Travis was born on May 26, 1993, in Omaha, Nebraska.[1] He attended Daniel J. Gross Catholic High School where he played on the basketball team for four years and was named first-team All-State, All-Metro and to the Lincoln Journal Star's Super-State Team.[2][3] He averaged 24.9 points, 5.0 assists and 8.9 rebounds as a senior and set the school records for career, single-season and single-game points, totaling 1,680 in his career.[2] He also played baseball, football and soccer.[2]
College career
Travis began his collegiate career with the NAIA-level Midland Warriors, playing in 25 games with 7.0 points per game during the 2012–13 season.[2] He then transferred to Iowa Central Community College in 2013 and started 28 of 32 games, recording an average of 18.3 points per game.[4] He was the team's scoring leader and placed sixth overall in the Iowa Community College Athletic Conference (ICCAC), receiving first team All-Region and All-Region Tournament honors.[2]
Travis transferred a second time in 2014 to the Florida Southern Moccasins, being the team's sixth man and ending the season with 11.2 points, 3.8 rebounds and 2.1 assists per game; he helped them compile an overall record of 36–1 with a national championship win over IUP, contributing 18 points in the game.[5] He entered the 2015–16 season with a new head coach, the fourth different head coach he played under in four years.[6] That season, he had the first triple-double in school history and ended with an average of 21.5 points per game.[2][6]
Professional career
Travis was eligible for the 2016 NBA draft, but was not selected.[1] In August 2016, he signed his first professional contract with the German club Rot-Weiss Cuxhaven in the 1. Regionalliga.[7] In one season there, he averaged 14.9 points, 5.4 rebounds and 2.9 assists per game.[8] He joined third-tier club Scanplus Baskets in ProB for the following season, but was released not long after.[8]
Travis signed with the Western Port Steelers of the Australian Big V for the 2018 season, where he averaged 30.5 points, 9.3 rebounds and 3.9 assists per game.[8] In 2019, he played for the Waverley Falcons of NBL1 South, appearing in 19 games while averaging 20.2 points, 6.5 rebounds and 5.5 assists.[1] The 2020 season was canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, and Travis returned home to the U.S., accepting a job as a special education teacher for Westside High School in Omaha, where he also helped coach the basketball team.[3]
In a nine-year span of playing basketball, Travis played for nine different head coaches.[9]
3x3 career
While at Westside, Travis was asked by a friend, Trey Bardsley, to try out 3x3 basketball.[3] He participated in several tournaments and later was chosen as one of 16 players competing for spots on the national team for the 2020 Summer Olympics.[10] He played for 3Ball Omaha and helped them to the national championship in 2021, then helped them re-appear in the championship in 2022.[4]
Travis first played for the national team at the 2022 FIBA 3x3 AmeriCup, winning the gold medal over Puerto Rico.[4] In 2023, he played for Team Miami at several events, including the USA Basketball 3X Nationals where they were undefeated until losing in the finals.[4] He also competed for the national team at the 2023 FIBA 3x3 World Cup, winning silver, and at the 2023 Pan American Games, winning gold.[4] In 2024, he was named as one of four players on the national team squad for the 2024 Summer Olympics, the first time the U.S. ever had a men's 3x3 Olympic basketball team, as they did not qualify in 2020.[3][11][12]