I'll remember Taylor as a flawed quarterback who gave his all to the program, more than many players through the last 30-40 years. The sad, unfortunate truth was that, no matter how much polish they tried to put on him, he remained coal and not a diamond. Which is a bit surprising, considering all the heat and pressure he faced throughout his career.
The guy gave up Spring Break and his time off during the summer in both 2012 and 2013 to try to make himself into a quarterback. I can't recall hearing about any other player, ever, who gave up that much of his free time to try and improve himself for this team.
I'll remember him as a fumble machine, most luckily recovered by our team but WAY too many going to the opponent. I'll remember some truly awful "threw it right to him!!!" interceptions, plus a few really bizarre fluke INTs that flew from the hands of the WR into the DB's hand, resulting in TDs.
I'll remember him for having about as much elite speed as he had injuries. He never met the promise we saw in him, partly because he was a flawed experiment at quarterback from the beginning and partly because of the injuries.
I'll remember him for gutting out those injuries, putting winning and the team ahead of his own safety. I hope he doesn't suffer life-long consequences for playing injured like he has, but I'm afraid he might. And that's a shame.
I'll remember his blazing speed and the TD on the very first play from scrimmage, but I'll never forget the awkward way he went into contact the last few years, and cringing at some of the hits he took - many unnecessary, and very ugly.
I'll remember the vitriol and hatred heaped on him. I'll remember the choosing of sides, the character assassination, the insinuations and the accusations by fans who, despite the fact the guy gave his everything to the program, would never forgive him for being shy and awkward and imperfect, both on the field and in front of the microphone. I'll remember the flaws of many players - even entire sides of the ball - during his career being barely mentioned while conversation after conversation sprung up like mushrooms about the flaws of the team and how Taylor was somehow, often inexplicably, responsible.
I'll remember him (hopefully, oddly) as the quarterback who played with deeply flawed defenses, defenses lacking playmakers and football acumen, in an era bracketed by very good defenses. His timing was off more than anything - put him on that 2009 team and we win the Big XII Championship, give him that 2009 defense in 2010 and we win it again. Give him the defense I suspect we'll have the next couple of years and he wins again. But with the defenses he had, it just wasn't possible. No man can lift a mountain alone - although he tried, often to his own detriment.
I'll remember him as a guy walking out the door with umpteen-dozen all-time records, some deeply impressive, despite playing a position for which he wasn't a natural. And I'll remember that, like another Husker great in Rex Burkhead, we were cheated of his Senior year to see if he could improve even more on some already impressive feats.
The Taylor Martinez Legacy will forever be a mixed bag of greatness and grief. Both supporters and detractors have plenty of grist for their respective mills, and my guess is he'll be a hotly-debated quarterback for at least the next ten years.
Martinez will, for better or worse, not be quickly forgotten.