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Evans Cycles branch closures fewer than expected at time of Sports Direct takeover

Sports Direct owner Mike Ashley had warned half of Evans' stores would have to close when he bought it in October 2018...

Two Evans Cycles stores in London, plus branches in Leeds and Macclesfield, have put up their shutters in recent months in the latest wave of closures since the retailer was bought by Mike Ashley’s Sports Direct group in October 2018 - but far fewer branches have closed since the takeover.

The closures, flagged up here by Cycling Industry News, mean that a net total of 11 stores have now closed since the retail tycoon bought the troubled retailer out of administration – although at the time of the acquisition, Ashley suggested that half of Evans’ 62 stores would have to close.

“In order to save the business, we only believe we will be able to keep 50 per cent of stores open in the future,” he said.

Soaring overheads, including rising rents, were among the factors that led the business, which is due to celebrate its centenary next year, to call in the administrators.

Sports Direct’s annual report and accounts for the 52 weeks to 28 April 2019 reveal that it bought Evans for cash consideration of £8 million plus £8.0m plus £0.8m of other assets, and that in the six months following the acquisition the business had an operating loss of £17.8 on revenue of £44.6 million.

Immediately after buying Evans, Sports Direct appointed commercial property specialists CBRE to carry out a review of the retailer’s estate.

CBRE’s head of national agency, James Keany, said: “We are looking forward to working with landlords in order to help create a sustainable business,” including discussing “the future of individual stores.”

Both the Chiswick (closed in October) and Macclesfield (November) stores were located in close proximity to branches of Halfords, while the Chalk Farm store in Camden (also closed in November) was only a kilometre or so away from another Evans branch next to St Pancras station.

The store in Leeds is the second branch to have been closed in the West Yorkshire city, following the closure of a smaller site at Leeds railway station’s Cycle Point, but only temporarily; a replacement is on its way, with Evans saying on its website, “We'll be back in January with a brand new store.”

Another recent casualty is the Evans store on The Cut near Waterloo station, one of the company’s longest-standing branches.

In all, some 51 branches are listed as currently trading on the company’s website, with some of the earlier closures – the Mark Lane branch near Tower Hill in the City of London, for example – no longer appearing.

As we reported yesterday in our article containing a Q&A with one of the company’s employees involved in the takeover of an Evans branch Instagram account which has been renamed Make Evans Great Again, uncertainty over branch closures is one of the issues said to be affecting staff morale at the business.

> Make Evans Great Again: Evans Cycles investigating "re-purposed" Instagram account (plus exclusive Q+A)

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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schlepcycling | 4 years ago
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This is a typical business tactic, make a statement that you 'may' close 50% of stores and then everyone's grateful when you 'only' close 25% of stores which is actually what you planned to do in the first place.  It's exactly the same tactic when a company is looking to make redundancies. they announce that it might be a really high number and when it's only 1/2 what they said it might be those that keep their jobs think you're a great employer for not laying them off.  Typical managemnent BS!.

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jollygoodvelo | 4 years ago
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Was surprised to see recently that the Spitalfields store near Liverpool Street station in London had closed.  If they couldn't keep a presence in the City with its thousands of comparatively affluent commuters, what hope for the rest of the shops?  I realise that there are still other branches at London Bridge and Canary Wharf but in City terms that's not 'just round the corner'.

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werics | 4 years ago
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Beating your own estimates isn't beating anything. It just means you made poor estimates.

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ROOTminus1 | 4 years ago
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**Breaking News**

Bricks and Mortar store with inconsistent knowledge, cheapening product range, and questionable management continues to fail to operate profitably (!)

I've tried to support my local store, I bought my mtb from there as it was the right spec bike for a reasonable price, but had to get a warranty replacement after the first ride as it hadn't been built up properly, not the level of customer service you'd expect when someone drops £2.7k. In the end, the front of shop guy who races and clearly lives and breathes bikes checked the build of the replacement as he seemed to know more than the person actually on the spanners in the back. Because of that I've never taken it back for a service, instead plumping for independent mechanics who have a good deal more reputation than Evans.

I can appreciate how the frontline staff feel, as I worked at Millets when they folded, but there is a question of how relavent the stores can remain in the current high street, particularly when sticking to the same old operating models.

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alansmurphy | 4 years ago
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The proximity to Halfords should really have had jack shit to do with Macclesfield. There's about 3 stores in Manchester (velodrome and deansgate make sense) then you're talking about Chester or the Midlands for proximity.

 

That area of East Cheshire has the Cat & Fiddle, Gunn Hill, Wincle, The Peak District, Macclesfield Forest, Jason and Laura Kenny on their Cheshire doorstep and should certainly be able to attract people looking for more than Apollo / Ridge products

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