A legend in the coaching profession, Michaelis retired as the all-time leader in victories among female coaches in collegiate volleyball at any level with 886 wins (which included only the 33 seasons since volleyball records were maintained at BYU starting in 1969). She ranked second overall in Division I women’s volleyball victories, trailing only UCLA’s Andy Banachowski. When Michaelis retired from coaching, only six other female coaches (all softball coaches) had ever achieved more wins than Michaelis in an NCAA Division I sport.
Respected throughout the collegiate volleyball world for her exceptional volleyball mind, Michaelis was always gracious and dignified before, during and after matches. Her teams were always well prepared for opponents and played under control during the matches. While compiling an overall record of 886-225-5 (.792), Michaelis never suffered a losing season. With a 20-9 mark in her final season, Michaelis completed her 28th consecutive 20-win season while advancing the team to her 12th straight NCAA Tournament. Overall, her teams qualified for 30 of the 33 national tournaments, including 20 of 21 NCAA tournaments. Her 1972-73 team finished as the national runner-up and her 1993 squad became the first BYU team to qualify for an NCAA Final Four. Michaelis achieved a national tournament record of 73-44 (.624), including the ninth-best NCAA record of any school at 26-20 (.565). Only four programs played in more NCAA tournaments during her tenure.
Against conference competition, Michaelis’ teams were dominating, earning an incredible 356-37 (.906) record. She holds the distinction of winning the inaugural championship in each of the five leagues in which the Cougars were volleyball members, including the inaugural Mountain West Conference title in 1999 (with 13-1 league record). Overall, her teams claimed 23 conference titles.
Bringing in top-flight talent and teaching sound fundamental volleyball resulted in BYU players earning many honors during Michaelis’ tenure. Under her tutelage, 18 players earned 51 All-America awards, including nine AVCA/CVCA and six Volleyball Magazine first-team honors. Six players were singled out for major individual national honors, with the top award going to Mariliisa Salmi in 1986 as the CVCA National Player of the Year. Four athletes earned seven CoSIDA Academic All-America awards.
Also recognized on numerous occasions, Michaelis was honored by her peers as conference coach of the year eight times — once in the Intermountain Athletic Conference, three times in the High Country Athletic Conference and four times in the Western Athletic Conference. She was named the 1987 Tachikara Northwest Region Division I Coach of the Year and the 1996 NCAA District 7 Coach of the Year.
On December 18, 2003, she was inducted into the inaugural class of the AVCA Hall of Fame. She was also honored with the Pioneers in Progress Award in 2003 and the United States Olympic Committee National Coach of the Year for Volleyball in 2002. Her coaching peers in the MWC also recognized her with a Career Achievement Award in 2002. In 2001, she received the USA Volleyball All-Time Great Coach Award. She was inducted in the Utah Sports Hall of Fame in 2005, BYU Hall of Fame in 2008 and WCC Hall of Honor in 2012.
A 1988 Bear River High School Distinguished Alumni recipient, she was inducted into the Utah Summer Games Hall of Fame in 1987, the Hall of Fame of the Utah Network for Women and Girls in Sport in 1990, and was one of three honorees of the Salt Lake City Old Time Coaches Association in 1993. She was the 1994 recipient of the Dale Rex Memorial Award, an honor given annually by the BYU Cougar Club to the person who has contributed the most to amateur athletics in Utah.
For her years of dedication, Michaelis received the Volleyball Festival Distinguished Service to U.S. Volleyball Award in 1993. She also accepted the AVCA Founders Award, which honors individuals who have been involved in the advancements of volleyball for at least 15 years, at the 1996 AVCA Coach of the Year luncheon.
Michaelis was part of BYU’s women’s athletics program since she was a student participating in volleyball, basketball and softball from 1956-60. An excellent athlete, she once pitched a no-hitter and a one-hitter on the same day during a regional softball tournament at the University of Colorado in 1959. After graduating with a bachelor's degree in physical education in 1960, she was hired to coach several of BYU’s women’s teams in 1961. She went on to obtain a master's degree in physical education from BYU in 1962 and held the rank of associate professor of physical education and full athletic professional.
Through the 1960s and into the early 1970s — the era of “sports days,” she coached volleyball, basketball, softball and field hockey. She continued on as basketball coach until 1977, logging an intercollegiate record of 48-34 from 1972-1977. She also served as director of the women’s intramural and extramural programs at BYU for 10 years.
Michaelis enjoyed success in the 1960s with BYU competing at local and regional levels. Once women’s athletics took on a national look in the late 1960s and early 1970s, Michaelis had her volleyball team poised to be a national contender. At the inaugural AIAW national volleyball tournament during the 1969-70 season, Michaelis coached the Cougars to a seventh-place finish. Her 1972-73 team finished as the national runner-up with a 20-2 record and her 1978 squad placed fourth with a 34-5 resume.
Prior to the NCAA taking over women’s sports, Michaelis earned a 51-9 record in AIAW regional play, winning seven straight AIAW Region VII titles.
Michaelis served simultaneously as both a head coach and the Cougars’ top administrator for seven seasons. Consistently ranked among the top-10 women’s programs in the country, BYU women’s athletics thrived under Michaelis’ direction. BYU’s 11 women’s teams regularly ranked among the nation’s best in their respective sports. Under her tenure as BYU women’s athletics director, the cross country team finished either No. 1 or No. 2 each year, while winning four NCAA titles. During her final season in 2003-04, cross country finished No. 2 and the soccer team advanced to the NCAA Elite Eight, while gymnastics (No. 13), track and field (No. 15 outdoor, No. 19 indoor) and women’s tennis (No. 21) also achieved top-25 ranked seasons.
Michaelis was dedicated to her faith and served in various capicities in her local congregation of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in sunday school teacher, young women's president and relief society president roles. She also served on the Young Women's General Board from 1971-73 and the General Church Activities Committee from 1982-86.