McCool originally worked as a middle school teacher in
Palatka, Florida. She joined WWE in 2004 after participating in the
WWE Diva Search. From 2005 to 2007, she utilized the character of a personal trainer, before changing it to that of a teacher. At
The Great American Bash in 2008, McCool became the inaugural WWE Divas Champion, holding the title for approximately five months. She then won the WWE Women's Championship at
The Bash in 2009, becoming the first female wrestler to have held both titles. At
Night of Champions in 2010, she unified both titles becoming the first and only WWE Unified Divas Champion. McCool held both titles on two occasions, which makes her a four-time champion overall. In November 2010, she was ranked number one in Pro Wrestling Illustrated's Female 50, and she retired the following year. Since 2018, McCool has made occasional appearances in WWE, including participating in matches.
World Wrestling Entertainment/ WWE (2004-2011, 2018-present)
Development territories and training (2004–2006)
McCool first came to
World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) as a competitor in the
2004 WWE Diva Search, losing to
Christy Hemme.[1] Although she was eliminated, WWE signed her to a three-year deal in November.[1] She quickly began appearing in backstage segments on SmackDown! portraying a
fitness trainer and teaching various wrestlers stretches. She wrestled in her first SmackDown! match,
teaming with
Big Show to defeat
Dawn Marie and
René Duprée on March 3, 2005.[9] McCool made her
singles debut match on March 24, losing to Marie.[2] A few months later, McCool became a part of the feud between
MNM (
Johnny Nitro and
Joey Mercury) and
Heidenreich when she defended Heidenreich against MNM's
managerMelina's verbal attacks.[1] In a match on June 30, Melina defeated McCool by pinning her with the illegal aid of the ring ropes as leverage.[1]
McCool was then sent to WWE's developmental facility,
Deep South Wrestling (DSW), where she wrestled, performed interviews, hosted segments, and provided
color commentary.[1] While in DSW, she was hospitalized after having an allergic reaction to a
prescribed medication and was temporarily sidelined to recover.[1] Eventually, she started to train in WWE's other developmental territory,
Ohio Valley Wrestling (OVW). While in OVW, she began managing the duo of
Amish Roadkill and
K.C. James.[1]
Soon after, she began acting as
valet for the
team of
K.C. James and
Idol Stevens, who, because of her association with them, were nicknamed The Teacher's Pets.[1][12] The trio began feuding with
Paul London and Brian Kendrick, and their valet Massaro, for the
WWE Tag Team Championship, but never won the title.[1] The feud ended when London and Kendrick won a match against them at
No Mercy in October.[13] On November 28, McCool was hospitalized with an enlarged kidney, a broken
sternum, and an
electrolyte imbalance.[a][15] She was released from the hospital on December 2.[16] McCool returned on the March 30, 2007, episode of SmackDown!, where she participated in a 10-Diva tag team match.[17] On the April 13 episode of SmackDown!, McCool became a
fan favorite again, when she came to the aid of Ashley after she was attacked by Jillian Hall backstage.[18] Subsequently, a series of matches took place between Victoria and McCool,[19] including a
mixed tag team match where Victoria and
Kenny Dykstra defeated McCool and
Chuck Palumbo.[20]
"All-American Diva" and Divas Champion (2008–2009)
McCool was then
repackaged as "The All-American Diva", where she began accompanying her on-screen friend Chuck Palumbo during matches against Jamie Noble.[1] After a series of matches between the men, Noble won a date with McCool by defeating Palumbo.[1] In the storyline, Palumbo accidentally elbowed McCool during a match,[1] causing her to suffer a
concussion.[21] The partnership was dissolved when McCool refused to accept his apology.[1] She then went on to compete in a series of matches with Victoria,
Eve Torres,
Maryse and
Cherry to determine SmackDown!'s top Diva, with McCool winning title.[3]
On the July 4, 2008, episode of SmackDown!, McCool won a
Golden Dreams match to face
Natalya for the
WWE Divas Championship at
The Great American Bash. At the event, on July 20, McCool defeated Natalya to become the inaugural WWE Divas Champion.[22] McCool successfully defended the title against Maryse on SmackDown and at the
Unforgiven pay-per-view in September, and against
Maria on SmackDown in November.[23][24][25] On the December 26 episode of SmackDown!, McCool lost the Divas championship to Maryse.[26] After the match McCool turned
heel by attacking Maria, the special guest referee of the match, and blaming her for the loss.[26] In the following weeks, McCool also attacked
Eve Torres,[27] resulting in Torres' debut match, which McCool won.[28]
McCool then defeated
Gail Kim on the May 22, 2009, taping of SmackDown to become the number one contender for the
WWE Women's Championship.[29] A month later at
The Bash, McCool defeated Melina – with help from
Alicia Fox – to win her first Women's Championship.[1][30] With her win, McCool became the first Diva to have won both the WWE Divas and Women's championships.[31] She retained the championship against Melina in a rematch on July 26 at
Night of Champions,[32] and also in a
Lumberjill match on the October 2 episode of SmackDown.[33]
McCool then allied with
Layla to form
LayCool, and the duo entered a controversial feud with
Mickie James, in which LayCool bullied James and made fun of her weight. The feud resulted in a five-on-five
Survivor Series match at the
2009 Survivor Series, which James' team won, when
Melina pinned McCool.[34] James then became the number one contender for McCool's WWE Women's Championship at
TLC: Tables, Ladders & Chairs, where McCool successfully retained the championship after interference from Layla.[35][36] McCool lost the Women's Championship to James at the
Royal Rumble, although she regained it on the February 26, 2010, episode of SmackDown! when
special guest refereeVickie Guerrero interfered, to become a two-time Women's Champion.[37][38] On the April 23 episode of SmackDown!, McCool and Layla defeated
Beth Phoenix and Mickie James, and attacked Phoenix after the match. This led to McCool losing the championship to Phoenix in an "Extreme Makeover" match at
Extreme Rules.[39] On the May 14 episode of SmackDown!, McCool and Layla faced Phoenix in a Women's Championship
two-on-one handicap match, in which Layla pinned Phoenix to win the championship.[40] Despite Layla's win, McCool and Layla cut the Women's Championship in half, and the duo were unofficially referred to as the "co-champions".[41]
On the July 30 episode of SmackDown!, McCool
took Layla's place in her Women's Championship match against
Tiffany, defeating her and retaining the title.[42] At
Night of Champions, McCool defeated Melina to
unify the WWE Women's Championship with the
WWE Divas Championship,[43] becoming the first WWE Unified Divas Champion, and both McCool and Layla carried their own separate championship belts. At
Survivor Series on November 21, she lost the Divas Championship when
Natalya defeated McCool and Layla in a two-on-one handicap match.[44] At
TLC: Tables, Ladders and Chairs, McCool and Layla were defeated in the first Divas tag team
tables match by Natalya and Beth Phoenix.[45][46] LayCool invoked their rematch clause in January 2011, prompting the scheduling of a two-on-one handicap match at the
Royal Rumble. At the event, however, the match was altered to a fatal four-way with the addition of
Eve Torres, who won the match.[47]
On the April 8 episode of SmackDown!, dissension began to show between McCool and Layla after they were defeated by Beth Phoenix and
Kelly Kelly, due to McCool avoiding being tagged in by Layla, citing a back injury.[48] After more arguing and unsuccessful
couples therapy sessions in the following weeks, LayCool officially disbanded.[49] On the April 29 episode of SmackDown, McCool faced Layla in a singles match, which ended in a double
countout after the two began brawling. After the match, Layla challenged McCool to a no disqualification and
no countout match at
Extreme Rules. McCool accepted under one condition, which was that the
loser leaves WWE.[50] At Extreme Rules, McCool was pinned by Layla, in what is her final full-time WWE match.[51]
In a 2019 article published by The Sportster, McCool revealed her departure from the WWE that she was dealing with numerous injuries, including a torn MCL and gave birth to her child the following year.[52] This was explained in
Lillian Garcia's Chasing Glory podcast interview in 2016:
"It was tough just leaving in itself was tough because it got to a point where I was dealing with so much again mostly being Undertaker's girlfriend and why I was on TV and even having a writer throw the papers up one day and say 'Why don't we just call it the Michelle McCool and Undertaker show?!' It was nonstop and I went to Vince on numerous occasions and bless his heart he was wonderful, but I just said Vince, I don't wanna hate something that I grew up loving so much and the longer I stay the more I'm like like getting a sour taste in my mouth. So making that decision to leave was as hard as it is, but more than wanting to be in WWE or be a champion I've always wanted to be a mom."[52]
Sporadic appearances (2018–present)
On January 22, 2018, McCool was honored as part of a segment involving women that contributed to the company's success on the WWE Raw 25 Years special episode.[53] The following week as a
face, she was a surprise entrant in the inaugural women's
Royal Rumble match at the
2018 Royal Rumble, making the most eliminations in the match at five before being eliminated by Natalya.[54] In October, McCool took part in the all women's pay-per-view,
WWE Evolution, by participating in a
battle royal. She was eliminated from the match by
Ember Moon.[55]
During WWE The Bump, during which she celebrated the 30th anniversary of her husband
Undertaker's career, in 2020 she was asked who she would like to fight. She replied that she would gladly fight the "Queen of WWE",
Charlotte Flair, and did not rule out such an option in the future.[56][57][unreliable source?]
On January 28, 2023, McCool was seen sitting front row for the
2023 Royal Rumble with her children. McCool returned from the crowd at number 25, eliminating
Tamina quickly after entering the match and helping 10 other superstars eliminate
Nia Jax, before being eliminated by
Rhea Ripley, making it to the final 10 women in the match.[citation needed]
McCool was married to Jeremy Louis Alexander, whom she began dating in high school.[1][71][72] The couple divorced in 2006.[1] She married fellow wrestler Mark Calaway, known professionally as
The Undertaker, on June 26, 2010, in
Houston,
Texas.[73][74] Their first child together, their daughter Kaia, was born in August 2012.[75] They have a younger adopted son named Kolt.[76]
She has had several wrestling-related injuries; in November 2007, she fractured her nose during an overseas WWE tour after
Victoria's clothesline hit her in the face.[79] She has been hospitalized twice, had two broken ribs, a
broken sternum, and a broken
xiphoid process.[80] When she eventually decided to retire from active wrestling competition and thus left the WWE and ended her active career, she mentioned that her foot had been injured for two months prior with a broken toe, torn
joint capsules and a torn
MCL.[81] In 2016 she was diagnosed with skin cancer, and underwent successful treatment.[82] In April 2019 she publicly disclosed she had struggled with infertility, and had suffered several miscarriages.[83]
^McCool originally injured her back during a WWE European tour. Because of pain in her back, she was unaware of the sternum injury until she went to the hospital for treatment. Tests also revealed that she had an enlarged kidney.[14]
^Strode, Cory (January 28, 2018).
"FULL ROYAL RUMBLE COVERAGE". PWInsider.
Archived from the original on December 12, 2020. Retrieved November 14, 2018.
^McCool-Calaway, Michelle (April 24, 2019).
"Michelle McCool Calaway on Instagram". Instagram. Archived from the original on December 26, 2021. Retrieved September 13, 2019. millions of women, including myself, who struggle with infertility. [...] 13 rounds of IVF [...] & 3 miscarriages later