional promotions and tourism Paul Davis said even though there were less Lions supporters around at the start of the tour, it was still a “real boom” for the city with a large number of Aucklander­s travelling up for the reasonably priced game.

Hamilton also welcomed 3500 more overseas internatio­nal visitors during the game and some 6000 people or just 10 per cent more visited Christchur­ch when the Crusaders kicked off on home soil.

The figures also revealed there were some die-hard fans with about 1000 Aucklander­s and 600 UK visitors attending all 10 games.

 ?? Picture / Brett Phibbs ?? Lions fans ready to claw back the series during the final test match at Eden Park.
Picture / Brett Phibbs Lions fans ready to claw back the series during the final test match at Eden Park.

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