Michigan State is a massive Big Ten research university — 40,243 undergraduates spread across one of the largest, most self-contained campuses in the country — where the combination of world-class research programs, a fiercely loyal alumni network, and a genuine college-town atmosphere creates an experience that feels both big-time and surprisingly grounded. MSU is the kind of place where you can study packaging science (one of the only programs of its kind), cheer alongside 75,000 fans at Spartan Stadium, and still find your niche in a tight-knit lab group or student org. This school is for students who want the full large-university experience — D1 athletics, hundreds of student organizations, serious academic breadth — and are willing to seek out their own community within a very large ecosystem rather than having it handed to them.
Location & Setting
East Lansing is a true college town — not a city with a university in it, but a town that exists largely because the university is there. The campus itself is enormous, over 5,200 acres split by the Red Cedar River, with the academic core on the north side and many residence halls and athletic facilities to the south. Step off campus along Grand River Avenue and you're in the main drag of downtown East Lansing: pizza shops, bars, coffee places, and the kind of businesses that cater to a student population. Lansing, the state capital, is immediately adjacent and offers a bit more — restaurants, a minor-league baseball stadium, some arts venues — but East Lansing is where student life happens. This is mid-Michigan, about 90 minutes from Detroit and three hours from Chicago. It's not remote, but it's not a major metro. The surrounding area is flat, agricultural, and very Midwestern.
Where Students Live & How They Get Around
MSU is a residential campus for the first year — freshmen are required to live on campus, and about 40% of undergrads overall live in university housing. The residence hall system is organized into five neighborhoods, each with its own dining hall, study spaces, and community feel, which helps break the massive campus into more human-scaled units. After freshman year, most students move to off-campus apartments in East Lansing or nearby areas. A car is helpful but not essential: MSU runs a robust bus system (CATA) that connects campus, off-campus housing, and the broader Lansing area, and most students use it heavily. The campus itself is big enough that walking between distant classes can take 20+ minutes, so bikes, scooters, and the bus are common. Weather is a defining feature of daily life — winters are long, cold, and snowy (average January high around 30°F), and the wind off the flat terrain makes it feel colder. Students invest in serious winter gear. Spring and fall are genuinely beautiful, and the Red Cedar River and campus green spaces come alive when the weather turns. Summers are warm and humid.
Campus Culture & Community
The social fabric at MSU runs on a few major currents: athletics, Greek life, and the sheer variety that comes with 40,000+ undergrads. Football and basketball Saturdays are a genuine cultural event — tailgating starts early, Spartan Stadium fills up, and campus buzzes with green and white. Greek life is present (about 10-12% of students participate across 60+ chapters) but it's one option among many, not the dominant social force. The bar scene along Grand River Avenue is a big part of upperclassman social life. For students who aren't into the party scene, there are 900+ student organizations ranging from club sports to cultural groups to professional societies. MSU's size means there's genuinely a community for almost any interest — the challenge is finding it. School spirit is intense and authentic. The MSU-Michigan rivalry is deeply felt, and students take real pride in being Spartans. The culture skews friendly and unpretentious — more "down-to-earth Midwestern" than elite or status-conscious. Traditions like painting the campus rock, the homecoming parade, and the Spartan Marching Band performances are part of the shared experience.
Mission & Values
MSU was founded in 1855 as one of the first land-grant universities in the country, and that mission — making higher education accessible, connecting research to real-world application, serving the public — still shapes the institution in visible ways. There's a genuine emphasis on community engagement and service; MSU consistently ranks among the top universities for Peace Corps volunteers. The university invests in study abroad (one of the highest participation rates among public universities, with programs in 60+ countries) and undergraduate research. That said, at a school this large, whether you feel "known" depends heavily on the effort you put in. The infrastructure is there — academic advisors, student support services, residential life staff — but nobody is going to track you down. Students who seek out mentors, office hours, and smaller communities within the university tend to have a very different experience than those who don't.
Student Body
MSU draws heavily from Michigan — roughly 80% of students are in-state — with a significant contingent from the Chicago suburbs, the East Coast, and a growing international population (about 12% of total enrollment). The vibe is Midwestern in the best sense: friendly, approachable, and not particularly pretentious. Politically it skews moderate, with active voices on both sides. Students tend to be practical and career-oriented but not cutthroat about it. The campus is more diverse than many Big Ten peers, with meaningful communities of Black, Asian, and Latino students, though like most large state universities, how much you experience that diversity depends on the circles you move in.
Academics
MSU's academic strengths are more distinctive than people realize. The College of Communication Arts and Sciences is nationally elite — the advertising and public relations programs in particular are top-ranked. Supply chain management in the Broad College of Business is consistently rated #1 in the country. Education, criminal justice, and nuclear physics are historically strong. The packaging science program is one of fewer than a handful nationally. Agriculture and natural resources programs are excellent, as you'd expect from a land-grant school. Pre-med and engineering are solid and popular, though competitive for resources. The Honors College provides a smaller, more intensive academic experience within the larger university — smaller classes, priority registration, dedicated housing — and is worth considering for students who want the big university with a liberal-arts feel in the classroom. Class sizes vary dramatically: introductory lectures can have 300+ students, while upper-division seminars might have 20. The student-faculty ratio is about 16:1. Professors in research programs are genuinely accomplished, but the teaching experience in lower-division courses often involves graduate TAs. Academic culture is more collaborative than competitive — study groups are common, and the atmosphere in most departments is supportive rather than cutthroat.
Athletics & Campus Sports Culture
Athletics are central to campus identity — there's no way around it. MSU competes in 25 varsity sports in the Big Ten, and football and men's basketball are cultural pillars. Tom Izzo's basketball program is iconic, and football games at Spartan Stadium (capacity 75,005) define fall weekends. The athletic facilities are world-class. Student-athletes are visible and generally well-regarded on campus. Beyond the revenue sports, MSU has strong programs in hockey, wrestling, rowing, and several others. Field hockey is not currently a varsity sport at MSU, which is worth noting for a prospective field hockey player — though the Big Ten includes several programs that do sponsor it. Club sports and intramurals are huge, with thousands of students participating. The culture around athletics is passionate but generally positive — students support Spartan teams with genuine enthusiasm.
What Else Should You Know
MSU went through a deeply painful period with the Larry Nassar scandal, and the institutional fallout — leadership changes, policy reforms, ongoing scrutiny — is part of the school's recent history. Current students and administrators have worked to rebuild trust, and new safeguards for student-athlete welfare are in place, but it's something any prospective student-athlete should be aware of and ask about directly. On a practical note, MSU's campus is beautiful but genuinely large — some students feel the distances between buildings are a real daily factor, especially in February. Financial aid for out-of-state students at Michigan public universities can be limited compared to private schools, so run the net price calculator. The alumni network is enormous (over 500,000 living alumni) and genuinely active in helping graduates with careers, especially in Michigan, Chicago, and the broader Midwest. MSU is a place where you can get a tremendous education and experience — but you have to be proactive about building your own path within a very large institution.

| High | Low | |
|---|---|---|
| January | 32° | 18° |
| April | 58° | 37° |
| July | 83° | 61° |
| October | 62° | 42° |
| Talent/Ability | Important |
| Demonstrated Interest | Considered |
| Course Rigor | Not Considered |
| GPA | Important |
| Test Scores | Considered |
| Essay | Important |
| Recommendations | Important |
| Extracurriculars | Considered |
| Interview | Important |
| Character | Considered |
| Season | Record | GF/G | GA/G | GD | SO | OT | Last Game |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 5-13 | 1.7 | 3.2 | -28 | 1 | 0 | L 1-2 vs Central Michigan |
| 2024 | 8-10 | 1.8 | 2.2 | -6 | 1 | 7 | L 0-1 vs Indiana |
| 2023 | 4-12 | 1.1 | 2.2 | -18 | 3 | 4 | W 4-0 vs Ball State |
| 2022 | 9-9 | 2.1 | 2.1 | 0 | 1 | 4 | W 3-1 vs Kent State |
| 2021 | 7-8 | 2.3 | 2.6 | -4 | 4 | 0 | L 0-3 vs Rutgers |
| 2020 * | 2-14 | 0.9 | 3.1 | -35 | 1 | 1 | L 1-3 vs Michigan (B1G Quarterfinals at Iowa) |
| 2019 | 7-11 | 1.6 | 2.7 | -19 | 4 | 2 | L 0-3 vs Ohio State |
| 2018 | 5-15 | 0.9 | 3.1 | -45 | 1 | 5 | L 0-6 vs Maryland (B1G Tournament) |
| 2017 | 8-11 | 1.8 | 3.1 | -24 | 2 | 3 | L 0-3 vs Maryland (Big Ten Quarterfinal) |
| 2016 | 8-12 | 2.8 | 2.5 | +7 | 1 | 2 | L 1-2 (2 OT) vs Michigan (B1G Quarterfinals at Maryland) |
| 2015 | 5-14 | 2.0 | 3.2 | -23 | 0 | 2 | L 2-3 vs Maryland (Big Ten Quarterfinal at Indiana) |
| Name | Position | Contact | Bio |
|---|---|---|---|
| Helen Knull | Head Coach | hknull@ath.msu.edu | View Bio |
| Tamara Durante | Head Coach | — | View Bio |
| Matt Michie | Assistant Coach | — | View Bio |
| Katie Michie | Assistant Coach | — | View Bio |
| # | Name | Position | Year | Height | Hometown | High School |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | Ashley Herbert | GK | So. | - | Glasgow, Scotland | Glasgow Academy |
| 1 | Lyra Gavino | GK | Jr. | - | New Malden, England | Surbiton |
| 2 | Nina Angeli | F | R-Fr. | - | West Pittson, Pa. | Wyoming Area |
| 3 | Bianca Pizano | F | Jr. | - | Exeter, Pa. | Wyoming Area |
| 4 | Katelyn Dulin | M | Jr. | - | Barto, Pa. | Boyertown Area Senior |
| 5 | Mora Cavazza | M | So. | - | Buenos Aires, Argentina | Colegio Carmen de Marin |
| 6 | Alexa Shaffer | B | R-Jr. | - | Hummelstown, Pa. | Lower Dauphin |
| 7 | Mia Corbo | M | R-Fr. | - | Miami, Fla. | Maritime and Science Technology Academy |
| 8 | Maddie Lawlor | M | Gr. | - | Shamong, N.J. | Seneca |
| 9 | Ella McKernan | F | Fr. | - | Falls, Pa. | Wyoming Area |
| 10 | Grace Grabowski | M | Fr. | - | Ann Arbor, Mich. | Pioneer |
| 11 | Brynn Shaffer | F | Jr. | - | Hummelstown, Pa. | Lower Dauphin |
| 12 | Serena Mailhe | B | Jr. | - | Buenos Aires, Argentina | Santo Tomás de Aquino |
| 13 | Hannah Simms | M | Fr. | - | Timperly, England | Alderley Edge HC |
| 14 | Lilian Knorr | M | So. | - | Berlin, Germany | Arndt-Gymnasium Dahlem |
| 15 | Sarah Connolly | M | Fr. | - | Ballina County Mayo, Ireland | Corinthians HC |
| 16 | Carmen Maudlin | M | So. | - | Louisville, Ky. | DuPont Manual |
| 17 | Caroline Horace | F | Fr. | - | Sinking Spring, Pa. | Wilson |
| 18 | Caro Schafer | B | So. | - | Hannover, Germany | Kaiser-Wilhelm-und Ratsgymnasium |
| 19 | Tatum Johnson | F | Gr. | - | Downingtown, Pa. | LaSalle |
| 20 | Ellie Kendall | M | Fr. | - | Brisbane, Australia | Brisbane Girls Grammar School |
| 21 | Rilyn Lehman | B | Fr. | - | Harbeson, Del. | Sussex Academy |
| 22 | Josefina Abdala | M | Fr. | - | Mendoza, Argentina | - |
| 23 | Emmy Wellejus | B | Fr. | - | Worthington, Ohio | Thomas Worthington |
| 24 | Ella Tambroni | M | Fr. | - | State College, Pa. | State College Area |
| 25 | Gracie Burns | F | Sr. | - | Dexter, Mich. | Dexter |
| 31 | Catherine Wolf | GK | Fr. | - | Sinking Spring, Pa. | Wilson |