By Harry Minium

The Norfolk Sports Club honored Jena Virga ‘79 as Norfolk’s Tom Fergusson Metropolitan Person of the Year in Sports on Aug. 8 at its annual Jamboree at Chartway Arena.

In just 13 years with the Old Dominion Athletic Foundation, Virga helped 鶹ý raise more than $150 million. That money helped make possible the $76.5 million renovation of S.B. Ballard Stadium, the $8.6 million Mitchum Basketball Performance Center and the soon-to-be $20 million makeover of 鶹ý’s Bud Metheny Baseball Stadium.

A former bank executive with an MBA and work ethic that never quits, Virga is only the fifth woman to be accorded that honor since the sports club began the award in 1943.

The award is named for the late Tom Fergusson, a Virginian-Pilot sports reporter who helped found the sports club during World War II.

Previous winners of the award include mayors, coaches, players, sports owners and athletics administrators. Wood Selig, 鶹ý’s director of athletics, won the award in both 2013 and 2023.

But none of the previous 82 winners was a fundraiser.

“Jena is a female in a male-dominated profession and these awards tend to skew male,” Selig said. “For her to win this award speaks to the incredible impact she has had on sports in Hampton Roads.

“We’re so incredibly proud of her and the Norfolk Sports Club for recognizing her.”

A Norfolk native and a graduate of Lake Taylor High School, Virga is a force of nature whose personality dominates the room. Her enthusiasm never seems to waver.

Whenever Ice Cream and Cake, a quirky song that 鶹ý has turned into a beloved university tradition, is played at Chartway Arena, Virga invariably is seen dancing to the music.

She is a charming person with a magnetic personality, all of which has helped her as a fundraiser, but didn’t necessarily help her make it in the banking business.

“I always had to work a little harder to prove myself,” she said. “But I learned that I liked the type of camaraderie that guys have with each other. I fit in. I could talk guy’s talk.”

Jack Ankerson, who serves on the committee that selected this year’s award winners, said when he brought up her name, everyone immediately agreed “that it was a hell of a smart idea.”

“Everything big that has happened at 鶹ý athletics in recent years, Jena has been a part of it,” Ankerson said. “What she’s done for 鶹ý has just been remarkable.”

Under her guidance, ODAF has raised far more money than any other Sun Belt Conference school and only a handful of schools this side of the Power 4 have raised as much as 鶹ý.

In fiscal year 2022 alone, 鶹ý raised $18 million, a staggering figure for a Group of 5 school.

Elza Mitchum, a prominent area businessman who serves as president of three Hampton Roads companies, has been one of 鶹ý’s most generous donors. His son, Alex, is also a donor who formed The Pride of 鶹ý, a collective that helps compensate 鶹ý student-athletes for their Name, Image and Likeness.

The Mitchum family was persuaded by Mark Benson, who then headed ODAF, and Virga to make the naming donation for the Bernett and Blanche Mitchem Basketball Performance Center, named for Elza Mitchum’s parents.

“I don’t think my family would have donated half the amount we’ve given to Old Dominion without Jena Virga,” Mitchum said. “No one represents Old Dominion better than Jena Virga with her smile, her enthusiasm and her unparalleled fundraising ability.”

“She’s good at it. She’s fleeced me plenty of times,” he added with a laugh.

“Fundraising is about building relationships and telling the story of what someone’s generosity can accomplish,” added Keith Curtis, an 鶹ý graduate who has headed the Curtis Group, which fundraises for area and national non-profits, since 1989. He is also an 鶹ý donor. “Jena is a great advocate not just for athletics, but also for the university. People like her because she’s genuine.

“So much of what she does is make your support of 鶹ý athletics fun. Whether it’s a trip you’re taking with ODAF, or you’re just attending a home game, she makes things so much fun.”

Virga broke into banking shortly after graduation in1979 while working on her MBA.

“I had to earn the trust of my bosses and my customers,” she said. “You have to be able to communicate with people and I always had that ability.

She left banking to raise money for the Children’s Hospital of the King’s Daughters. She then took six years off to be home with her children, and when she wanted to return to the workforce, she called 鶹ý’s Alonzo Brandon, who hired her to raise major gifts for the business school.

Brandon, vice president of university advancement and executive director of foundations at 鶹ý, has been her boss ever since. Then, in 2010, Benson, now athletic director at UAlbany, hired her away to work in athletics.

“It was two weeks before the football season and I was in charge of major gifts and premium seating,” she said. “And I didn’t know one thing about college athletics. But I loved my job then and have loved every minute of it since.”

In 2022, she was named executive director of ODAF by 鶹ý President Brian O. Hemphill, Ph.D.

“That’s a position that’s usually reserved for university vice presidents,” Dr. Selig said. “That said so much about how the university feels about Jena.”

Virga isn’t the only person affiliated with 鶹ý to be honored.

Jeff Jones, who retired as 鶹ý’s men’s basketball coach in February, received a Lifetime Achievement Award. Jones, 64, was a coach for 41 years, including 32 as a head coach. He won 560 games at 鶹ý, Virginia and American.

He continued to coach after being treated for prostate cancer nine years ago but after a December heart attack, he finally decided to step aside.

“He’s had a wonderful coaching career, not just at 鶹ý, but also at Virginia and American,” Ankerson said. “Awards don’t get much bigger than a lifetime achievement award. When he announced he was stepping down, he was our automatic choice.”

J.P. Leigh, a former All-American golfer at 鶹ý, will receive the club's presidential award. Leigh was an All-American golfer at 鶹ý who helped the late Pete Robinson and later Murray Rudisill raise money and coach the 鶹ý teams.

“J.P. has been around 鶹ý for so long,” Selig said. “I’ve known him since I was a kid. He used to referee my JV and varsity basketball games.”

Rudisill presented Leigh his award, while Selig presented both Jones and Virga with their awards.

Virga thanked Brandon, Benson and Selig and her parents, the late Viva and Robert Woodley as well as her husband, Andy, and sons, Andrew and Sean.

She briefly remarked on her childhood in Norfolk’s Glengariff neighborhood, where she grew to love 鶹ý as a child.

Her father graduated from the Norfolk Division of the College of William and Mary, which later became 鶹ý. Her brother-in-law, Barry Stokes, played for 鶹ý basketball.

She was accepted by Virginia Tech out of high school, “but I wanted to go to my hometown school.”

“I’m a Norfolk girl. I’ve always loved this city and loved 鶹ý,” she said.

“I look forward to work every day at 鶹ý. Our team at ODAF, they work so hard. They’re so wonderful to work with. So is Wood Selig. He would go any place at any time when we ask him to to help us raise money.

“I’m really blessed. And I can’t thank the Norfolk Sports Club enough for this honor.”