Reid_Travis_2

As a Redshirt Junior (2017-18) | Game-by-Game Stats
• First Team All-Pac-12 selection by the coaches
• National Association of Basketball Coaches First Team All-District selection
• United States Basketball Writers Association All-District pick
• One of three individuals in Stanford history with at least 1,400 points and 700 rebounds in less than 100 career games. 
• Ranks 16th on Stanford's career scoring list with 1,427 points
• Ranks 10th on Stanford's career rebounding chart with 758 rebounds
• Hank Luisetti MVP Award 
• Third-year captain
• Ranked third in the Pac-12 in both scoring (19.5 ppg) and rebounding (8.7 rpg)
• Ranked the top-three in the Pac-12 in 10 categories overall, including free throw attempts (first, 243), field goal attempts (first, 474), total points (second, 682), free throws made (second, 164), total field goals made (second, 250), scoring (third, 19.5), double-doubles (third, 16), offensive rebounds per game (third, 3.0), rebounding (third, 8.7) and total rebounds (third, 306).
• Posted the fifth-best scoring total in a season in school history with 682 points
• Recorded the seventh-most rebounds (306) in a season in school history
• Ranked third on Stanford's single-season list in field goals (250), fourth in free throw attempts (243) and 10th in free throws made (164)

As a Redshirt Sophomore (2016-17) | Game-by-Game Stats
• First Team All-Pac-12 selection by the coaches
• National Association of Basketball Coaches Second Team All-District selection
• Only player in the Pac-12 and one of only five individuals in the top six conferences (Pac-12, Big 12, Big Ten, ACC, SEC and BIG EAST) to finish the season ranked in the top five of his conference in both scoring and rebounding
• One of two players in the Pac-12 to rank in the top six in the league in scoring, rebounding and field goal percentage
• Starting forward, who started all 27 games he played in (missed four games with a shoulder injury)
• Led the team in nine categories, including scoring (470, 17.4 ppg), rebounding (239, 8.9 rpg), offensive rebounding (93, 3.4 orpg), defensive rebounding (146, 5.4 drpg), field goals made (176), field goal attempted (304), field goal percentage (.579), free throws made (118), free throws attempted (181)
• Ranked in the top seven in the Pac-12 in seven categories, including scoring (17.4 ppg, fourth), rebounding (8.9, fifth), offensive rebounding (3.4, first), field goal percentage (.579, sixth), double-doubles (9, seventh), free throws attempted (181, second) and free throws made (118, third).
• Nationally, ranked 20th in offensive rebounding, 32nd in field goal percentage and 59th in rebounding
• Posted nine of his 10 career double-doubles in 2016-17
• Career-high 29 points and nine rebounds at No. 4 Kansas
• Set both Stanford and Kansas records for free throws made (19) and attempted (22) in a game
• Posted 24 points and a career-high 17 rebounds against Harvard
• Averaged 19.8 points and 9.6 rebounds in the final nine games

As a Sophomore (2015-16) | Game-by-Game Stats
• Starting forward, who missed the final 22 games of the season with an injury to his left leg.
• Led team in rebounds (7.1), was second in points (12.8), and third in minutes (32.8) at the time of his injury
• Shot a team-best 55.7 percent from the field
• Scored a career-high 18 points in 34 minutes at Saint Mary’s
• Career-high four steals against DePaul
• Averaged a double-double during six-game exhibition tour of Italy

As a Freshman (2014-15) | Game-by-Game Stats
 Played in 28 games, making 12 starts
 Averaged 6.2 points and 5.6 rebounds
 Shot 48.9 percent from the field
 During Postseason NIT play, averaged 6.4 points and 6.6 rebounds while shooting 50.0 percent overall
 Made collegiate debut against Wofford (Nov. 14), scoring 14 points (6-12 FG) and grabbing four rebounds
 Contributed nine points and eight rebounds against UNLV (Nov. 21)
 Grabbed 12 rebounds against Duke (Nov. 22)
 Pulled down 11 rebounds against Delaware (Nov. 25)
 Totaled 12 points (6-8 FG) and five boards at DePaul (Nov. 30)
 Scored season-high 15 points (7-11 FG) and hauled down six rebounds at BYU (Dec. 20)
 Hauled down season-best 14 rebounds to go along with seven points in 32 minutes at Texas (Dec. 23)
 Totaled six points and eight rebounds in 27 minutes off the bench at Arizona State (March 5)
 Posted 14 points (5-8 FG, 4-6 FT) and six rebounds against Washington (March 11)
 Produced first career double-double with 10 points and 10 rebounds against UC Davis (March 17)
 Grabbed seven boards to go with five points against Rhode Island (March 22)
 Totaled eight rebounds and four points versus Old Dominion (March 31)

Prior to Stanford
• Ranked among nation’s top-50 by the following: Scout.com (No. 40 overall, No. 7 position), Rivals.com (No. 40 overall) and ESPN.com (No. 23 overall, No. 5 position, five-star recruit)
• Averaged 26.1 points and 9.0 rebounds per game while guiding the Islanders to their third straight Class AAA state title
• McDonald's All-American Game participant in 2014, Stanford's first since Brook Lopez and Robin Lopez in 2006 and the school's seventh selection overall
• Member of USA Basketball Junior National Select Team, competing at 17th annual Nike Hoop Summit
• Tabbed Minneapolis Star Tribune Metro Player of the Year
• Earned MaxPreps second team Junior All-American honors
• Named co-state player of the year
• Heralded two-sport star who achieved success on the gridiron during his first three seasons before deciding to focus solely on basketball
• Led AAU squad, Howard Pulley Panthers, to the AAU Super Showcase championship
• Equally impressive at the Big Man Skills Academy, LeBron James Skills Academy, Peach Jam, NBA Player Association Top 100 Camp and Global Challenge

Personal
• Born in Minneapolis, Minn.
• Parents are Nathaniel and Jacqueline Travis
• Has two brothers, Jonah and Jalen, and two sisters, Olivia and Grace
• Brother, Jonah, played basketball at Harvard

Travis Says:
“The biggest thing for me was I just thought it was the right feel. When I was talking to the team, coaches and people on campus, I felt that those were the type of people I want to surround myself with. The Stanford brand, that kind of persona, is how I envision my college experience. That’s what sold me. Academics were the top priority for me throughout the recruiting process, especially having the opportunity to come to Stanford along with my brother already attending Harvard. My family really stressed academics from day one, and although you still want to play basketball at the highest level, I just felt that a Stanford education is going to help me out in the best way. I’m really excited to keep following the team’s progress and get out there next year.”