Campus Overview

Bellarmine University is a small Catholic university in Louisville, Kentucky, where 2,286 undergraduates get a genuinely personal education with big-city access most schools this size can't offer. The draw here is the combination: a tight-knit campus where professors know your name and your goals, strong pre-health and professional programs that punch above their weight, and Louisville itself — a city with real culture, food, and internship opportunities right outside the gates. Bellarmine works best for students who want to be more than a number, who value mentorship over anonymity, and who don't mind that most people outside Kentucky haven't heard of the school — because the people who have tend to think highly of it.


Location & Setting

Bellarmine sits on roughly 175 acres in the Highlands-adjacent area of Louisville, along Newburg Road. This is suburban-feeling but firmly within city limits — not a college town, not downtown, but a residential neighborhood with easy access to both. The Bardstown Road corridor, Louisville's most walkable strip of restaurants, coffee shops, bars, and local shops, is a short drive or rideshare away. Downtown Louisville (the waterfront, bourbon tourism, the arena district) is about 15 minutes by car. NuLu, the trendy food-and-arts district, is similarly close. Louisville is an underrated mid-sized city — it has the Derby, a serious bourbon and food scene, a growing arts community, and enough going on that students don't feel trapped. The campus itself is green, well-maintained, and quiet enough to feel separate from the city without being isolated from it.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

Bellarmine is primarily residential for the first two years — freshmen and sophomores are required to live on campus, and housing is traditional dorms and suite-style buildings. By junior and senior year, many students move into apartments or rental houses in the surrounding neighborhoods, which are affordable by college-town standards. Roughly half the student body lives on campus at any given time. A car is helpful but not essential for the first two years; Louisville's public transit is limited, so upperclassmen who move off campus tend to drive. Campus itself is compact and easily walkable — you can cross it in 10 minutes. The climate is four-season mid-South: hot, humid summers, mild-to-cold winters with occasional ice storms, and genuinely pleasant springs and falls. Snow is infrequent enough that campus doesn't shut down for it, but it gets cold enough that you'll want a real coat from November through March.

Campus Culture & Community

Bellarmine has no Greek life — none. That's a defining feature of the social scene. Without fraternities and sororities structuring the weekend, social life revolves around friend groups, campus organizations, athletic events, and Louisville itself. Friday and Saturday nights might mean a house party off campus, heading to Bardstown Road, or campus programming. The campus activity board runs events regularly, and because the school is small, you tend to see the same faces — which builds community but can also feel like a fishbowl. School spirit exists but isn't the consuming force you'd find at a big state school; it's more of a steady hum than a roar. The annual campus traditions — homecoming, the President's Cup, service days — are well-attended without being mandatory social currency. Students describe the culture as friendly and approachable. It's easy to get involved because organizations are always looking for people, and leadership opportunities come early. The flip side of small is that cliques can form and drama can circulate, but most students say the community feel outweighs that.

Mission & Values

Bellarmine is Catholic — specifically, it's a diocesan Catholic university (affiliated with the Archdiocese of Louisville, not a religious order like the Jesuits or Franciscans). In practice, the Catholic identity is present but not heavy-handed. There are required theology and philosophy courses in the core curriculum, but they're taught as academic disciplines, not catechism. Campus ministry is active for those who want it, and there's a chapel on campus, but you won't feel pressure to attend Mass. It is not a dry campus. The school's connection to Thomas Merton — the famous Trappist monk, writer, and social activist who lived at the Abbey of Gethsemani about an hour south — gives it a distinctive intellectual flavor. The Merton Center on campus houses a significant collection of his work, and his emphasis on contemplation, justice, and interfaith dialogue subtly shapes the institutional ethos. Students who aren't Catholic or aren't religious generally report feeling comfortable. The service component is real: community engagement hours are woven into many courses, and Louisville provides ample opportunities. Bellarmine genuinely invests in knowing students as individuals — advisors, professors, and staff tend to recognize students by name, and the support infrastructure (academic advising, career services, mental health) is accessible in a way that bigger schools struggle to match.

Student Body

Bellarmine draws heavily from Kentucky and the surrounding states — Indiana, Ohio, Tennessee. Louisville itself is a major feeder. You'll find some geographic diversity, but this is primarily a regional school. The student body skews middle-class, moderately conservative-to-moderate in politics, and career-oriented. Pre-health, nursing, and business students make up a significant chunk of the population, which gives the campus a practical, goal-directed energy. Racial and ethnic diversity is limited compared to Louisville's actual demographics — the student body is predominantly white, though the university has been working to change that. International enrollment is small. The typical Bellarmine student is friendly, involved in a few things, planning for a specific career, and probably from within a three-hour drive.

Academics

Nursing is the flagship — Bellarmine's nursing program has a strong reputation in the region, and Louisville's concentration of hospitals (Norton Healthcare, UofL Health, Baptist Health) means clinical placements are plentiful. Physical therapy (the DPT program) is another standout, consistently well-regarded. The business school (Rubel School of Business) is solid, and education programs benefit from partnerships with Louisville-area schools. The core curriculum (called the "General Education" program) includes theology, philosophy, and interdisciplinary seminars that reflect the liberal arts mission — some students love these, others see them as hoops. Class sizes are small, typically 15-20 students, with a student-faculty ratio around 11:1. Professors are teaching-focused; this is not a research university, and that's the point. Students regularly cite faculty accessibility as Bellarmine's greatest strength — office hours are real, not performative, and undergraduate research opportunities exist across disciplines for students who seek them out. Study abroad participation is modest but available. The academic culture is more collaborative than cutthroat, though pre-nursing and pre-health tracks carry real competitive pressure for clinical spots.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

Bellarmine's transition to Division I is still relatively fresh — the school moved up from D2 (where it was a powerhouse in the Great Lakes Valley Conference) and now competes in the Mid-American Conference. This is a school where athletics are part of campus life without dominating it. Basketball has historically been the highest-profile sport, and Knights basketball games draw decent student crowds. The D1 transition has raised the athletic profile and brought new energy, but Bellarmine is not a school where gameday defines the week. Student-athletes are well-integrated into campus life — at a school this small, they're your classmates, your lab partners, your friends. The athletic facilities have been upgraded to support D1 competition, and there's a sense of building something as the program grows into its new competitive level.

What Else Should You Know

The D1 transition is worth understanding as context. Bellarmine was a highly successful D2 program, and moving to D1 (and the MAC) means adjusting to a higher level of competition — that's exciting but also means some growing pains in certain sports. Louisville itself is a genuine asset that Bellarmine sometimes undersells; it's a city with character, affordability, and enough happening to keep you engaged for four years. Financial aid is worth asking about directly — Bellarmine's sticker price is private-school level, but the school is known for being generous with merit aid, and many students pay significantly less than the published cost. The alumni network is strong locally and regionally (especially in healthcare and education in Kentucky and southern Indiana) but thinner nationally. If you're planning to stay in the Louisville area or the broader region after graduation, Bellarmine's name carries real weight. If you're aiming for a coast, you'll be explaining it more.

Field Hockey

  • Head Coach Toby Platt brought a 14-4 record from Rhodes College; named Bellarmine's 11th head coach in March 2025.
  • 80% out-of-state roster; 32% international recruits; program rebuilding under new coaching staff.
  • Assistant Coach Anna Crump is a five-year Bellarmine letterwinner and 2024 All-MAC Second Team selection from Louisville.

About the School

  • Louisville location offers Bardstown Road dining/culture, downtown waterfront access, and internship opportunities within 15 minutes.
  • 27% of undergrads major in Health Professions; strong pre-health advising and clinical partnerships in a major medical hub.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D1 Low
FHC Rank
#77 of 83 (D1)
Massey Score
55.2 *
2025 Record
Overall: 2-16
Conference
Mid-American Conference
Coach
Toby Platt
Trajectory
↓ Declining
Season Results
'25: L 2-3 vs Central Michigan
'24: L 1-2 vs Ball State
'23: L 0-1 vs Kent State

Programs

Popular Majors

Health Professions (27%) (D1 avg: 18%)
Registered Nursing, Nursing Administration, Nursing Research and Clinical Nursing (84%)
• Health and Medical Administrative Services (7%)
• Allied Health Diagnostic, Intervention, and Treatment Professions (7%)
• Rehabilitation and Therapeutic Professions (2%)
Business (15%)
Business Administration, Management and Operations (49%)
• Finance and Financial Management Services (24%)
• Accounting and Related Services (21%)
• Management Sciences and Quantitative Methods (6%)
Psychology (11%)
Recreation (7%)
Biology (7%)

My Programs

Environmental Science (0.9%)
Psychology (10.6%)
Biology (7.0%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology (34.5%)
French (0.3%)
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

School Profile

Type
Private (Roman Catholic)
Classification
Doctoral/Professional

Student Body

Total
2,928
Undergrad
78%
Demographics
61% women
Student:Faculty
13:1

Academics

Admission Rate
94%
SAT Median
1,159
SAT Range
1,075-1,243
ACT Median
25
Retention
75%
Graduation
68%

Events & Clinics

No recruiting events listed

Costs

Total Cost
$60,247
Tuition
$47,180
Room & Board
$10,250

Avg Net Price
$23,587
Net Price ($110k+)
$29,302

Financial Aid

Freshmen Getting Aid
97%

Merit Aid

Avg Merit Grant
$28,785
Freshmen Merit Only
17%

Need-Based Aid

Freshmen w/ Need
79%
Avg % Need Met
87%
% Need Fully Met
23%
Avg Aid Package
$46,377
Grants / Loans
$36,241 / $3,232

Debt at Graduation

Avg Debt
$27,609
Grads w/ Loans
60%
Source: CDS 2024

Location & Weather

Setting
City (City: Large)
Nearest City
Louisville, KY (4 mi)
Major Metro
Cincinnati, OH (89 mi)

HighLow
January43°27°
April69°48°
July88°69°
October69°48°

Admissions


Early Application
Not offered
Source: CDS 2024

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 2-16 0.6 3.8 -59 1 2 L 2-3 vs Central Michigan
2024 4-13 1.2 2.8 -27 0 3 L 1-2 vs Ball State
2023 7-10 1.8 2.6 -13 1 4 L 0-1 vs Kent State (at Louisville)
2022 4-15 1.5 3.1 -29 1 2 L 1-3 vs Saint Francis
2021 4-12 1.7 3.8 -33 1 1 W 6-2 vs Saint Francis
2020 * 0-13 0.9 4.9 -52 0 1 L 1-5 vs Ohio
2019 10-8 2.8 2.0 +15 2 3 W 3-0 vs Frostburg (Independents Championship Weekend at Bellarmine)
2018 8-9 1.8 2.4 -10 2 4 L 0-3 vs Newberry
2017 8-11 2.1 2.3 -4 3 4 W 3-2 (2 OT) vs Newberry (ECAC 3rd place at Lindenwood)
2016 14-7 3.5 1.5 +42 6 1 W 8-1 vs Mercy (ECAC 3rd Place at Newberry)
2015 10-7 2.3 2.2 +1 1 4 L 2-3 (OT) vs Limestone (ECAC Final at Louisville)
* Shortened COVID season
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Toby Platt Head Coach, Field Hockey tplatt@bellarmine.edu View Bio
Anna Crump Assistant Coach, Field Hockey acrump@bellarmine.edu View Bio
Laura Campbell Assistant Coach, Field Hockey View Bio
Madison Workman Graduate Assistant, Field Hockey mworkman@bellarmine.edu View Bio

Roster Breakdown

25 players

Geographic Recruiting

In-State: 20% (5 players)
US Out-of-State: 48% (12 players)
International: 32% (8 players)
Kentucky: 20% (5 players)
Virginia: 16% (4 players)

Position Breakdown

Forward: 3 (12.0%)
Forward/Midfielder: 5 (20.0%)
Midfielder: 8 (32.0%)
Midfielder/Defender: 1 (4.0%)
Defender: 6 (24.0%)
Goalkeeper: 2 (8.0%)

Roster Composition

Graduating '27: 4 players (16%)
Forward: 1
Midfielder: 2
Defender: 1
Class of 2026: 5 (20%)
Class of 2028: 7 (28%)
Class of 2029: 9 (36%)

Full Roster (25 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
1 Mia Booth F Jr. 5-5 Walton, KY The Summit Country Day School
2 Reilly Casey D Jr. 5-8 Worthington, OH Thomas Worthington
3 Maria Bonwell D Sr. 5-7 Montpelier, VA Collegiate School
4 Brooke Buchanan M Jr. 5-3 Hudson, OH Hudson
5 Anouk Richters F/M So. 5-11 Enschede, Netherlands Bonhoeffer College
6 Annie McCarthy F Fr. 5-3 Houston, TX St. Agnes Academy
7 Dominique Hudson D So. 5-11 Dorset, England Canford School
9 Addyson Hough M Fr. 5-7 Fredericksburg, VA James Monroe
10 Lilli Vera F/M Fr. 5-3 Brighton, MI Father Gabriel Richard
11 Eve Gladys F So. 5-3 Prospect, KY Ballard
12 Mira Alcorn M Fr. 5-7 Glen Ellyn, IL Glenbard West
15 Madison Patton F/M Fr. 5-5 Fredericksburg, VA Stafford
16 Chloe James D Fr. 5-3 Powhatan, VA Powhatan
17 Amber Lacy M Fr. 5-5 Louisville, KY Christian Academy
18 Luna Tuncay M So. 5-5 Fulda, Germany Rabanus-Maurus School
19 Olivia Pifer F/M Fr. 5-4 Louisville, KY Mercy
21 Cami Paris M Fr. 5-4 Buenos Aires, Argentina Pilgrims' College
22 Annie Malloy D So. 5-3 St. Louis, MO St. Joseph’s Academy
24 Skylar Sokal D R-So. 5-3 Shaker Heights, OH Shaker Heights
25 Emily Williams F/M Sr. 5-4 Louisville, KY Ballard
27 Alicia Hudson M/D Sr. 5-9 Dorset, England Canford School
37 Ella Bonnell M Jr. 5-5 Milton, Ontario, Canada Bishop Reding Catholic
95 Megan Clauser GK So. 5-8 Saline, MI Saline
99 Kailey Workman GK Sr. 5-10 Milton, Ontario, Canada Craig Keilburger Secondary School
- Luiza Bonardi MGR Sr. 5-5 Curitiba, Brazil Colegio Positivo