1960s–1970s A cornerstone to the Arena was laid in 1961 with a vault that included messages from then-U.S. President
John F. Kennedy, then-
Maryland governor
J. Millard Tawes, and then-Baltimore Mayor
J. Harold Grady. The vault was opened in 2006. The current site that was chosen for the Baltimore Civic Center was actually not one of the many sites proposed to the
Greater Baltimore Committee in 1955. Among nine suggested locations were two in
Druid Hill Park, three at the end of the Inner Harbor basin (where the
World Trade Center and
Harborplace are now located), and one in
Clifton Park. From 1962 through 1976, the
Baltimore Clippers of the
American Hockey League played their home games at the Arena. The financially troubled Clippers ceased operations in mid-season, 1974–75, when the professional
Baltimore Blades (the relocated
Michigan Stags) of the
World Hockey Association (WHA) moved into the market/arena. The Blades folded at the end of the season, and the Clippers regrouped for one final AHL season 1975–76. The Arena has hosted two other AHL franchises: the
Baltimore Skipjacks lasted from 1981 to 1993, and the
Baltimore Bandits from 1995 to 1997. On November 12, 1962, the Arena hosted a boxing match between
Joey Giardello and Johnny Morris attended by approximately 6,000 fans. In
1963, the Arena became the home of the
NBA's
Baltimore Bullets (originally the
Chicago Packers), where the team played home games until its move to the
Capital Centre in 1973. The
NBA All-Star Game was played at the Arena in
1969.
The Beatles performed at the Arena on September 13, 1964, to a total of 28,000 attendees in two performances on the same day, at 4:00 pm and 8:30 pm. On April 3, 1965, defending WWWF champion
Bruno Sammartino defeated
Gene Kiniski in a return title match. Just a few months later, in January 1966, Kiniski would win the National Wrestling Alliance (NWA) title. On April 12, 1966, Dr.
Martin Luther King Jr. gave a speech, "Race and the Church", before a gathering of Methodist clergy at the Baltimore Civic Center. The venue also hosted
Led Zeppelin several times through the early 1970s. A couple of scenes from the Led Zeppelin concert film
The Song Remains the Same were filmed backstage. On June 13, 1970,
The Jimi Hendrix Experience played the Civic Center with a last-minute decision to visit from New York and sold out. This was noted to be one of the best performances of the whole 1970 tour and was one of the last shows Hendrix played before his death a few months later.
Chicago performed at the Civic Center on September 4, 1971, the month before the release of their fourth album,
Chicago at Carnegie Hall. Elvis Presley played the Civic Center twice: Tuesday, November 9, 1971, 8:30pm (wearing the Red Lion Suit) and again on Sunday, May 29, 1977, 8:30pm (wearing the Mexican Sundial Suit), less than three months before his untimely death. Both shows were complete sell-outs. The
Grateful Dead's performance on September 17, 1972, was recorded and later released as ''
Dick's Picks Volume 23''. It contains the complete concert, except for the encore, which was "
One More Saturday Night". It contains the longest CD version of "The Other One", to date, at nearly 40 minutes long. In 1974, the
World Team Tennis (WTT)
Baltimore Banners played their home games there in their only season.
World No. 1 player
Jimmy Connors was on that team. After Connors defeated
Ken Rosewall in Wimbledon they played each other at the Arena in a rematch.
Billie Jean King and
John Newcombe both played at the Arena, with their respective WTT clubs. The Civic Center was host to the 1974 and 1975
MEAC men's basketball tournament. In 1975, professional basketball returned briefly with the
Baltimore Claws of the
American Basketball Association (ABA). The
Memphis Sounds relocated to Baltimore following the 1974–75 ABA season and were first called the Baltimore Hustlers, before changing their name. Troubled financially from the start, the Claws folded after three road exhibition games.
1980s–1990s The Arena was the home of the Major Indoor Soccer League's
Baltimore Blast from their arrival in the 1980–1981 season until the league folded in 1992. The Blast won their only championship in the 1983–84 season which was attended by upwards of 11,200 fans. The Blast, regardless of
incarnation, were the longest-serving tenant in the Arena's history.
Van Halen performed at the Arena on July 22, 1980, as part of their
Van Halen World Invasion Tour.
Bon Jovi performed to a sold-out Arena crowd during their
Slippery When Wet Tour on December 29, 1986. In 1986 and 1989, the Arena was host to popular Italian opera singer
Luciano Pavarotti.
Def Leppard performed at the Arena on October 9, 1987, during their
Hysteria World Tour.
Kiss performed at the Arena on November 27, 1984, as part of their
Animalize World Tour. This performance is notable, because lead guitarist
Mark St. John makes his live debut with the band, after being temporarily replaced by
Bruce Kulick for the first two months of the tour due to contracting
reactive arthritis. Kulick played the first five songs of the show, then St. John joined onstage to perform five songs. Kulick returned onstage and finished the show. Both St. John and Kulick bowed with the rest of the members at the end of the show. St. John went on to play only two full shows with the band before being permanently replaced by Kulick. The Arena was the home of the Major Indoor Lacrosse League (MILL) and later the
National Lacrosse League (NLL)
Baltimore Thunder from 1987 through 1999. The Thunder won the inaugural MILL championship. Notable players include
Gary Gait, Tom Gravante (head Men's Lacrosse coach at
Mount St. Mary's University) and Hugh Donovan. The Arena was a frequent venue for
Jim Crockett Promotions (NWA) and
World Championship Wrestling (WCW). Starting in 1988,
The Great American Bash pay-per-view was held at the Arena eight times. It also hosted
SuperBrawl V in 1995.
Sting defeated
Ric Flair to win his first NWA World Championship at 1990's Great American Bash, and
Ron Simmons upset
Big Van Vader in 1992 for the WCW title, becoming the first African-American to hold a major world title. The
nWo was reformed in 1999 at the Baltimore Arena with
Bret Hart,
Kevin Nash,
Scott Hall and
Jeff Jarrett on the Nitro after
Starrcade The Arena has also hosted many
WWE events over the years. Most notably the
1994 King of the Ring,
No Mercy (2003),
No Way Out 2006,
Backlash 2008,
Extreme Rules (2010),
TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs (2011),
Payback (2015), and
Extreme Rules (2017) as well as multiple
Raw and
SmackDown! tapings. Major title changes to take place in the Arena include
Superstar Billy Graham over
Bruno Sammartino in 1977 for the WWWF championship and
Tito Santana over
Greg Valentine in 1985 for the WWF Intercontinental title in a
steel cage match. In
1989, the Arena was host to the
U.S. National Figure Skating Championships. Three years later, the
International Olympic Committee held the U.S. Olympic Gymnastics Trials there. In 1995, the Arena was host to the
NCAA Men's Basketball Division 1 games (Rounds 1 & 2). The
NBA's
Washington Bullets (formerly based in Baltimore) played 35 regular season "home" games at the arena from January 1989 through March 1997; their final game at the arena was a 94–87 victory over the
Dallas Mavericks on March 29, 1997. The team has yet to play a regular season game in Baltimore under its current Wizards moniker.
2000s The Arena has also been a staple on the
PBR's
Built Ford Tough Series bull riding tour. It first visited the Arena from 2001 to 2003, then came back again from 2008 to 2010. It returned in 2012 and again in 2015. On October 25, 2003, Maryland's
Good Charlotte performed at the Arena. In July 2004, the Arena was host to the US debut of Japanese rock band
L'Arc-en-Ciel, as part of the
anime and east Asian culture convention
Otakon. On December 3–4, 2004, the Arena hosted the final Vans Triple Crown Of
Freestyle Motocross events. On February 1, 2006, the Arena hosted the first concert by
The Rolling Stones, in Baltimore, since 1969, which was also at the Arena. On February 19, 2006,
No Way Out 2006 was held in Baltimore, the WWE's first pay-per-view in the city since No Mercy 2003.
Kurt Angle defeated
The Undertaker to retain the World Heavyweight Championship. The
2006 Miss USA Pageant was held here on April 21, 2006. On February 11, 2008, the Arena also hosted a rally for presidential candidate
Barack Obama. On April 27, 2008,
Backlash 2008 was held in Baltimore.
Triple H defeated
Randy Orton to win the WWE Championship. On November 20, 2009,
Bruce Springsteen & The
E Street Band performed at the Arena, recreating the entirety of their landmark album
Born to Run; it was their first tour stop in Baltimore since 1973. Several country-pop music acts have made tour stops at the Arena, including
Carrie Underwood and
George Strait. ;Accolades: :#1 Top Grossing Venue in North America in 2009* :#3 Top Grossing Venue in the World in 2008* :#13 Ticket Sales Worldwide All Venues in 2008** :Prime Site Award Winner 2005–2015 :* :**
2010s The
PBR's
Built Ford Tough Series bull riding tour returned to the Arena in 2012. Shogun Fights, the first promoter to bring professional Mixed Martial Arts to the state of Maryland, held its second event, Shogun Fights 2, on March 27, 2010. This event occurs twice each year, once in the Spring and again in the Fall. On April 25, 2010, the Arena played host to
WWE Extreme Rules. It has then played host to
Monday Night Raw on June 20, 2011. This episode was named
Power to the People. It has played host to
WWE's
Tables, Ladders & Chairs 2011 on December 18, 2011. It hosted the season 23 premiere of
WWE Monday Night Raw on September 8, 2014, and ended the same WWE Raw season on September 7, 2015, with the main event being a six-man tag team match between
John Cena and the
Prime Time Players vs.
Seth Rollins and
The New Day.
WWE Payback was held in this Arena on May 17, 2015.
WWE Extreme Rules held on June 4, 2017, was the latest WWE pay-per-view to be held at the Arena. On September 30, 2011, the
NHL's
Washington Capitals played a preseason game against the
Nashville Predators in a 2–0 loss at the Arena. It was the arena's first ice hockey event to be played since 1997. A second Capitals preseason game at the arena was played on September 17, 2013, against the
Boston Bruins in another 3–2 loss. On October 17, 2013, the RFA held an NBA preseason game between the
Washington Wizards and the
New York Knicks to celebrate the Wizards 50th anniversary. The team, who played several games there in the 1990s as the Bullets, played another preseason game at the arena against the
New Orleans Pelicans, on October 20, 2014. On April 26, 2014, the Royal Farms Arena hosted
UFC 172: Jones vs. Teixeira. The
Colonial Athletic Association announced they would be moving their
men's basketball tournament to the Arena in 2014 under a three-year contract after a 24-year run at the
Richmond Coliseum. It is the first time the tournament will be held outside the state of Virginia. In still more recent years, the Arena continues holding events such as
Stevie Wonder (April 2015),
Prince (May 2015), the
Eagles (July 2015), and
Garth Brooks (five sold-out concerts in January 2016). On November 14, 2016,
Monumental Sports & Entertainment (owners of the
Washington Wizards of the
NBA,
Washington Capitals of the
NHL,
Washington Mystics of the
WNBA and the new
Washington Valor of the
Arena Football League) announced that they had been granted a second
Arena Football League franchise, the
Baltimore Brigade, to play at the Royal Farms Arena. It is the first time the AFL played in Baltimore and the first team to play in Maryland since the
Maryland Commandos played at the
Capital Centre in 1989. On July 28, 2018, the Arena and Brigade hosted its first ArenaBowl Championship,
ArenaBowl XXXI where the Baltimore Brigade was upset by the Washington Valor 55–69. On July 23, 2017,
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers played a concert in the arena as part of their 40th Anniversary Tour. On November 8, 2018,
Travis Scott kicked off his
Astroworld – Wish You Were Here Tour in the arena. ;Accolades: :#1 Top Grossing Venue in North America in 2015* :#2 Top Grossing Venue in North America in 2014* :#2 Top Grossing Venue in North America in 2012* :#1 Top Grossing Venue in North America in 2011* :Prime Site Award Winner 2005–2015 :* :**
2020s The
COVID-19 pandemic in Maryland led to the postponement or cancellation of a number of arena events. The venue went dark until a September 2021
Guns N' Roses performance. In February 2022, the arena hosted the
CIAA men's and women's basketball tournament. No further events were scheduled due to the pending renovation. After the tournament, the city terminated its naming rights deal with Royal Farms. Oak View Group, which is leading the arena's renovation, has the right to sell naming rights and other sponsorships. In October 2022, the arena was renamed CFG Bank Arena. The arena reopened in February 2023 after a year long renovation and once again hosted the 2023
CIAA men's and women's basketball tournament. The first concert held since the renovation was
Bruce Springsteen and
the E Street Band in April 2023. On May 3, 2025,
Linkin Park played at the venue as part of the
From Zero World Tour, promoting their eighth studio album,
From Zero. On May 28, 2025, the arena hosted its first
Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) game between the
Indiana Fever and
Washington Mystics, followed by a second game between the two teams on September 7, 2025. On November 3, 2025, the arena hosted a
MEAC vs
Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball game between
Coppin State and
University of Maryland, College Park, which Maryland won 61–83. ==Proposed replacement and the decision for renovation==