Jacob Lacey

Jacob Lacey (born May 28, 1987) is an American football cornerback for the Detroit Lions of the National Football League. He was signed by the Indianapolis Colts as an undrafted free agent in 2009. He played college football at Oklahoma State.

Early years
Lacey was born on May 28, 1987, in Columbus, Ohio, but was raised in Garland, Texas. He is the son of James and Francine Lacey and has one older brother, James.

Lacey graduated from Naaman Forest High School in Garland, Texas, in May 2005. While attending, Lacey played not only football, but varsity basketball as well. However, in his senior year, he decided to make football his main focus. Starting as the cornerback his sophomore year, the, then 5’10 155 lb Jacob, received the nickname “Mouse” Lacey and "The Field Mouse". Lacey also moved to quarterback to help his team “shake things up.” The star player finished his senior season rushing 1200 yards, scoring 14 touchdowns, and passing 650 yards. In 2004 he was named First-team all-district and the offensive MVP in District 11-5A. The player had offers from Oklahoma State University, Kansas, Colorado, Iowa, and Wisconsin. Jacob had a tough decision to make, and in turn took official visits to two Big Ten schools in a matter of only 48 hours. The then senior visited Madison, Wisconsin, on Friday then departed for Iowa City on Saturday afternoon. However, after four visits to Kansas and a conversation with associate Raimond Pendleton, he decided Kansas was his spot. Fortunately he later openly admitted that after an official visit to Oklahoma State, he was having some second thoughts. He eventually made the right choice.

College career
Lacey attended Oklahoma State University in Stillwater, Oklahoma, as an economics major. In his freshman year he played in ten games and started against Texas Tech. Lacey finished his freshman year with 14 tackles. Two of his tackles took place during his collegiate debut against Montana State. In his sophomore year he started all thirteen games as cornerback and finished seventh on the team with 48 tackles. While in his junior year, Lacey had three interceptions against Texas in the biggest day of his college career.

Indianapolis Colts
Lacey was signed by the Colts as an undrafted free agent in 2009 and made the initial 53-man roster. Lacey had his first career interception and first touchdown on the same play. The play was made off of Marc Bulger of the St. Louis Rams and returned it 35 yards for a touchdown. At this time he also received his first celebration penalty. The player was fined $10,000 and 15 yards for sliding into the end zone and making an official’s safe signal. The following day the cornerback told reporters that the celebration was planned for when and if he scored. “If I would have known ahead of time, I probably wouldn’t have done it, but I didn’t l know. I’ll try to get into the end zone and spice it up again.” Within one week, the fine was rescinded. Lacey not only shared the field with players such as Peyton Manning, Reggie Wayne, Dwight Freeney, and Robert Mathis, but also with former high school teammate Melvin Bullitt. When asked why he signed with the Colts, Lacey answered, “I had a friend that I played high school football with who was already on the team... He took the same path as me as a free agent. So I knew they would give a free agent a good look, a good shot, a fair chance.” With a couple of Colts injuries early in the season, Lacey was able to start in a few games. Also, later, in Week 15 of the 2009-10 season, Lacey intercepted David Garrard, sealing the victory to put the Colts at 14-0.

In 2010, Lacey appeared in 11 games, starting 7. His season highlight was a 44 yard interception return. He suffered an ankle injury mid-season and missed three games. He returned in in the week 9 loss to Philadelphia, establishing himself as a starter for the rest of the season.

Detroit Lions
Lacey signed with the Detroit Lions on March 20, 2012.