The New Zealand Herald

Babies of Eden Park need our support

Venue should be concert-approved even when not saving bubs

- Matt Heath

Auckland doesn’t need a new billion-dollar stadium. We have heaps of good ones already. Take Eden Park. Maybe we chuck a roof on top at some point but apart from that she’s great. The major problem with our national stadium is they aren’t allowed to use it much.

That’s why I was excited about this huge announceme­nt last week. “Eden Park has applied to the Auckland Council for resource

consent to hold a massive concert headlined by a ‘globally renowned artist’ next Waitangi Day.”

This super event will launch the Sir Ray Avery Foundation LifePod Appeal. A Live Aid-style concert with lots of bands and other stuff which aims to save one million babies.

A concert at the stadium for a good cause is a fantastic idea. But I’d argue holding major musical events in the middle of our city is a good cause in itself. Big concerts bring happiness to tens of thousands. Eden Park is the only major stadium in the country that isn’t allowed to do it.

On Wednesday morning I joined a crowd of shivering Aucklander­s in the South Stand for this public announceme­nt. After an intro from CEO Nick Sautner and his swaddled baby the great Sir Ray Avery spoke. He reminded me of Jurassic Park owner John Hammond as he stood proudly beside his creation.

A futuristic baby-saving invention. Although to be fair I couldn’t really see him. I was behind internatio­nal cricketing superstar batsman Martin Guptill. What a specimen. Tall, wiry, fast. Firm, proud buttocks.

The pre-eminent scientist broke the sad news that he only has 5000 days left. Don’t worry there’s nothing wrong with him.

He’s 71 so he’s planning on hitting his mid 80s. Hopefully he lives much longer. He’s done so much but is determined to do even more with his remaining years. That’s why he’s invented this tough, stylish-looking incubator. Took him 10 years. If the Eden Park event raises $4 million he can build and ship enough of these to save a million little babies. That’s if the event gets consent.

In my opinion Eden Park should be allowed to hold concerts even when it’s not saving infants. We all know there are global superstars gagging for our 40,000-seater central city stadium. As our top promoter Brent Eccles put it in a previous column “we set up a stadium with the biggest capacity but don’t allow the biggest events to play there”.

So the big question is, who will this major artist be? (If the event gets the support it needs). David Bowie, Prince and Tom Petty can’t make it. I doubt they will go for the likes of Slayer, Metallica or Celine Dion (wrong vibe).

Also they’re saving babies so it’s unlikely to be anyone profane. Sadly that rules out Conner4Rea­l, Style Boyz and Hunter the Hungry. Also those last three are fictional bands from the film Pop Stars Never Stop Never Stopping. Very funny movie. It’s on Netflix at the moment. The closing song Incredible Thoughts featuring Michael Bolton will blow your mind.

So ruling out the dead, the inappropri­ate and the fictional who could the internatio­nal artist joining the line up be? Apparently we find out in two months. That’s if the consent gets signed off by the council.

A big Eden Park event would be especially good and handy for people like me who live super close to the venue. What a treat to have a massive show in your neighbourh­ood. That’s why Eden Park has been flooded with messages of support from their “Hood” community. But it wouldn’t just be for lucky locals. Eden Park is central. So equally handy for the North Shore, the West, the East and the South.

A major musical event at our national stadium in our biggest city is a good thing in itself. Throw in a million babies saved and you’d have to really try hard to want to oppose it. If you like the idea have your say. A great event, in the middle of a great city for a great cause. Surely everyone will be onboard. Surely.

 ?? Photo / Greg Bowker ?? Sir Ray Avery wants a Live Aid style concert with lots of bands which aims to save one million babies.
Photo / Greg Bowker Sir Ray Avery wants a Live Aid style concert with lots of bands which aims to save one million babies.
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