PHOTOS: New Colorado DB Travis Jay

Take a photographic look at Colorado’s most recent defensive transfer pickup

Travis Jay committed to Colorado on May 12 following a somewhat unique four years at Florida State. The former four-star prospect worked with the Seminoles’ scout team last season but prior to that, he was one of their top defensive backs at times.

In 2021, Jay started FSU’s season opener against Notre Dame and defended two passes while intercepting one. He would finish that season with 17 total tackles, two picks and six passes defended.

Things ultimately didn’t work out for Jay at FSU, however, and he’s now joining CU head coach Deion Sanders’ impressive secondary.

Take a photographic look at the Buffaloes’ most recent defensive transfer pickup:

Colorado lands its fifth Florida State transfer

The #cubuffs are looking more and more like the Seminoles as another former Florida State player transferred in on Friday evening

Colorado is looking more and more like Florida State heading into next season as another former Seminole has decided to join the herd. Travis Jay, a defensive back originally from Greenville, Florida, committed to the Buffaloes on Friday night.

Jay spent four years at FSU, compiling 43 total tackles, three interceptions, seven passes defended while starting in three games. The 6-foot-2, 198-pound DB redshirted in 2019 before appearing in 16 games over the next two seasons. The former four-star recruit was on Florida State’s practice squad last season.

Jay brings more Power Five experience to the Buffs and some sorely needed depth in the secondary.

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Notre Dame at Florida State: Fourth-Quarter Analysis

Oh boy.

They never said college football was easy. Sometimes, you find yourself in a battle you didn’t want. That’s what Notre Dame found itself in Sunday. Eighteen unanswered points by Florida State have sent this game to overtime with a 38-38 score.

The fourth quarter began with the Seminoles knocking on the door of the end zone. A couple of defensive stands and a penalty pushed the offense back from the 1-yard line to the 8. On third-and-goal, Jordan Travis avoided the defense and found Andrew Parchment for a touchdown. A successful two-point conversion pass to Keyshawn Helton cut the Irish’s lead to 38-28.

Relying mainly on the run, the Irish only were able to get one first down on their first possession of the fourth quarter. Jay Bramblett was knocked down on the ensuing punt, but the roughing penalty only went for 5 yards, much to the chagrin of an enraged Brian Kelly. Whether there should have been a 15-yard penalty instead will be debated. What’s not debatable is that things everything was coming up Seminoles.

On the ensuing drive, Travis’ helmet was knocked off, which forced the Seminoles to go to McKenzie Milton for his first game action in three years. All he did with this sudden opportunity was complete all four pass attempts before handing it off to Treshaun Ward for an 8-yard touchdown to make it 38-35. What once seemed like a sure victory now was anything but.

Desperately needing a long offensive possession, the Irish went three-and-out save for an offside penalty on first down. Jack Coan was sacked by Keir Thomas on the final play of the drive, sending Doak Campbell Stadium into a frenzy. The Irish fans in attendance only could brace for what was to come.

Milton continued his heroics with a run-heavy attack that the Irish’s defense simply couldn’t stop. The only thing that stopped him from reaching the end zone was a bad snap on third-and-6 from the Notre Dame 25. He threw the ball out of bounds to set up Ryan Fitzgerald for a 43-yard field-goal attempt. The kick was good, and the game was tied with 40 seconds left.

With time running out, Coan completed a couple of passes to Michael Mayer to get into Seminoles territory. A crushing blow happened when Mayer dropped a pass with five seconds left that would have set up a game-winning field goal. A Hail Mary with the clock expired was picked off by Travis Jay, and to extra football we go.