While growing up as the son of a steel worker in a blue-collar, football-loving town in western Pennsylvania, Ron Manilla didn’t know much about tennis.
So when a monsignor at the Catholic school he had just started attending as a ninth-grader tried to recruit him to a tennis team that was short on players, Manilla – who had played only football and basketball to that point – scoffed.
“I said, ‘No way I’m playing that sport. That’s a sissy sport,’” Manilla recalled. “He said, ‘Why don’t you show up at the tennis courts tomorrow and I’ll show you who the sissy is.’
“So I went out there and he just pulverized me up and down – I thought I was going to die,” Manilla said, laughing. “And that was it. I just realized it was a really fun sport, a really tough sport, and ever since that day I’ve been hitting tennis balls.”
More than a half-century after first picking up a racket, Manilla is retiring. The longtime tennis director at the University of Virginia Foundation-owned Boar’s Head Sports Club – a fixture in the Charlottesville tennis community, on the UVA tennis scene and in the Special Olympics world – has announced that March 12 will be his last official day as a full-time teaching professional.
Manilla has, in some cases, taught tennis to three generations of Charlottesville families. (Contributed photo)
The man with the jovial disposition, the Santa Claus-like beard and the million-watt smile will be missed.
“He not only touched the lives of many because of the racket in your hand, but also with the delivery of life lessons along the way,” Boar’s Head General Manager Russ Cronberg said. “Without a doubt, Ron has directly shaped the importance of tennis in our community.”
“When I think of the Boar’s Head Sports Club and of the people who make that place so special, I think of Ron Manilla,” UVA men’s tennis head coach Andres Pedroso said. “He’s someone who treats everyone with consideration, is so kind to everybody, a friend to everybody in the organization and all the members. He says hello to everybody, is very flexible with everybody and is just a very friendly person who has been a joy to be around.
“He’s been a major asset for not only the Boar’s Head, but also for UVA tennis and the Special Olympics.”
Manilla, who has taught tennis to three generations of Charlottesville families, smiles when thinking back to his earliest days in the sport. He grew up in the small steel-mining town of Farrell before attending high school in Erie and then going on to play tennis at Gannon University (also in Erie), where he served as team captain.

