The league was established in 2005 as Charm City Roller Girls, when Caroline Donaghy returned to Baltimore from
Houston, where she had skated with the
Space City Roller Girls, and began promoting the intention to start a league in Baltimore.[2] The first public Charm City game was held in 2006 at Skateland in Putty Hill.[3] Upon the league's formation, it comprised four teams: the Junkyard Dolls, the Mobtown Mods, the Night Terrors and the Speed Regime.[3] As early as 2008, games were being held at the
Fifth Regiment Armory in Baltimore,[4] and by 2009, the league was holding games at
Du Burns Arena in
Canton before sellout crowds of 2,000 fans.[5]
As of 2017[update], Charm City has three travel teams: the All-Stars represent the league in WFTDA competition, and Female Trouble and the Trouble Makers are B and C teams, respectively. A three-team home league features the Dundalk Deviants, Hampden Hons and Pigtown Butchers. The All-Stars are known for wearing helmets that feature elements of the
state flag of Maryland, which they first donned in 2008.[6] Charm City Roller Derby operates as a
limited liability company.[7]
This section needs to be updated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(October 2023)
Charm City was announced as a new member of the WFTDA in May 2007.[9] The Charm City All-Stars first competed at WFTDA Playoffs in 2008 as the sixth seed at the
Eastern Regional, where they won their opening game against
Cincinnati Rollergirls, lost their quarterfinal to the
Windy City Rollers but recovered to defeat
Detroit to finish in fifth place.[10] In 2009 at the Eastern Regional, Charm City won their opener against
DC Rollergirls but then lost their semifinal to
Philly Roller Girls to put them in the third-place game, which they lost 156-143 to
Boston to finish in fourth place.[11]
In 2010, an opening round win over
Steel City was followed by a loss to
Gotham Girls Roller Derby to put them in the third-place game again, this time beating Boston 162-128 to finish third and qualify for
WFTDA Championships for the first time.[12] At Championships, Charm City won their opening game against
Minnesota Rollergirls 249-118, but then lost their quarterfinal to
Rocky Mountain Rollergirls 165-103 to end their weekend.[13] At the 2011 East Regional (co-hosted by Charm City and DC Rollergirls at Du Burns Arena),[14] the All-Stars defeated Steel City 189-94 to again finish in third place and advance to Championships.[15] At Championships, Charm City lost 160-121 to Minnesota in the opening round.[16] At the 2012 East Regional, Charm City finished in third place for the third straight year, via a 183-159 victory over
London Rollergirls, and again qualified for Championships.[17] At Championships, a 268-141 loss to
Denver in the opening round eliminated the All-Stars.[18]
In 2013, the WFTDA restructured the Playoff system, and Charm City qualified as the ninth seed for
Division 1 Playoffs in
Salem, Oregon, where upset losses to Detroit and
Sacred City Derby Girls[19] put the All-Stars in the ninth-place game against the
Chicago Outfit, which they won, 189-177.[20] At the 2014 Division 1 Playoff in Salt Lake City, fourth-seeded Charm City finished in fourth place with a 183-156 loss to Rocky Mountain.[21] In 2015 at Tucson, Charm City was the fifth seed but dropped down to an eighth-place finish with a 191-165 loss to
Team United Roller Derby.[22] In 2016, Charm City dropped into
Division 2 for the first time, albeit as the top seed at the Playoff in Lansing, but were eliminated from Division 2 Championships contention with an upset loss to
Calgary, 216-191.[23] Charm City earned third place with a narrow 197-194 win over
Wasatch Roller Derby.[24] Charm City returned to Division 1 Playoffs in 2017 at
Malmö as the twelfth seed, but lost both their games to
Helsinki Roller Derby (308-144)[25] and
Rainy City Roller Derby (258-78)[26] to finish outside of the medals.