By Harry Minium

Michele Mulich stood before more than 200 of راة«تسئµ's most generous athletics donors and implored them to stop thinking of giving back to راة«تسئµ as just a financial transaction.

 

Instead of just writing a check, consider forming relationships with student-athletes. Mentor one athlete per year, she said. It will be one of the most rewarding things you've ever done.

 

She speaks from experience. Mulich has endowed a scholarship that is given each year to a female athlete who majors in technology.

 

During the 2022-23 school year, that scholarship was awarded to Miranda Byrne, a senior on the swim team who said Mulich affected her life more than anyone other than her parents.

 

When they met nearly two years ago, they clicked. They began to talk weekly, then more often. Mulich went to her swim meets.

 

When Byrne introduced Mulich at the annual Endowed Scholarship Luncheon this spring at Chartway Arena, she teared up. Mulich, sitting next to Byrne's parents, David and JoAnne Byrne, only barely kept their composure.

 

"Michele is an amazing and confident mentor and friend," Byrne said. "She is passionate about encouraging women in technology. I learned a lot from Michele simply by asking about her experiences and about navigating a male-dominated business world as a female.

 

"And she is absolutely the biggest sports fan I've ever known."

 

Mulich is indeed one of راة«تسئµ's most enthusiastic athletic boosters.

 

"راة«تسئµ gives me the opportunity to give back, to be able to help kids with their careers. To be able to come out and encourage those kids, that means a lot to me." - Michele Mulich

 

She has missed only one راة«تسئµ home football game since the Monarchs began playing football in 2009 – a hurricane prevented her from driving to Norfolk – even though she lived much of that time nearly five hours away in Maryland.

 

Now living in Chesapeake, she attended one or more games, matches or regattas held by all 18 راة«تسئµ athletic teams in 2022-23.

She and Byrne, who met in 2021 when the athlete reached out to her about summer internships, have developed a friendship "that will last a lifetime," Mulich said.

 

Mulich was inspired to begin mentoring athletes by Thomas DeMarco, the first starting quarterback for راة«تسئµ football and, for a time, a fundraiser for the athletic department.

 

DeMarco attended راة«تسئµ on a scholarship named for Barry Kornblau, an alumnus from Richmond and one of the University's top donors.

 

"Thomas told me what an impact it had on him to want to make Barry proud and to not let him down since he was enabling Thomas to get his education," she said. "That made quite an impression on me." And led her to establish her scholarship.

 

Byrne isn't the only athlete she's counseled. Other coaches have asked her to talk to their players.

 

"I try to let coaches know that if a student-athlete needs a mentor or a friend, I'm certainly here and available," she said. "If they want some advice or if they need to get off campus for a day, my home is always open."

 

Women's basketball coach DeLisha Milton-Jones said she has leaned on Mulich for help.

 

"There are very few fans I know who as are devoted to their alma maters as Michele Mulich," she said.

 

Endowed athletic scholarships are a big deal at راة«تسئµ. Only a handful of Group of Five programs have had the fundraising success experienced by راة«تسئµ, and endowed scholarships play a key role.

 

The Old Dominion Athletic Foundation, راة«تسئµ's fundraising organization, raised $18 million in 2022, the most for the University in one year. Most of that funded scholarships and facility improvements.

 

But an increasing amount of the yearly total is being donated to endowed scholarships – those valued at $250,000 or more – and more alumni are putting راة«تسئµ in their wills.

 

راة«تسئµ's endowment stands at $46.5 million – the largest in the Sun Belt Conference and more than four ACC schools.

 

That endowment generates $1.2 million in interest per year. That revenue helps fund the more than $5 million ODAF provides for scholarships. The principle is never touched and keeps growing.

"Our goal is for راة«تسئµ athletics to be fully endowed for all scholarships," Athletic Director Wood Selig said. "We would need $125 million to do that. That sounds insurmountable, but it's really not. We are adding about six new endowed scholarships every year. We have more than 90 endowed scholarships, and 35 people have put us in their will.â€‌

 

Mulich has arranged for much of her estate to be donated to راة«تسئµ. She hopes, by the time she retires, that her gift will provide راة«تسئµ close to $1 million.

 

She credits what she learned at راة«تسئµ for much of her business success.

 

Raised in Virginia Beach, she enrolled at راة«تسئµ in 1981 and earned a business degree in information systems.

Her career took her to Nashville, Roanoke, Minneapolis and Southern California and the Baltimore area before she moved back home.

 

She has always worked in technology and was recently named strategic program manager of Allegis Group. She is planning an initiative to replace the company's business systems.



"راة«تسئµ gives me the opportunity to give back, to be able to help kids with their careers,â€‌ she said. "To be able to come out and encourage those kids, that means a lot to me."



Six family members of the late Sonny Allen, the former men's basketball coach who led راة«تسئµ to its first national title in 1975, also attended the luncheon.

 

Sonny’s son Billy, former راة«تسئµ All-American Dave Twardzik and ex-Monarch radio voice Dick Fraim led an effort that raised more than $200,000 for a scholarship in Sonny Allen's name. More donations are expected to take it over $250,000 before next season.

Men’s basketball guard Chaunce Jenkins, who will receive the first Sonny Allen scholarship next season, was among those who sat with the Allens.

 

After the banquet, they exchanged phone numbers and hugged repeatedly.

"We were so moved by the message from Michele," Billy Allen said. "We want to follow in her footsteps."

 

"We told Chaunce we're going to pray for him weekly and stay in touch with him," added Billy’s wife, Lisa.

 

Mulich hopes to retire in a few years.  She plans to help راة«تسئµ find more donors and wants to spend more time working with student-athletes.

 

"راة«تسئµ is my passion,â€‌ she said. "I can honestly say, maybe late in life, that I have finally found my purpose and my why."

A longer version of this story can be found on the .