Yes, but he spoke entirely like an employee, not a leader. Think of some of the cross-university issues like realignment, the P5 breakaway, etc - he said nothing about them and didn't show any signs that he had ever thought about them or was prepared to help VT through them.
To a search committee with three Hokie Club members he said the Hokie Club had to do more, but without showing a reason why they should or a reward if they do.
He spoke like a bureaucrat who wants outsiders to solve his problems for him. His bureaucratic mindset is emphasized by the Title IX mindset of privileging compliance with a regulation. Does Alabama delay a football practice facility until it has built facilities for three women's sports so that it has an ironclad case for Title IX compliance? How many schools have been hit by regulators for failing Title IX due to facilities?
I don't doubt that financial stresses are a major issue at universities generally and athletic departments specifically. But building a softball clubhouse doesn't solve them, and he doesn't seem like the entrepreneurial leader who would come up with a solution.