Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association

Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association
(CIAA)
Established 1912
Association NCAA
Division Division II
Members 12
Sports fielded 16 (men's: 8; women's: 8)
Region Middle Atlantic States,
South Atlantic States
Former names Colored Intercollegiate Athletic Association
Headquarters Charlotte, North Carolina
Commissioner Jacqie McWilliams (since 2012)
Website www.theciaa.com
Locations

The Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA) is a collegiate athletic conference, mostly consisting of historically black colleges and universities. CIAA institutions are affiliated at the Division II level of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA).

Conference members are primarily located in North Carolina (eight) and Virginia (two). There is also one school from Maryland and another from Pennsylvania. Because a majority of the members are in North Carolina, the CIAA moved its headquarters to Charlotte, North Carolina from Hampton, Virginia in August 2015.[1]

The CIAA sponsors 16 annual championships and is divided into Northern and Southern divisions in every sport except track and field, cross country, and baseball. The CIAA recently partnered with the startup network Bounce TV to televise sporting events and championships.

History

The CIAA, founded on the campus of Hampton Institute (now Hampton University) in 1912, is the oldest African-American athletic conference in the United States. It was originally known as the Colored Intercollegiate Athletic Association and adopted its current name in December 1950.

Founding leaders were Allen Washington and C.H. Williams of Hampton Institute; Ernest J. Marshall of Howard University; George Johnson of Lincoln University (PA); W.E. Atkins, Charles Frasher, and H.P. Hargrave of Shaw University; and J.W. Barco and J.W. Pierce of Virginia Union University.[2]

Football is experiencing a major resurgence after going through a period of decline at several member universities. Football was absent from the campus of Saint Augustine's University for nearly three decades, before getting reinstated by the administration in 2002. Shaw University then brought back its football program in 2003, following a hiatus of 24 years.

Lincoln University, a charter member, added varsity football in 2008 and was readmitted to the CIAA after nearly three decades in Division III. Chowan University joined the CIAA in 2008 for football only. On October 14, 2008, the CIAA Board of Directors admitted Chowan as a full member effective July 1, 2009, the first non-HBCU to play in the conference.

The CIAA, founded in 1912, is composed predominantly of Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) spanning the east coast from Pennsylvania to North Carolina.

On August 27, 2012, the CIAA announced the appointment of Jacqie Carpenter, the first African-American female commissioner to hold the position.[3]

In 2014, a collection of records, including the original 1912 documents leading to the formation of the CIAA and meeting minutes from 1913 to 1922, were sold at auction after being discovered in a storage locker. The lot sold for $11,500 to an unnamed bidder.[4]

Conference membership

A divisional format is used for basketball (M / W), football, softball, and volleyball.

Current members

Institution Location Founded Enrollment Nickname Colors Joined
Northern Division
Bowie State University Bowie, Maryland 1865 5,561 Bulldogs           1979
Chowan University Murfreesboro, North Carolina 1848 1,316 Hawks           2009
Elizabeth City State University Elizabeth City, North Carolina 1891 2,421 Vikings           1957
Lincoln University Oxford, Pennsylvania 1854 2,650 Lions           1912;
2008
Virginia State University Ettrick, Virginia 1882 4,900 Trojans           1920
Virginia Union University Richmond, Virginia 1865 1,700 Panthers           1912
Southern Division
Fayetteville State University Fayetteville, North Carolina 1867 5,000 Broncos           1954
Johnson C. Smith University Charlotte, North Carolina 1867 1,500 Golden Bulls           1926
Livingstone College Salisbury, North Carolina 1879 1,200 Blue Bears           1931
Saint Augustine's University Raleigh, North Carolina 1867 1,500 Falcons           1933
Shaw University Raleigh, North Carolina 1865 2,800 Bears           1912
Winston–Salem State University Winston-Salem, North Carolina 1892 6,000 Rams           1945;
2010

Former members

Institution Location Founded Nickname Joined Left Current
Conference
Bluefield State College Bluefield, West Virginia 1895 Big Blues 1932 1955 Independent
Delaware State University Dover, Delaware 1891 Hornets 1945 1970 Mid-Eastern Athletic
(NCAA D-I)
Hampton University Hampton, Virginia 1868 Pirates 1912 1995 Mid-Eastern Athletic
(NCAA D-I)
Howard University Washington, D.C. 1867 Bison 1912 1970 Mid-Eastern Athletic
(NCAA D-I)
University of Maryland Eastern Shore Princess Anne, Maryland 1886 Hawks 1954 1970 Mid-Eastern Athletic
(NCAA D-I)
Morgan State University Baltimore, Maryland 1867 Bears 1929 1970 Mid-Eastern Athletic
(NCAA D-I)
Norfolk State University Norfolk, Virginia 1935 Spartans 1962 1996 Mid-Eastern Athletic
(NCAA D-I)
North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University Greensboro, North Carolina 1891 Aggies 1924 1970 Mid-Eastern Athletic
(NCAA D-I)
North Carolina Central University Durham, North Carolina 1910 Eagles 1928;
1980
1970;
2007
Mid-Eastern Athletic
(NCAA D-I)
Saint Paul's College Lawrenceville, Virginia 1888 Tigers 1923 2011 Closed in 2013
Virginia University of Lynchburg Lynchburg, Virginia 1886 Dragons 1921 1954 Unaffiliated
West Virginia State University Institute, West Virginia 1891 Yellow Jackets 1942 1955 Mountain East

Membership timeline

 Full member (all sports)   Full member (non-football)   Associate member (football-only)   Associate member (sport) 

Sports

Conference sports
Sport Men's Women's
Baseball Green tick
Basketball Green tick Green tick
Bowling Green tick
Cross Country Green tick Green tick
Football Green tick
Golf Green tick
Softball Green tick
Tennis Green tick Green tick
Track & Field Indoor Green tick Green tick
Track & Field Outdoor Green tick Green tick
Volleyball Green tick

Men's sponsored sports by school

School Baseball Basketball Cross
Country
Football Golf Tennis Track
& Field
Indoor
Track
& Field
Outdoor
Total
CIAA
Sports
Bowie State Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 5
Chowan Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 6
Elizabeth City State Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 4
Fayetteville State Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 4
Johnson C. Smith Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 7
Lincoln Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 6
Livingstone College Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 6
Saint Augustine's Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 7
Shaw Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 4
Virginia State Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 8
Virginia Union Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 7
Winston-Salem State Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 4
Totals 5 12 12 12 8 5 7 7 68

Women's sponsored sports by school

School Basketball Bowling Cross
Country
Softball Tennis Track
& Field
Indoor
Track
& Field
Outdoor
Volleyball Total
CIAA
Sports
Bowie State Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 8
Chowan Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 6
Elizabeth City State Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 6
Fayetteville State Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 6
Johnson C. Smith Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 8
Lincoln Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 6
Livingstone College Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 8
Saint Augustine's Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 7
Shaw Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 7
Virginia State Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 8
Virginia Union Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 8
Winston-Salem State Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick Green tick 7
Totals 12 10 12 12 10 8 9 12 85

Other sponsored sports by school

School Men Women
Soccer Golf Lacrosse Soccer
Chowan IND IND IND IND
Lincoln IND

Conference facilities

School Football Basketball
Stadium Capacity Arena Capacity
Bowie State Bulldog Stadium
2,964
A.C. Jordan Arena
2,200
Chowan Garrison Stadium
5,000
Helms Center
3,500
Elizabeth City State Roebuck Stadium
6,500
R. L. Vaughn Center
5,000
Fayetteville State Luther "Nick" Jeralds Stadium
5,520
Felton J. Capel Arena
4,000
Johnson C. Smith Irwin Belk Complex
4,500
Brayboy Gymnasium
2,316
Lincoln Lincoln University Stadium
2,600
Manuel Rivero Hall
3,000
Livingstone Alumni Memorial Stadium
5,500
William Trent Gymnasium
1,500
Saint Augustine's George Williams Athletic Complex
2,500
Emery Gymnasium
1,000
Shaw Durham County Stadium
8,500
C.C. Spaulding Gym
1,500
Virginia State Rogers Stadium
7,909
Daniel Gymnasium
3,454
Virginia Union Hovey Field
10,000
Barco-Stevens Hall
2,000
Winston–Salem State Bowman Gray Stadium
22,000
C.E. Gaines Center
3,200

Basketball tournament

It was the first NCAA Division II conference to have its tournament televised as part of Championship Week on ESPN. Over 115,000 fans attended the 2007 CIAA tournament.[8]

Cheerleading

The CIAA cheering squads practice Stomp 'N Shake that incorporates voice, gymnastics, and dance. Over the past few decades, S-N-S has evolved into a more technical style, priding itself on precision, accuracy, and creativity. Included in this style are the techniques of up-stomp, up-step, down-stomp, kick, side-kick, roll, roll-break, power-arms, slpaz-hand, clasp, blade, and the shakes(car-wash shake, single shake, double shake, hit-shake, and jiggle-pop). CIAA Cheerleading is most known for its cheer battles. This is where squads battle each other during games verbally with chants. It provides a heightened level of excitement and competition to the sports they are cheering for. It showcases cheerleading in a different dimension. Only in this style can you excite the crowd, rally them to cheer on the team, cheer on the team and slay your opponent all at the same time.

SQUADS
Institution Squad name
Bowie State University Golden Girls
Chowan University Sapphires
Elizabeth City State University Dee-Lite Cheerleaders
Fayetteville State University Cheer Phi Smoov Cheerleaders
Johnson C. Smith University Luv-A-Bull Cheerleaders
Lincoln University Fe-Lions Cheerleaders
Livingstone College La La's Cheerleaders
Saint Augustine's University BlueChip Cheerleaders
Shaw University Chi Chi Cheerleaders
Virginia State University Woo Woo Cheerleaders
Virginia Union University Rah Rah Cheerleaders
Winston-Salem State University Cheer Phi Cheerleaders

References

  1. Burkins, Glenn (2014-03-03). "CIAA headquarters will move to Charlotte; tournament stays 6 more years". Qcitymetro.com. Retrieved 2015-08-04.
  2. Raymond Schmidt, Shaping College Football: The Transformation of an American Sport, 1919-1930 (Syracuse University Press, 2007) p133
  3. "Carpenter Named New CIAA Commissioner". 2012-08-27. Retrieved 2012-08-27.
  4. "Saunders: This CIAA treasure trove fails to bring in big money at auction". 2014-02-26. Retrieved 2014-02-26.
  5. "Chowan University Adds Men's Lacrosse, Griffin Named Head Coach". Chowan University Athletics. Retrieved November 10, 2015.
  6. "Chowan University Adds Women's Swimming, Hood Named Head Coach". Chowan University Athletics. Retrieved May 7, 2015.
  7. "Chowan to Gain Associate Membership in Conference Carolinas for Five Sports". Chowan University Athletics. Retrieved November 12, 2015.
  8. "2007 CIAA Tournament Week is Largest Ever". CIAA. 2007-04-02. Retrieved 2015-08-04.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, February 09, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.