DW Sports calls in administrators as it looks to close shops and save gyms after lockdown

Sports retailer and gym group DW Sports has said it is going into administration, with 1,700 employees at risk.
DW Fitness First in Timber Beach Road in Sunderland. Image copyright Google Maps.DW Fitness First in Timber Beach Road in Sunderland. Image copyright Google Maps.
DW Fitness First in Timber Beach Road in Sunderland. Image copyright Google Maps.

The company is expected to appoint insolvency specialists on today, Monday, August 3, after its income was wiped out by the protracted closure of stores and gyms during lockdown.

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DW Sports, founded by former Wigan Athletic owner Dave Whelan, operated 73 gyms and 75 retail sites across the UK but announced plans to shut 25 of its stores last month.

DW Sports retailer and gym group said it is to tumble into administration, with 1,700 employees at risk. Photo by Nick Potts/PA Wire.DW Sports retailer and gym group said it is to tumble into administration, with 1,700 employees at risk. Photo by Nick Potts/PA Wire.
DW Sports retailer and gym group said it is to tumble into administration, with 1,700 employees at risk. Photo by Nick Potts/PA Wire.
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It has stressed that Fitness First, which is a sister company of DW, will continue to operate as a separate company and its 43 clubs will be unaffected by the administration.

Its sites include DW Fitness First gym in Timber Beach Road in North Hylton, Sunderland, as well as another in Byker.

The company said it will now wind down its retail business, with its website ceasing trading and closing-down sales at its 50 remaining stores - they include one in the Metrocentre and another in Byker.

The PA news agency understands it plans to protect as many jobs and gyms as possible through the restructuring process.

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The administrators intend to support employees, customers and gym members as far as possible while they look to secure a buyer or buyers for some or all of the DW Sports portfolio.

At present, 59 of its gyms have reopened in England and Northern Ireland, including its Wearside branch, with a further 14 sites in England, Scotland and Wales unable to open due to Government restrictions.

Chief executive Martin Long said: "As a consequence of Covid-19, we found ourselves in a position where we were mandated by Government to close down both our retail store portfolio and our gym chain in its entirety for a protracted period, leaving us with a high fixed-cost base and zero income.

"Like many other retail businesses, the consequences of this extremely challenging operating market have created inevitable profitability issues for DW Sports.

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"The decision to appoint administrators has not been taken lightly but will give us the best chance to protect viable parts of the business, return them to profitability, and secure as many jobs as possible.”

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