St. Bonaventure University

Club Sports


Club sports allow you to keep those competitive juices flowing, playing as a representative of St. Bonaventure University against club sports teams from other colleges and universities.

But it's more than that. As a club sports participant you'll grow as a person, learn the value of teamwork and fair play, and have the opportunity to mature as a leader through four years of practice and competition with new friends and teammates as devoted to your favorite sport as you.


You might even have the opportunity to compete again in front of your hometown friends and neighbors — this time as a Bonnie.

Club Sports @ SBU


College doesn't mean you stop playing the games you love. Playing a club sport keeps you fit, focused, and satisfies that yearning you'll always have for competition and camaraderie.

Club Sports for Men



  • Club Sports for Women


  • Mixed Club Sports


  • Recreational Club Sports


    These are internal clubs at the university that do not currently compete against teams from other universities. As these clubs grow, the option to compete externally will be explored!


  • Full-time athletic training staff available to club sport athletes

     
    Students who play club sports at SBU have access to full-time certified athletic training staff for their care and treatment.

    The athletic training staff attend many games on campus and staff a club sports training room, located in Room 127 of Doyle Hall, adjacent to the Center for Student Wellbeing.

    The training room is equipped with ultrasound and electrical muscle stimulation equipment, a hydrocollator for heat treatments, as well as other equipment for the prevention and treatment of injuries.

    Trainers Thomas Gallagher & Brendan Carter

    Pictured (from left): Club sports athletic trainers Thomas Gallagher, MS, LAT, ATC and Brendan Carter, MS, LAT, ATC.

    Required club sports clearance form

    All students who want to play a club sport at St. Bonaventure must complete and submit our Club Sports Clearance Form before participating in practices or games.


    News-Publications-Research- Banner

    No. 2 Bonnies upend Cortland to claim league rugby title for first time since 2014

    Oct 29, 2023

    Meredith Pyke wasn’t blowing smoke.

    When asked last week after thumping Oswego if her Bonnies could give Cortland a better game this season in the league title game, it didn’t take her long to spit out confidently: “Absolutely.”

    Her conviction was warranted. In a back-and-forth game on a soggy grass pitch at Cortland Sunday afternoon, All-American Makenna Ramsey scored five times to lead St. Makenna RamseyBonaventure to a 32-22 victory in the Upstate New York Women’s Collegiate Rugby Conference title game.

    The victory earned the Bonnies (7-0), ranked No. 2 in the National Collegiate Rugby small-college poll, a trip to Virginia Nov. 11-12 for one of four regional brackets of the NCR Small College national tournament. Cortland, ranked No. 5 nationally, could still earn an at-large bid in a different regional.

    The win avenged a 48-17 loss to Cortland in the league title game last fall and gave the Bonnies their first UNYWCRC title since 2014.

    “We just did a great job of staying connected and staying calm,” Pyke said. “Mistakes are bound to happen, especially when the conditions are like this and you’re playing a good team, but instead of getting frustrated, they did a good job of holding together.”

    Senior Co-Captain Abbey Beres scored the other try and Kyla Nentarz added the conversion to give the Bonnies a 17-12 lead at halftime, but Cortland tied it early in the second half before Ramsey scored three more times, the last with 4 minutes to play to give SBU a 10-point lead.

    But unlike last week’s blowout of Oswego, when Ramsey scored several times on long runs, Sunday’s scoring efforts were the result of methodical, time-consuming drives. Cortland gave up ground begrudgingly, but that didn’t stop the Bonnies from taking each yard they could at every opportunity.

    “We definitely had more possession time than they did and that was a credit to our pods,” Pyke said. “Abby and Kaylee Vincent and Jaylei (Wagstaff) and Katie (Patterson) did a great job. Playing against a tougher defense than they saw all season and not seeing as many open spaces, they saw the value of working together to just keep moving the ball down the field.”

    A pod is when three forwards stand close to the scrum-half so that when one forward carries the ball forward, the other two can clear out the defenders in the breakdown and deliver quick ball.

    Pairings for the regional brackets will be announced later this week.

    “Given the season we had, I think we’ll have a pretty high seed,” Pyke said.

    ______________

    About the University: The nation’s first Franciscan university, St. Bonaventure University is a community committed to transforming the lives of our students inside and outside the classroom, inspiring in them a lifelong commitment to service and citizenship. Out of 167 regional universities in the North, St. Bonaventure was ranked #6 for value and #14 for innovation by U.S. News and World Report (2024).