Hours after Kaitlyn Davis had completed her first summer workout at USC, a few of her new teammates texted head coach Lindsay Gottlieb about the Columbia graduate transferโs athleticism. The gist of the messages, according to Gottlieb? โOMG.โ
โShe stands out amongst Power 5 athletes as the kind of craziest athlete on the floor,โ Gottlieb told The Next about the 6โ2 forward/guard.
For two other teammates, though, Davisโ athleticism wasnโt a surprise because it had been high on their scouting reports for years. Harvardโs McKenzie Forbes and Pennโs Kayla Padilla also committed to USC and Gottlieb as graduate transfers this spring. That trio is poised to make a big impact on a new-look USC team that ESPN ranked No. 18 in the country for 2023-24 even before Davis committed.
โIt’s like a little Ivy power team in the Pac-12,โ Harvard head coach Carrie Moore said during a Zoom town hall with fans on May 22.
Davis, Padilla and Forbes were three of the Ivy Leagueโs biggest stars last season as seniors, and they combined for six All-Ivy selections in eight seasons played in the conference. Padilla, a 5โ9 guard, also won the Rookie of the Year award in 2019-20.
Last season, Davis averaged 13.6 points, 8.3 rebounds and 3.7 assists per game on 51.0% shooting from the field. She ranked in the top 12 in the Ivy League in all five major statistical categories. Padilla was the conferenceโs second-leading scorer at 17.7 points per game and ranked seventh with 3.5 assists per game. And Forbes, a 6โ guard, ranked seventh in scoring with 13.7 points per game and made 40.1% of her 3-pointers.
Their stardom made them fierce rivals. Davis and Columbia fared the best in the regular season, going 3-1 against Penn and Harvard en route to the programโs first-ever Ivy League title. But all three teams made the four-team Ivy League Tournament, and Harvard upset Columbia behind Forbesโ 27 points, including a game-sealing steal and score in the final seconds.

That game thwarted Columbiaโs hopes of an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament, but Columbia, Harvard and Penn all qualified for the WNIT. Columbia got revenge on Harvard in the quarterfinals and eventually advanced to the championship game.
Gottlieb, a Brown alumna, watched the conference from afar and saw several players who could succeed at the Power 6 level. Graduating with a year of eligibility remaining after the COVID-19 pandemic prompted the Ivy League to cancel the 2020-21 season, Davis, Forbes and Padilla are three of the six Ivy League graduate transfers who will play for Power 6 programs next season. Thatโs the most since at least 2017-18 and likely longer, because fewer graduating seniors had eligibility left before COVID-19.
โWhat that league is showing is that, if you’re the right fit there, you can get an Ivy League degree and play basketball at a high level,โ Gottlieb said. โSo I think โฆ the depth of talent in the league is only going to get better.โ
However, Gottlieb didnโt set out to collect Ivy League grad transfers like Happy Meal prizes. She recruited them individually, they fit different needs the Trojans had after seven players departed, and her vision happened to resonate with all of them. They didnโt recruit each other much, either, because they didnโt know each other beyond the scouting reports.
โI even was joking like, I wasn’t even sure what [Padillaโs] voice sounded like when I met her,โ Forbes told The Next with a laugh.
For Forbes, signing with USC brought her college career full circle. The California native played her freshman season for Gottlieb at Cal but transferred to Harvard after Gottlieb took a job with the NBAโs Cleveland Cavaliers. By the time Forbes entered the transfer portal again last season to play as a graduate student, Gottlieb was the USC coach, and it was a natural next step for Gottlieb to recruit Forbes a second time.
Gottlieb emphasized to Forbes that she didnโt want her former player to choose USC primarily to play for her, though. Instead, she wanted Forbes to find the best all-around fit, and if it was USC, their relationship would be โthe icing on the cake.โ
But Forbes was intent on returning to the West Coast, and USC was always her frontrunner. All USC had to do, she said, was not โroyally mess upโ during her official visit.
Like Forbes, Padilla is a California native, and Gottlieb had seen her play in high school and followed her exploits at Penn. Gottlieb then had to game-plan against her when Penn played at USC last season โ a six-point USC win in which Padilla struggled with her shot but had 13 points, six rebounds and five assists. Shortly after that game, Penn head coach Mike McLaughlin called Gottlieb to tell her that Padilla was planning to enter the portal and gauge Gottliebโs interest.
Padillaโs decision came down to USC and Michigan, but USCโs business school, basketball fit and storied history โ with players such as Cheryl Miller, Cynthia Cooper, Tina Thompson and Lisa Leslie โ won her over. She also liked that Gottlieb is an Ivy League alum and avidly follows the conference. โHonestly, it wasn’t that hard of a sell,โ Padilla told The Next.

Padilla and Forbes took their official visits on the same weekend, and when they tried on USC uniforms and posed for photos, the idea of playing together came into focus.
โWe just clicked right away,โ Forbes said.
โWe saw each other in the uniforms and we were taking pictures, and โฆ we just had a special moment,โ Padilla said. โโฆ A lightbulb went off, and we were like, I think we’re both going here. Like, how could we not? It seemed like the perfect fit.โ
Forbes convinced Padilla that they shouldnโt wait to commit to the program, and they told Gottlieb while they, their families, the coaching staff and the USC players were mingling at Gottliebโs house on the last night of the visit.
โThey both had poker faces,โ Gottlieb said, but when they announced their decisions, โit prompted a sort of an impromptu dance party amongst the team, the families, everyone there. It was joy. It just, it felt right.โ
Another memorable reaction came from Padillaโs high school coach Noelle Quinn, the former UCLA star and current Seattle Storm head coach. Padilla texted Quinn a question: Was it okay if Padilla, who wears Quinnโs No. 45, took that jersey number to the other side of Los Angeles?
โI thought about it for a second, but Iโm like, โOf course. Iโll be there,โโ Quinn told The Next. โโฆ Even though it’s SC, Iโve forgiven her for that.โ
โIt was funny to โฆ hear her congratulating me but also still trying to keep her Bruin pride alive,โ Padilla said.
Davis was the last of the trio to commit to USC and the one Gottlieb was least familiar with before she started recruiting her. But when USC forward Kadi Sissoko declared for the WNBA Draft, the Trojans needed another athletic frontcourt player.
โI watched film on a lot of players and so did our staff,โ Gottlieb said. โAnd we kept coming back to Kaitlyn.โ
Davis narrowed her list of schools to Penn State, Michigan and USC โ nearly teaming up with Padilla in a different shade of yellow than Trojans gold. USCโs desire to play fast this season, just like Columbia does, excited Davis, and she also valued the programโs track record of preparing frontcourt players such as Sissoko and fellow 2023 draft pick Okako Adika for professional careers. Then there was the academic piece and, like Padilla, the comfort in playing for an Ivy League alum.
โGoing from Coach [Megan Griffith] at Columbia, who was a student at Columbia, I felt that my experience there was much better because she understood what that experience as a student-athlete was at an Ivy League,โ Davis told The Next. โAnd so just, it felt like when things kind of click in place โฆ when [Gottlieb] told me that she went to Brown and played there.โ
When Davis texted Forbes and Padilla to tell them that she was joining them at USC, they had a similar feeling of things clicking into place.
โWe were like, โOkay, period. Thatโs [an] easy done deal,โโ Forbes said. โโฆ Having played together and had some battles, it’s just cool to be on the same team now.โ

The Ivy Leagueโs unique eligibility rules made the recruiting process different โ and, in some ways, easier โ for Forbes, Padilla and Davis than for student-athletes from other conferences. The Ivy League does not allow graduate students to compete in athletics, so the players and their coaches all knew that transferring would be necessary. The players could enter the transfer portal for 2023-24 during their last Ivy League season, and their coaches could help with the recruiting process, including by calling other coaches and advising players on whether certain programs would be a good fit. And when the players chose their destinations, the teammates and coaches they left behind remained some of their biggest supporters.
โWe will, I’m sure, be staying up late watching her team play,โ Moore said of Forbes. โโฆ It’ll be really fun for us to cheer her on.โ
โI think all of us would agree to say,โ Forbes said, โthat just having the support of your last school and also still having a home in your last school, where you graduated from, is pretty cool.โ
After Padilla, Forbes and Davis committed to USC, they FaceTimed as a group to โbreak the ice,โ according to Padilla. On that call, they marveled, โWho would have ever thought this would happen?โ
By some accounts, though, it was still an adjustment when they arrived in Los Angeles in June and started playing as teammates instead of rivals.
โThey’re all really competitive and they cared about winning, which is part of the reason that we wanted them,โ Gottlieb said. โSo โฆ I think that it took them a minute to be like, โI can’t believe we’re really cool with each other right now.โโ
โIt was definitely a little weird at first,โ Davis said, pointing out how a loss to Penn early in conference play and the Ivy Tournament loss to Harvard both hurt Columbiaโs NCAA Tournament chances. But, Davis said, โWeโre cool now โฆ I’m excited to play a full season with them.โ
โThere’s no bad blood, obviously,โ Forbes said. โI think Kaitlyn’s the sweetest gentle giant I’ve ever met. It’s actually quite funny to interact with in contrast to her on-court persona.โ
Once the season starts, there will likely be plenty of banter about Ivy League rivalries. Gottlieb said there is already an Ivy League alums group chat, and she may start โan NCAA-friendly, for fun little wagerโ whenever her Brown Bears play one of her grad transfersโ alma maters. โI’mma be talking some crap in our locker room, that’s for sure,โ she said.
โI’m sure โฆ there’ll be some personal Ivy League references being thrown out every once in a while,โ Padilla said.
For now, the graduate transfers are focusing on their first summer sessions with the program โ and for Padilla and Davis, the first of their careers because the Ivy League doesnโt hold summer workouts. Theyโre getting used to picking up scholarship checks and to playing in a new system. Forbes and Padilla are rooming together, and all three players are pursuing a one-year masterโs degree in entrepreneurship and innovation from USCโs Marshall School of Business. Gottlieb joked that the teamโs academic advisor might only need to work part-time this season.
All three players have already made a strong impression on the court. Padilla won the conditioning test, and Gottlieb said that Forbes is the teamโs best communicator. โShe’s kind of older and wiser and, I would say, just hungrier,โ Gottlieb said, comparing Cal freshman McKenzie Forbes to the USC graduate student version.
Davis โalmost broke the rackโ in the weight room and is diving on the floor for loose balls in summer session, Gottlieb said, along with wowing teammates with her athleticism. Forbes said even the male practice players struggle to contain Davis: โShe’ll kind of surprise them, too, with just some of the rebounds she gets.โ
Though the trio hasnโt played together a lot in the summer session, itโs clear to everyone that they complement each other on the court. Not only do they know each otherโs tendencies from years of scouting reports, but they can all play multiple positions. Padilla can run the point or play off the ball; Davis can play either forward position and distribute as a point forward; and Forbes, a natural guard, played the post at times for Harvard and can fit anywhere.
They have complementary leadership instincts as well, Padilla said, as she and Davis lead more by example and Forbes is โthe one whoโs always talking and riling the group up.โ They will help lead a USC program that went 21-10 last season โ recording its best winning percentage since 2000-01 โ but lost three of its top four scorers and rebounders this offseason. This yearโs team features six newcomers, including the Ivy transfers and ESPN HoopGurlzโs No. 1-ranked freshman in guard JuJu Watkins.
And while some observers might discount what three Ivy League players can do in the Pac-12, Gottlieb knows better โ from her own Ivy experience and from watching them plays on film and now in person.
โThey’re gonna help us,โ Gottlieb said, โget where we want to go, basketball-wise.โ
The Nextโs Rowan Schaberg contributed reporting for this article.
