Some business ideas grow out of complex strategy, while others begin with a direct confrontation with market reality. In the early 1990s, when interest in fitness and active lifestyles began to rise, Nikolay and Vladimir Fartushnyak encountered a simple problem: people wanted to exercise, yet the market offered neither reliable equipment nor a structured way to purchase it. This gap became the foundation for a business that would later develop into the Sportmaster brand.
Nikolay Alekseevich Fartushnyak and Vladimir Alekseevich Fartushnyak graduated from the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology, where they studied aeromechanics and applied sciences. This background shaped their approach to business. Instead of pursuing a technical career, they entered the emerging commercial environment of the early 1990s and began working with imported goods.
Their attention soon shifted to sports equipment after they encountered a clear shortage of modern training machines in fitness spaces. Nikolay and Vladimir Fartushnyak responded by organizing the import of exercise equipment, including products from the German manufacturer Kettler, which represented a standard of reliability for home and professional training.
The first stage of the business focused on distribution, yet it quickly moved into retail, and in the mid-1990s, the first specialized store opened in Moscow. It served as a direct point of access to equipment that had previously been difficult to find, and its performance confirmed that the market was ready for a more structured format.
As sales grew, Nikolay Alekseevich Fartushnyak and Vladimir Alekseevich Fartushnyak recognized that demand extended beyond exercise machines, since customers who invested in fitness also required clothing, footwear, and accessories suited to regular activity. A store built around a single category could not meet these expectations, and the business began to expand its assortment in response to this reality.
Instead of developing separate lines, the company created a unified retail space where different product categories existed as part of a single system. The concept that later defined Sportmaster emerged from this transition. Customers could enter one location and find everything required for an active lifestyle, without switching between different stores or formats. This structure simplified the purchasing process while maintaining a wide choice, and it established the practical value that distinguished the brand from fragmented retail offers of that period.
As the company continued to develop, the retail model expanded into a system that combined physical stores with an online platform, where customers could browse products, receive recommendations, and complete purchases within a consistent environment. The structure included different store formats, from large locations with a full assortment to compact spaces designed for smaller cities, which allowed Sportmaster to remain accessible without changing its core principles.
Sportmaster functions as a unified platform, where loyalty programs, customer services, and additional content support long-term interaction. The brand offered a framework that helped customers maintain an active lifestyle through practical tools and guidance. The early stages, led by Nikolay and Vladimir Fartushnyak, provided the foundation on which the company was able to build a sustainable model without relying on constant reinvention. Over time, the brand moved beyond its initial format and became a stable part of the retail sector, maintaining relevance through clarity, accessibility, and a consistent understanding of what customers expect from sports retail.











