Campus Overview

Mercy University is a private, non-sectarian university in Dobbs Ferry, New York, with about 5,539 undergraduates and a mission rooted in access, opportunity, and practical preparation. What makes Mercy distinctive is its identity as the largest private Hispanic-Serving Institution in New York State, its deep commitment to first-generation and working students, and a location that puts you on the Hudson River just 30 minutes from Manhattan. If you're a D2 athlete looking for a place where you won't get lost in a crowd, where your professors will actually know your name, and where the diversity around you reflects the real world, Mercy deserves a serious look.


Location & Setting

Dobbs Ferry is a small, quiet village on the eastern bank of the Hudson River in Westchester County, about 22 miles north of Midtown Manhattan. The main campus sits right along the waterfront — the views of the river and the Palisades across in New Jersey are genuinely striking and not something you'd expect from a school this close to New York City. The village itself has a walkable little downtown with a handful of restaurants, a coffee shop or two, and a Metro-North train station that gets you to Grand Central in roughly 40 minutes. It's suburban and calm — this isn't a bustling college town with bars on every corner. The surrounding area is affluent Westchester, with parks, trails along the Old Croton Aqueduct, and easy access to the Saw Mill River Parkway. Mercy also has branch locations in Manhattan (Herald Square area) and the Bronx, which some students — especially graduate and commuter students — use. But the Dobbs Ferry campus is the heart of the undergraduate and athletic experience.

Where Students Live & How They Get Around

Mercy has historically been more of a commuter school than a residential one, and that identity still shapes campus life. The university has residence halls on the Dobbs Ferry campus, and they've been investing in growing the residential population, but a significant share of undergraduates commute from surrounding Westchester, the Bronx, and other parts of the metro area. If you're a student-athlete, you'll almost certainly live on campus, at least for your first year or two, and that puts you in a smaller residential community where you'll get to know people quickly. Having a car is genuinely helpful — Dobbs Ferry is suburban, and while campus itself is walkable and compact, getting to stores, restaurants, or anything beyond the village is much easier with wheels. The Metro-North train is a lifeline to Manhattan, though, and athletes and other students use it regularly for city trips. Winters are real — cold, grey Hudson Valley weather from November through March — so plan accordingly for early morning training sessions.

Campus Culture & Community

The social scene at Mercy is quieter and more low-key than what you'd find at a large state school or a traditional residential campus. There is no Greek life — fraternities and sororities are not part of the picture here. Weekend social life tends to revolve around small gatherings, trips into the city, campus events put on by student organizations, and time spent with teammates. For student-athletes, your team often becomes your primary social circle, especially in the first year. The campus can feel emptier on weekends when commuter students head home, which is one of the honest trade-offs of a school with a strong commuter population. That said, Mercy has been actively working to build more of a campus community feel — programming events, improving student spaces, and encouraging residential life. School spirit exists but it's not the kind of place where the whole campus turns out for a game. The community tends to feel tight-knit among the people who are around, and students frequently describe the atmosphere as welcoming and unpretentious. There's a genuine sense that people are here to build something — academically and personally — rather than to party.

Mission & Values

Mercy was founded by the Sisters of Mercy in 1950, and while the university has been independent and non-sectarian since the early 1970s, the founding values — compassion, service, access, and social justice — still run through the institutional DNA. There are no required theology courses, no religious services built into the calendar, and students of all faiths (or none) will feel comfortable. Where the mission shows up most visibly is in the student body itself: Mercy is a federally designated minority-serving institution that has built its identity around giving opportunities to students who might be overlooked by more selective or expensive schools. There's a genuine service ethos — community engagement projects, clinical placements in underserved areas, and a general culture of giving back. Students often describe feeling "known" by faculty and staff, which is partly a function of size and partly a function of an institution that takes its pastoral role seriously even without the religious framework.

Student Body

The undergraduate population of approximately 5,539 is notably diverse — racially, ethnically, socioeconomically, and in terms of age and life experience. A substantial portion of students are Hispanic/Latino, reflecting Mercy's HSI designation. Many students are first-generation college-goers. You'll find traditional 18-year-olds alongside adult learners and career-changers, which gives the community a different texture than a typical four-year residential campus. The geographic draw is heavily regional — most undergraduates come from the greater New York metro area, especially Westchester, the Bronx, and the broader Hudson Valley. There's some international representation (students from 51 countries), but the dominant feel is local and metro New York. The vibe is more pre-professional than preppy or artsy — students tend to be pragmatic, career-focused, and motivated by tangible outcomes. Politically and culturally, the campus leans progressive, consistent with its diversity and metro-area location.

Academics

Mercy offers more than 100 degree and certificate programs across six schools, and its strengths tilt toward the applied and professional. The standout programs are in health sciences — nursing and health professions are arguably Mercy's flagship, with strong clinical placements throughout the Westchester and NYC hospital systems. Education is another historically strong area, and the school produces a significant number of teachers and school professionals for the region. Business, criminal justice, psychology, and social work are also popular and well-regarded. STEM-oriented students will find programs in biology, math, and cybersecurity (a growing area of investment). The humanities and fine arts are present but smaller — this is not the school you choose for a deep-dive English or philosophy experience. Class sizes are generally small — many courses have 15–25 students — and the student-to-faculty ratio hovers around 16:1. Professors are teaching-focused, and students consistently cite accessibility and personal attention as major strengths. The academic culture is supportive and collaborative rather than cutthroat. Study abroad exists but is not a dominant part of the culture; most students are rooted locally and focused on internships and clinical experiences closer to home.

Athletics & Campus Sports Culture

Mercy competes in NCAA Division II as a member of the Northeast 10 Conference, one of the stronger D2 conferences in the country. The Mavericks field teams across a range of sports — expect to find soccer, basketball, baseball, softball, lacrosse, volleyball, cross country, track and field, and more. The move to the NE-10 (Mercy previously competed in the East Coast Conference) has elevated the competition level and brought more travel and exposure. For a D2 athlete, Mercy offers the chance to compete seriously while keeping academics front and center — you're not practicing 40 hours a week, but the commitment is real and the conference is competitive. Athletes are visible on campus and often form the core of the residential community, which can be a positive — your teammates become your built-in social network. Gameday culture is modest; don't expect packed stands or a student section painting their faces. But the athletic department is invested in growing the program, and being part of a rising D2 program in a strong conference has genuine appeal.

What Else Should You Know

A few things a well-informed friend would flag: First, financial aid. Mercy is not cheap on sticker price, but the school is known for putting together meaningful financial aid packages, and many students pay well below the listed tuition. Ask hard questions about your net cost and what athletic scholarship money is available — D2 schools can offer partial athletic scholarships, and Mercy layers those with institutional aid. Second, the commuter culture is real. If you thrive on a campus that's buzzing 24/7, this will feel different. But if you're comfortable building your community through your team and a smaller residential group, you can have a rich experience. Third, the campus itself is compact and has undergone renovations, but it's not a sprawling, manicured showcase campus — manage your expectations on facilities compared to well-funded D1 programs. Finally, note that Mercy rebranded from "Mercy College" to "Mercy University" in 2022, reflecting its expanded graduate and doctoral offerings. Some older reviews and references still use the college name. One data note: Mercy's total enrollment (undergraduate and graduate combined) is reported around 8,500+; the 5,539 figure reflects the undergraduate population specifically.

Field Hockey

  • Coach Marissa Spinazzola in her fifth season; led 2023 NE10 Championship qualifier after first program history postseason bid.
  • 2025 season started 5-1, best program start ever. Team posted third-highest GPA in Division II.

About the School

  • Largest private Hispanic-Serving Institution in New York State; 34% of students study Health Professions.
  • Dobbs Ferry campus sits on Hudson River, 30 minutes from Manhattan via Metro-North train to Grand Central.

Field Hockey (2025)

Level
D2 Low
FHC Rank
#27 of 34 (D2)
Massey Score
28.7 *
Conference
Northeast 10 Conference
Coach
Marissa Spinazzola
Trajectory
↑ Rising
Season Results
'25: L 0-6 vs Assumption
'24: L 3-4 vs Southern Connecticut
'23: L 1-4 vs Saint Anselm (NE-10 Quarterfinals)

Programs

Popular Majors

Health Professions (34%)
Registered Nursing, Nursing Administration, Nursing Research and Clinical Nursing (58%)
Health Professions and Related Clinical Sciences, Other (18%)
• Health Services/Allied Health/Health Sciences, General (18%)
• Communication Disorders Sciences and Services (3%)
• Clinical/Medical Laboratory Science/Research and Allied Professions (3%)
Business (15%)
Business Administration, Management and Operations (85%)
• Accounting and Related Services (15%)
Psychology (9%)
Social Sciences (8%)
Social Sciences, General (92%)
• International Relations and National Security Studies (5%)
• Sociology (3%)
Homeland Security (5%)

My Programs

Environmental Science
Psychology (9.3%)
Biology (3.2%)
Sports Med / Kinesiology (35.3%)
French (0.1%)
Popular (top 25%) Available Not found

School Profile

Type
Private
Classification
Master's: Larger Programs

Student Body

Total
7,831
Undergrad
71%
Demographics
68% women
Student:Faculty
15:1

Academics

Admission Rate
86%
Retention
75%
Graduation
48%

Events & Clinics

No recruiting events listed

Costs

Total Cost
$32,391
Tuition
$22,106
Room & Board
$14,700

Avg Net Price
$15,770
Net Price ($110k+)
$23,124

Financial Aid

Avg Aid ($110k+)
~$9,267
Pell Recipients
47%
Take Loans
49%
Median Debt at Grad
$19,637
Source: Scorecard

Location & Weather

Setting
Suburban (Suburb: Large)
Nearest City
New York, NY (22 mi)

HighLow
January40°23°
April63°40°
July86°64°
October65°45°

Admissions

No admissions data available

Season History

Season Record GF/G GA/G GD SO OT Last Game
2025 5-12 1.7 3.3 -27 2 2 L 0-6 vs Assumption
2024 6-11 1.6 2.8 -19 3 1 L 3-4 vs Southern Connecticut
2023 8-10 2.7 3.2 -9 1 1 L 1-4 vs Saint Anselm (NE-10 Quarterfinals)
2022 8-7 2.1 2.4 -4 1 1 W 6-4 vs Saint Michael'S
2021 4-13 1.2 3.3 -35 1 3 L 0-5 vs Saint Michael's
2019 4-12 1.0 2.8 -29 2 1 W 2-0 vs Frostburg
2018 5-12 0.9 1.9 -17 3 3 W 1-0 vs Molloy (ECC Championship)
2017 7-11 1.2 1.9 -13 7 0 W 2-0 vs Molloy (at Cedar Creek Park)
2016 7-13 1.2 3.0 -37 2 1 L 1-8 vs Bellarmine (ECAC 3rd Place at Newberry)
2015 6-10 1.5 2.8 -20 2 4 L 1-2 vs American International
Click any season to view full schedule

Coaching Staff

Name Position Contact Bio
Marissa Spinazzola Head Coach mspinazzola@mercy.edu View Bio
Alyssa Sacco Assistant Coach View Bio
Taylor Durkin Assistant Coach View Bio
Kasey Volz Assistant Coach View Bio

Roster Breakdown

19 players

Geographic Recruiting

In-State: 74% (14 players)
US Out-of-State: 26% (5 players)
New York: 74% (14 players)
Pennsylvania: 11% (2 players)

Roster Composition

Graduating '27: 3 players (16%)
Class of 2026: 4 (21%)
Class of 2028: 8 (42%)
Class of 2029: 4 (21%)

Full Roster (19 players)

# Name Position Year Height Hometown High School
00 McClure - Sr. 5-7 Canastota, N.Y. Canastota
1 Taynor - So. 5-6 Phillipsburg, N.J. Phillipsburg
2 Stella - So. 4-11 Hawley, Pa. Wallenpaupack
3 Bevacqua - Fr. 4-11 Medford, N.Y. Patchogue-Medford
4 Benvengo - Jr. 5-3 East Islip, N.Y. East Islip
5 Preston - Jr. 5-4 Brookfield, Conn. Brookfield
6 Lane - Sr. 5-3 Rocky Point, N.Y. Rocky Point
7 Sabert - So. 5-7 Mohegan Lake, N.Y. Lakeland
8 Brefka - So. 5-4 Cicero, N.Y. Cicero North Syracuse
9 Trickel - Sr. 5-3 Ottsville, Pa. Palisades
10 Conklin - Jr. 5-3 Greenvale, N.Y. North Shore
11 Tepper - So. 5-2 Sayville, N.Y. Patchogue-Medford
12 Evans - Gr. 5-10 Canastota, N.Y. Canastota
15 Walther - Fr. 5-10 Putnam Valley, N.Y. Putnam Valley
16 Santiago - So. 5-0 Smithtown, N.Y. Smithtown West
17 Shea - So. 5-7 Sherrill, N.Y. Vernon Verona Sherrill
22 Smith - Fr. 5-3 Sound Beach, N.Y. Miller Place
25 Felice - Fr. 5-2 Cornish, N.H. Windsor
99 McClure - So. 5-6 Lake Grove, N.Y. Sachem North