Quick Take
- PlayBlue raised $2.7 Mn (Rs 25.7 Cr) seed, co-led by Centre Court Capital and MIXI Global.
- The sports retail brand opens a 15,000 sq ft Bengaluru flagship, then Mumbai and Delhi-NCR.
- PlayBlue targets 150 stores and Rs 5,000 Cr annual revenue within the next five years.
In This Article
The PlayBlue funding round has closed at $2.7 Mn (Rs 25.7 Cr), a seed raise co-led by Centre Court Capital and MIXI Global with participation from WEH Ventures, announced on July 2, 2026.
Sports retail brand PlayBlue is an omnichannel, multi-brand platform that stocks more than 100 global and Indian labels across athleisure, footwear, gear, fitness equipment, recovery and nutrition. The company will use the fresh capital to launch its first flagship stores and a pan-India e-commerce platform, per its official website.
StartupFeed Insight
The real signal in the PlayBlue funding is not the ticket size but the buyers. Centre Court Capital and Japan’s MIXI Global are both operator-led sports investors, so PlayBlue is buying distribution and credibility, not just cash. Legacy retailers and Decathlon should watch closely: an organised, multi-brand challenger with quick delivery attacks their weakest point, discovery and advice. StartupFeed expects PlayBlue to open its Bengaluru flagship and switch on e-commerce before December 2026, with a second city live by mid-2027. If footfall converts, a Series A above $15 Mn should follow within 18 months. By Avinash.
What’s inside the PlayBlue funding round?
The PlayBlue funding round is a $2.7 Mn (Rs 25.7 Cr) seed raise, co-led by Centre Court Capital and MIXI Global, with WEH Ventures participating, per the company’s announcement.
| Metric | Detail | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Total Raise | $2.7 Mn (Rs 25.7 Cr) | Seed round |
| Round Type | Seed | First disclosed institutional round |
| Lead Investors | Centre Court Capital, MIXI Global | Co-led the round |
| Other Investors | WEH Ventures | Participated |
| Founders | Satyam Trivedi, Jayam Vora | Ex-GMR Sports, ex-Cult.fit |
| Announcement Date | July 2, 2026 | Per company release |
The most telling detail is the backing, not the size: both lead investors run sports-focused portfolios, and Centre Court Capital writes cheques of Rs 8-24 Cr from its Rs 410 Cr maiden fund, per Centre Court Capital.
About PlayBlue
PlayBlue is an omnichannel, multi-brand sports retail platform founded in 2025 by Satyam Trivedi, former chief executive of GMR Sports, and Jayam Vora, a former Cult.fit executive. It curates more than 100 global and Indian brands across athleisure, footwear, gear, fitness equipment, recovery and nutrition, sold through experiential stores and a pan-India e-commerce platform. Its backers include Centre Court Capital, MIXI Global and WEH Ventures.
How will PlayBlue use the seed capital?
The PlayBlue funding will go into physical stores and technology. PlayBlue opens a 15,000 sq ft flagship in Bengaluru first, then destination stores in premium malls and high streets across Mumbai and Delhi-NCR, alongside its pan-India e-commerce platform. Over five years, the company plans more than 150 stores, a community above 1 Cr (10 million) users, and annual revenue crossing Rs 5,000 Cr, per PlayBlue. In the near term, it targets Rs 100 Cr in revenue and operational profitability before its next raise.
“India is moving from a nation that watches sport to one that plays it, and that shift needs infrastructure beyond stadiums and screens,” said Satyam Trivedi, Co-founder, PlayBlue.
Why did Centre Court Capital back PlayBlue?
Centre Court Capital backed PlayBlue because organised, multi-brand retail is the missing layer in India’s fast-growing sports market. The fund is India’s first dedicated sports and gaming investor, founded in 2022 and led by General Partner (GP) Mustafa Ghouse, a former Davis Cup tennis player and ex-JSW Sports chief. In December 2025, it closed a Rs 410 Cr maiden fund, anchored by Parth Jindal and backed by athletes such as Neeraj Chopra and PV Sindhu, per Centre Court Capital. Japan’s MIXI Global co-led, adding gaming and community reach.
“India’s sports ecosystem will be built by operators who understand it from the inside,” said Mustafa Ghouse, Founder and General Partner, Centre Court Capital.
How does PlayBlue compare with Decathlon and rivals?
PlayBlue enters a sports retail market led by big-box giant Decathlon and dotted with newer specialists like SportsJam, Heelium and Agilitas. India’s sports and active lifestyle market is set to cross $30 Bn by 2035 and will need more than 15,000 new retail touchpoints, per PlayBlue. The wider sports economy is projected to more than double to $130 Bn by FY30 (financial year 2030) from $52 Bn in FY24, according to a Google and Deloitte report.
| Brand | Model | Focus |
|---|---|---|
| PlayBlue | Omnichannel, multi-brand | 100+ brands, stores plus e-commerce |
| Decathlon | Own-brand big-box | In-house labels, large-format stores |
| Heelium | D2C (Direct-to-Consumer) | Sports apparel, mostly online |
| Agilitas | Brand house | Owns and licenses sports labels |
What sets PlayBlue apart is its curated, advice-led format: unlike Decathlon’s own-label big boxes, it pairs more than 100 outside brands with expert buying guidance and quick delivery.
What’s Next
The next test is execution. PlayBlue plans to open its Bengaluru flagship and switch on its e-commerce platform in the coming months, then expand to Mumbai and Delhi-NCR. Reaching Rs 100 Cr in revenue and operational profitability will shape the size and timing of its Series A. Can a curated, multi-brand model pull Indian shoppers away from Decathlon and pure-play online stores?
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Written by Avinash. Have a tip? Write to us at editorial@startupfeed.in.
