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Retail companies specializing in outdoor recreation and sports equipment and based in the United States. Subcategories This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total.
Decathlon, the world's largest sporting good retail chain, [3] [4] opened its first store in Lille, France, in 1976. [5] It now has about 1700 stores in 60 countries and territories. [6] The sector contracted globally in 2007 and 2008, due to the loss of disposable income during the Global Financial Crisis. [2]
Big 5 Sporting Goods store in Glendale, California (2007) Big 5 Sporting Goods Corporation is a sporting goods retailer headquartered in El Segundo, California with 434 stores in Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Texas, Utah, Washington and Wyoming. [6] Steven G. Miller is the chairman, president, and CEO.
Dunham's Sports is an American sporting goods retail chain owned by Dunham's Athleisure Corporation, [2] with stores located in the Midwestern to Southeastern United States. The chain specializes in athletic equipment, clothing, firearms, and other sports-related items.
Rubin sold GSI to eBay later that year for $2.4 billion and bought back the sports e-commerce business, which included online stores for all North American sports leagues along with hundreds of teams and colleges, keeping the name Fanatics, Inc. for the new company moving forward.
Billionaire wealth grew by 17 percent to $6 trillion, according to a report released Thursday by $3 trillion money manager UBS and consultancy PwC.
Sports Unlimited – First store in 1983. In 2008 closed all stores and moved online. Sport Chalet – went bankrupt and closed in 2016; Sportswest – owned by Pay 'n Save and spun off in 1984; acquired by Big 5 Sporting Goods in 1988
Champs Sports was acquired in the 1980s by the Woolworth Corporation, then a specialty store division of the F. W. Woolworth Company.It, along with Foot Locker (which was owned by Woolworth and is now the name of the company that succeeded Woolworth), sold athletic merchandise, replacing the five and dime and department store concepts with the increasing specialty store concept.