We live in a need-it-now world, so let’s not dally in rolling out redshirt freshman Taylor Martinez’s nickname among his Nebraska teammates.
How does “T-Magic” grab you?
The kid’s so fast we freaked, or something like that.
Martinez grabbed us. He shook us out of our spring slumber. He bolted 10 yards on third-and-9, 13 on first-and-10, and never mind the interception. His speed’s the thing. He reaches top speed in three steps. He explodes, and our imaginations run wild — Eric Crouch-racing-free-against-Missouri wild. We are enamored with athletes’ speed, for good reason.
Speed’s fun to watch, and hard to defend.
Isn’t this fun, Zac?
Zac Lee is an intelligent quarterback. A savvy person. He no doubt saw this coming. Lee had to know Martinez would dazzle against a vanilla Spring Game defense. Lee had to know Martinez was leather-tough and can stiff-arm his way to first downs.
Lee had to know Martinez and Cody Green would make strong cases in Saturday’s Red-White Spring Game that one of them should replace Lee as Nebraska’s starting quarterback in 2010.
“This is just a small part of the evaluation,” Husker head coach Bo Pelini cautioned.
Maybe we should keep reminding ourselves of that until at least August, when Lee re-enters the race after sitting out the spring following surgery on his throwing elbow. This race is far from over.
If Martinez ends up in a reserve role at quarterback, Nebraska coaches ought to somehow find a way to get the pigskin in his grips.
However, it says here Martinez is a quarterback. A dangerous quarterback. No wonder Pelini kept telling me during the offseason how much he likes the kid’s game. No wonder Carl Pelini, the Husker defensive coordinator, recruited Martinez to play in the secondary but now is happy to watch T-Magic play tricks on defenders for the good of the team.
Or am I just another Spring Game sucker? We’ve seen it all before. Players dazzle in the Spring Game and vanish come fall. I don’t see that happening in Martinez’s case. Many of us got our first good look at him Saturday. Trust me, Nebraska coaches have known of his prowess all along.
Bo’s no spring sucker. He’s been around too long to step into that trap. Same goes for offensive line coach Barney Cotton, who smiled broadly as he discussed Martinez’s speed.
“He’ll put his foot in the ground, take off and make a defense take bad angles,” Cotton said.
Yes, Martinez intrigues us. He stretches the field laterally on option plays and hands off to physical running backs who can get vertical — through holes — in a hurry. He becomes dangerous on broken plays.
Plus, he’s coming along well as a passer, offensive coordinator Shawn Watson said. Martinez’s first touchdown pass Saturday, a 6-yard strike to fullback Tyler Legate, required accuracy and touch. Legate was in the flat. A defender was right behind. There was little margin for error.
Watson smiled as he recalled a conversation with former Colorado quarterback Mike Moschetti, who played for Watson at CU in 1999 and coached against Martinez’s high school team in California.
“Mike called me up and said, ‘Wats, I’m telling you, this guy can play quarterback. Don’t let anybody tell you he can’t. He’s your kind of guy,’ ” Watson said.
Meaning?
“Mike saw the arm talent,” Watson said. “Everybody knew Taylor could run.”
So, Watson sees ample promise in Martinez’s passing. Intriguing, indeed.
“I like guys with athletic, fast releases, and I like competitors,” Watson said. “Taylor fits the profile.”
Martinez fit the Spring Game profile, for whatever that’s worth. Something tells me it’s worth a lot in Martinez’s case.
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