Gower has been involved in a number of alcohol-related off-field incidents. In 1999, Gower exposed himself to a female Irish tourist in a
Coogee bar, blaming his behaviour on alcohol intoxication. He was dumped from the squad and fined A$2,500 by the
NRL and a further A$500 in court after pleading guilty to indecent exposure. In December 2005, Gower was fired as Panthers captain after incidents at a charity golf event where he argued with several guests,
groped the then teenage daughter of former league player
Wayne Pearce, chased
Mitchell Pearce with a bottle before vomiting on him, streaked nude around the resort, stole and crashed a golf cart, held a butter knife to the throat of a Sydney radio personality before throwing it at resort guests, and engaged in a brawl with resort security before being ejected from the official function and detained by police. He was handed a "final warning" by the
National Rugby League and fined A$100,000, with A$90,000 to be paid to an NRL programme encouraging the responsible use of alcohol by league players and $10,000 to replace the destroyed golf cart. Gower was "deeply unhappy" that the
Penrith Panthers club did not defend his reputation, and at one stage threatened to "walk" from the club. Allegedly inebriated with alcohol in a bar at
Kings Cross on 11 February 2007, Gower allegedly tried to kiss one man before biting him on the neck and sparking a brawl, and is accused of assaulting another man. The Panthers club controversially reappointed Gower as captain in 2007, claiming the Peppermint Lounge incident was just a media "beat-up". Australian swimmer
Dawn Fraser said Gower was unfit to be captain, due to his alleged lewd behaviour at the charity golf event which she attended, and
Sarah Maddison, spokesperson for the Women's Electoral Lobby, said "reappointing Craig Gower would send all the wrong messages." ==References==