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Home » CIAA 2026: Where Black Excellence Meets Baltimore’s Bottom Line
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CIAA 2026: Where Black Excellence Meets Baltimore’s Bottom Line

Doni GloverBy Doni GloverFebruary 19, 202649 ViewsNo Comments5 Mins Read
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CIAA 2026: Where Black Excellence Meets Baltimore’s Bottom Line
The CIAA is coming Feb. 24-28, 2026! Get your tickets now!

(BALTIMORE – February 19, 2026) – Baltimore is a basketball town. From neighborhood courts to college hardwood, this city understands the rhythm of the game. So when the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association returns for the 2026 Food Lion CIAA Men’s and Women’s Basketball Tournament, February 24 through March 1 at CFG Bank Arena, it’s more than a sporting event.

It’s strategy.

It’s circulation of capital.

It’s culture meeting commerce — and winning.


A $100 Million Partnership

Since the tournament officially relocated to Baltimore in 2021 — with games beginning in 2022, the CIAA Tournament has generated more than $100 million in cumulative economic impact for the city.

In 2025 alone:

  • $27.4 million in total economic impact

  • $19.8 million in direct spending

  • $2.4 million in state and local tax revenue

  • 1,487 jobs supported

That is not incidental revenue. That is institutional infrastructure.

Each year, approximately 100,000 alumni, students, and fans travel to Baltimore to celebrate HBCU culture. Hotels fill. Restaurants surge. Retail sees a spike during what is traditionally a slow winter period. And in June 2025, officials confirmed the tournament will remain in Baltimore through 2029.

This is no short-term experiment. This is a long-term civic alignment.


Built for Black Business

You know where I stand on this.

For over two decades, through BMORENews and the Joe Manns Black Wall Street Awards, we’ve championed economic ecosystems that uplift Black entrepreneurs. The CIAA Tournament doesn’t just generate revenue — it directs opportunity.

In 2024:

  • 118 minority-owned businesses directly participated

  • Over $1.4 million in direct economic benefit flowed to those businesses

  • Spectators spent millions across food, lodging, and retail sectors

The Baltimore Sports Tourism Development Council has intentionally ensured that minority-owned businesses are part of the economic equation.

And in 2026, that footprint expands:

  • CIAA Fan Fest Vendor Village at the Baltimore Convention Center

  • Power Plant Live vendor activations

  • A citywide Black-Owned Restaurant Tour

  • The CIAA Money Moves Financial Summit

  • The CIAA Tech Summit

This isn’t accidental. It’s economic architecture.


Scholarships and Generational Return

The impact doesn’t stop at spending.

In 2024, the City of Baltimore, the State of Maryland, and Visit Baltimore collectively contributed $1.5 million to the CIAA General Scholarship Fund supporting students at 13 HBCUs.

That is reinvestment.

That is sustainability.

That is what legacy looks like when it is properly stewarded.

Book with a Bestie!

Baltimore and the CIAA: A Natural Fit

Kireem Swinton, Interim President & CEO of Visit Baltimore

For Kireem Swinton, who helps guide Baltimore’s tourism and sports development strategy, the alignment is obvious.

Before the tournament arrived in Baltimore in 2022, Charlotte hosted it for 15 years. But Swinton believes the conference’s mission aligns deeply with Baltimore’s identity.

“We truly feel like Baltimore aligns with what CIAA is all about — Black excellence and the achievement of these HBCUs,” he said.

For Swinton, the most powerful aspect isn’t just economic data. It’s visibility.

Growing up in Baltimore, he says there was never a moment where young people could simultaneously see Black executives, Black entrepreneurs, Black athletes, and Black institutions operating at scale in one space.

The CIAA Tournament creates that moment.

Part family reunion.
Part economic summit.
Part inspiration engine.

And as Swinton notes, Baltimore needs the CIAA just as much as the CIAA needs Baltimore.

Five years in — with a commitment through 2029 — the partnership feels foundational.


Leadership That Delivers

Behind the CIAA’s growth and stability is Commissioner Jacqie McWilliams Parker.

Jacqie McWilliams Parker, Commissioner
Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA®)

Few leaders combine warmth, precision, and decisive execution the way she does.

Professional. Direct. Steady.

Under her leadership, the CIAA has strengthened its economic partnerships, expanded women’s basketball visibility, and built durable host-city relationships. The Baltimore–CIAA partnership is intentional, strategic, and mutually beneficial.

It reflects resilience, leadership, culture, and community — values the conference consistently reinforces.

And it works.


The HBCU Legacy

Let’s be clear: Baltimore’s own Morgan State University and Coppin State University compete in the MEAC, not the CIAA. But Morgan once captured three consecutive CIAA championships (1931–1933), and the tournament was held here in 1952.

The connection runs deep.

More broadly, HBCUs represent just 3% of U.S. colleges but produce approximately:

  • 20% of Black college graduates

  • 25% of Black STEM graduates

  • 40% of Black engineers

  • 50% of Black teachers

  • 70% of Black doctors and dentists

And when the NBA integrated, HBCU talent helped lead the way — including pioneers like Earl Lloyd, a graduate of West Virginia State College, a CIAA institution.

Every dribble in this tournament carries that lineage.


2026 Tournament Highlights

Location: CFG Bank Arena
Dates: February 24 – March 1, 2026
22 games over five days

Key events include:

  • Quarterfinals and Semifinals matchups

  • Championship Finals (Saturday, Feb 28)

  • CIAA Fan Fest (Free, registration required)

  • CIAA Step Shows

  • Performances by Marsha Ambrosius, K Camp, and Gabby Samone

Hotel partners include the Hyatt Regency Baltimore Inner Harbor, Renaissance Baltimore Harborplace, and Lord Baltimore Hotel through the CIAA Passkey Portal.


The Bottom Line

The CIAA Tournament is one of the most strategically valuable events Baltimore hosts each year.

It drives tourism.
It supports jobs.
It funds scholarships.
It amplifies Black-owned businesses.
It reinforces the power of HBCUs.

And in a city that understands basketball, culture, and entrepreneurship, that alignment makes sense.

This isn’t just a tournament.

It’s an ecosystem.

Baltimore — show up. Support local. Buy Black. Fill the arena.

The CIAA is back.

And the business case is undeniable.

CIAA 2026: Where Black Excellence Meets Baltimore’s Bottom Line
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