The roles will be reversed when Alexis Utz walks into school in August.
After 16 years as a student and member of an athletic team, sheâll be that person standing in front of the class and on the sidelines coaching the team.
It will be a stark contrast to what sheâs been accustomed to, but Utz says sheâs ready after three hectic and memorable years as a student-athlete. She will earn her degree, summa cum laude in History Education, on May 13. Utz will also earn the Exemplary Student Teacher Award and Outstanding History Graduate honor.
She will return to the Kansas City area for a job teaching sixth-grade social studies at Platte County Middle School in Platte City, Mo, in the fall. Sheâll also work with the Platte County High School volleyball program as head C Team coach and as an assistant for the varsity squad.
âIâm really excited, â I think itâs going to be a fun transition to still be part of a team, just in a different role,â said Utz, who graduated in May. âIâm excited to take on that challenge and grow into it.â
Utz was a middle blocker at KWU all three years, helping the Coyotes post a 69-29 overall record, 35-13 in the Kansas Conference. They won the 2022 KCAC Tournament title and competed in the NAIA National Championship opening round.
Utz also was a member of Wesleyanâs highly successful DECA team for two years and was a top-10 finisher in Event Planning with partner Maddy Beckett in the organizationâs international competition both seasons. DECA is an organized business competition that provides students with problems and asks them to present solutions. Some disciplines require a report written beforehand, while others involve an exam taken before the competition. All involve presentations with varying amounts of time to prepare, sometimes as little as 30 minutes.
Utz found DECA and volleyball to be compatible endeavors.
âYou wouldnât think academic and sport would correlate, but they overlap in so many different ways,â she said. âProblem-solving when youâre stuck in a situation and feel like thereâs no way weâre going to beat this team or no way weâre going to be able to solve this case. Just thinking critically, having a positive attitude and knowing that we can accomplish it. Knowing we can solve the DECA case or we can win the volleyball game.â
Quick, split-second decision making is essential in both.
âBeing able to go in front of a judge and speak confidently and with authority on the ideas that we came up with,â she said, âor in volleyball having to decide when you get set where youâre going to hit the ball â am I going to hit it deep, am I going to tip it? Thinking quickly what would be the best option to score at that time.â
Utz and Beckett placed second in event planning in the 2022 DECA International competition and were sixth in this yearâs event in April in Orlando, Fla. They won each of their state competitions.
âNot only did she and (Beckett) accomplish high accolades, but she also made the team better due to her charismatic personality,â DECA coach Dr. Trish Petak said. âHer work ethic, natural drive to be her best, positive attitude, energy and love of education will make her an exceptional history/social studies teacher.
âShe and her partner are the best duo I have ever coached or observed.â
Utz and Beckett are close friends in addition to teammates â Beckett a May graduate with a masterâs degree in business administration.
âWeâre super good friends,â Utz said. âWe hang out outside of volleyball, we hang out outside of classes. Just knowing her as a person and her knowing me has made a tremendous difference in DECA. I think thatâs part of the reason why weâre able to be so successful and why we have a chemistry.â
Utz is also thankful for her friendship with KWUâs eight graduating senior volleyball athletes.
âThose are friends Iâm going to have for the rest of my life, and thatâs something you canât pay for, something you canât wish for,â she said. âThe relationships with those girls are something that Iâll have for the rest of my life. Iâm going to miss them.â
She also formed strong friendships as a resident assistant in the residence halls.
âThe relationships with those girls are something that Iâm eternally grateful for, to be able to spend time with people and get to know them on a personal level,â she said. âIâve met so many incredible people at KWU, I think thatâs one of the advantages of a small school. I talk to my friends who are at (Missouri) and KU and K-State and they donât even know their professorâs first name.
âIâm so grateful for my time at Kansas Wesleyan.â