Davis Adding to Pittsford Winning Ways

December 13, 2019

By Doug Donnelly
Special for Second Half

PITTSFORD – Aaron Davis doesn’t have to worry about rebuilding Pittsford girls basketball.

While Davis is putting his own stamp on the program that has won two MHSAA Finals championships over the past five seasons, he knows the pieces already were in place when he was named the varsity head coach in June.

“There is a lot of ground work already in place at Pittsford,” said Davis. “It all starts with the youth level, and that’s already there. That is a blessing.”

Davis is in his first season at Pittsford and has the Wildcats off to a 3-0 start. He took over for Chris Hodos, who helped make Pittsford a household name in Class D girls basketball circles over the past decade.

“There are things that I do differently, but Chris and I shared a lot of the same philosophies about basketball,” said Davis, a 2007 graduate of North Adams-Jerome. “There are some things that we do that are from Chris. We still run some of the same presses.”

Davis was a three-sport athlete at North Adams-Jerome, playing basketball, football and baseball. He was a four-year varsity baseball player and spent a year on the Adrian College diamond, but an injury that dated back to his high school days cut his college career short.

“I tried it for a year, but it got to be too much stress on my body and arm,” he said.

Davis said that while growing up, his dad coached him in multiple sports. Davis also learned a lot from his high school coaches while playing at North Adams.

“My wife and I had always talked about me getting into coaching someday,” he said.

Davis got his start in coaching at his alma mater. He coached the junior varsity boys basketball team and had coached baseball with Hodos. In fact, when Hodos contacted him about coaching at Pittsford, Davis thought he was talking about baseball.

“After a few minutes, I was like, ‘Oh, you are talking about basketball,’” Davis said. “Chris was a great mentor. He helped me become a better coach.”

Davis spent three seasons as the Wildcats JV girls basketball coach. Hodos, he said, let him run the JV team as he wanted. That valuable experience has paid off in multiple ways early this winter.

Pittsford’s 3-0 start includes wins over Hudson (41-25), Tekonsha (50-12) and Waldron (68-15). Thus far, the Wildcats are giving up just 17.3 points a game. That’s by design.

“We’re real athletic, and we play good defense,” Davis said. “I have a lot of great defenders. Everything starts with our defense.”

Davis said the team presses, often full-court, and likes to create havoc for the other team as it works to just get the ball over the timeline.

“We are built to run, pressure and play fast,” he said. “We do a lot of trapping and try and force the other team into making bad passes. We like to try and create our offense with our defense.”

The Wildcats have 11 players: five seniors, four juniors and two sophomores. Jordyn Cole has been the team’s top scorer through three games. Another senior, Sara Cole, is right behind her. The other seniors are MaKayla McDaniel, Sam Leggett and Brooke Campbell.

“Jordyn and Sara, I’d say, take the majority of our shots,” Davis said, “but we really don’t have just one girl who can score for us. We don’t have that one player we rely on. We have girls up and down the line who are comfortable shooting. We like to spread it out.”

One thing that has helped in his transition is that every girl on the varsity roster played for Davis for at least a season. They all are familiar with him and his systems. He also brought on Greg Mallar to coach the Pittsford JV team. Mallar is also familiar to the girls because he has been coaching in the Wildcats youth program.

“He’s actually helped develop a lot of the girls,” Davis said.

Pittsford became a state power under Hodos. In his seven seasons as the head coach, the Wildcats went 156-14, including five consecutive 20-0 regular seasons and the Class D titles in 2016 and 2017. They fell just shy of Michigan’s record of 78 consecutive wins during that time frame.

Pittsford athletic director Mike Burger said the program is in good hands.

"I think that the way that he approaches coaching girls basketball fits quite nicely with the overall small-school athletics philosophy we have here at Pittsford,” Burger said.

The Wildcats play in the Southern Central Athletic Association with North Adams-Jerome, Jackson Christian, Hillsdale Academy and Camden-Frontier. Camden-Frontier and Hillsdale Academy both return several players from quality teams and also will play in the same District as Pittsford.

“It’s still early,” Davis said. “We’ve struggled at times offensively, but I’m not worried about that at this point. If we play up to our potential, we can make a run. But, like I said, it’s early. We’ll see what happens.”

Doug Donnelly has served as a sports and news reporter and city editor over 25 years, writing for the Daily Chief-Union in Upper Sandusky, Ohio from 1992-1995, the Monroe Evening News from 1995-2012 and the Adrian Daily Telegram since 2013. He's also written a book on high school basketball in Monroe County and compiles record books for various schools in southeast Michigan. E-mail him at [email protected] with story ideas for Jackson, Washtenaw, Hillsdale, Lenawee and Monroe counties.

PHOTOS: (Top) First-year Pittsford varsity girls basketball coach Aaron Davis talks things over with his team during a practice this season. (Middle) Davis and his team are off to a 3-0 start. (Top photo courtesy of James Gensterblum; middle photo provided by Pittsford girls basketball program.)

Record-Setting Airport Earns 1st Quarterfinal Trip, Set to Take On Reigning Champ

By Doug Donnelly
Special for MHSAA.com

March 17, 2026

The greatest girls basketball season in Carleton Airport’s history hasn’t come without its adversity. When it hit, however, it only made the Jets stronger.

Mid-MichiganTonight, Airport (24-2) – which already has set a school record for victories, broke the single-game Monroe County scoring record and won the first Regional championship in school history – will play a Quarterfinal against reigning Division 2 champion Tecumseh.

The journey to get here has been magical, said head coach Darrell Mossburg.

“Something just clicked with this group,” he said. “Their focus has been so much better. They watch film, they pay attention to scouting reports. They’ve learned you have to play every single possession and not worry about a missed shot or turnover. It’s next possession, next possession.”

The Jets have four seniors, all who have played several seasons on the varsity. Olivia Gratz is a 1,000-point scorer, but not the leading scorer on the team. That distinction belongs to junior Sophia Mator, who averages 17 points a game and has made 60 3-pointers on the season.

Senior Peyton Zajac is right behind them in scoring and has been a big contributor in a variety of ways.

“Peyton hasn’t been a great scorer, but there are other things she does that people don’t see on the stat sheet, getting our people in the right spot and playing defense,” Mossburg said.

Senior Jillian Baker has made perhaps the biggest strides since last season.

“Jillian has been playing extremely well. She’s scoring more,” Mossburg said. “Brooklyn Martin (sophomore) has been playing great. They provide the depth that you need this late in the year.”

Seven Jets have scored at least 100 points on the season. Airport averages a whopping 67.6 points per game, and put up a 103-point outburst against Huron League foe Milan in the first game in February. Airport has scored at least 70 points 12 times.

“The defense can’t key on just Sophia,” Mossburg said. “We have a lot of depth.”

Mossburg said this is one of those years that Jets faithful have been talking about for many.

“I know the program all the way down to the fourth grade,” he said. “We knew when this group were seniors, when we could mix in a couple of the other players, we knew they were going to be really, really good.”

Sophia Mator (22) drives toward the lane against New Boston Huron.In years past, he said, his players didn’t always have the same approach to practice. Now, everyone is on the same page.

“You have to practice like a winner, and every day you have to practice like a winner,” Mossburg said. “They finally grasp that concept. They’ve realized this is it. We have to come to practice every day and act like a winner.”

The team’s basketball IQ is off the charts, he noted.

Sophomore Mya Stahr’s dad and uncle were basketball stars at Flat Rock. Junior Katelyn Roecker is the daughter of a former head coach and basketball official. Freshman Brityn Duffy’s dad was Airport’s football coach and played baseball at Michigan State University.

Jillian Baker is the daughter of Luke Baker, who coached the Jets for much of the season when Mossburg had to step away for health reasons. Baker’s niece, Brenna, is a senior on the team as well.

“A lot of good basketball families,” Mossburg said. “They have the right basketball IQ and have been brought up the right way,”

Baker has been an assistant with Mossburg for five seasons and was the natural choice to step in when necessary.

“Luke has been fabulous,” Mossburg said. “He has been great. He does what’s right for the program. He puts his time in with film and scouting reports. Without him, I don’t know where we’d be.”

Mossburg has been around sports his entire life, graduating from Airport in 1988 and playing football at the University of Toledo including under coach Nick Saban. Mossburg’s dad was a longtime coach in Monroe County who had a fling in professional football.

Mossburg stepped away for the early part of the season but returned to the bench in February in an assistant coach-type of role. Even when he was in the hospital, he and Baker communicated daily. It was agreed that when the postseason began, Mossburg would be back as the head coach.

“I always told the kids that the coaches aren’t between the lines playing,” Mossburg said. “It’s been a smooth transition. No worries at all.”

Mossburg said he’s weathered the storm with his health. The focus now is on playing a Tecumseh team seeking to repeat as champion.

“We have to focus on us and not play to the scoreboard,” he said, “keep our focus on possession by possession, one shot at a time, one rebound at a time.”

Doug DonnellyDoug Donnelly has served as a news and sports reporter at the Adrian Daily Telegram and the Monroe News for 30 years, including 10 years as city editor in Monroe. He's written a book on high school basketball in Monroe County and compiles record books for various schools in southeast Michigan. He is now publisher and editor of The Blissfield Advance, a weekly newspaper. E-mail him at [email protected] with story ideas for Jackson, Washtenaw, Hillsdale, Lenawee and Monroe counties.

PHOTOS (Top) Carleton Airport’s Delaney Zajac (1) and Olivia Gratz (2) defend the post against Flat Rock. (Middle) Sophia Mator (22) drives toward the lane against New Boston Huron. (Photos courtesy of Monroe News.)