Steven Holloway - 2016 Champions League Final at the San Siro
As an Auckland based footy fan, I get to watch approximately two live games of professional football a year - of A-League quality. So the thought of watching Messi, Neymar and Suarez play together live (because lets face it, Barca are going to the final this year) is as exciting as it is incomprehensible . Watching Messi in his prime is bucket-list material and this year's Champs League final, at the great San Siro Stadium in Italy, is a stage worthy of his greatness.
David Leggat: French Open tennis
Okay primarily because it's in Paris. And it's in spring. Tough combination to beat.
Patrick McKendry: Three weeks on the Tour de France
For drama, chaos, in-fighting and epic feats of human suffering it's hard to go past the Tour de France. For three weeks in the French summer - starting this year in the beautiful sea-side fortification of Mont Saint Michel on July 2 - it's all about the bike and in particular the finest carbon fibre machines known to man. It's also about an ever-changing landscape, coffee, croissants and the occasional cold beer (for the press anyway).
This year the 103rd Tour will be made up of 21 stages and will cover 3,519km. Included is a climb of the famous Mont Ventoux, and a visit to Switzerland, so add beautiful chocolate to the above list. In 2008 I was lucky enough to see the tour roll through a couple of villages in the south of France, and got a glimpse of Kiwi Julian Dean and his black and white national champion kit. Another, longer, visit would be most welcome sil vous plait.
Matt Brown - Anfield
As a lifelong Liverpool Football Club fan, it's got to be tickets on the Kop at Anfield for a match against Manchester United or the Merseyside derby against Everton.
No stadium generates a better atmosphere than Anfield when the club anthem 'You'll Never Walk Alone' is sung.
Trevor McKewen - Billabong Pro at Teahupoo
If there's a modern day gladiatorial arena of man versus nature, it has to the Billabong Pro surfing content held annually at the treacherous Tahitian break of Teahupoo. If you can snare a seat on a spectator boat, you sit in the channel only metres away from some of the most powerful and frightening waves in the world. Unlike watching a surf contest from the beach, you are staring straight into the jaws of one of Mother Nature's most awe-inspiring creations watching the world's best surfers attempting to defy fear, gravity and a seething wall of water the size of a double storey building. And then if they make the wave, they whiz past you as the wave's spray drenches you. Where else can you sit so close to premier sporting action?