The Denver Post

Huskers freshman ignites high hopes

Quarterbac­k Martinez looks like the real deal despite team’s 05 start

- By Eric Olson

L I N COLN, NEB . » Four starts into his career, Nebraska’s Adrian Martinez already is showing signs of blossoming into the next standout quarterbac­k coached by Scott Frost.

Frost has mentored some of the nation’s best: 2014 Heisman Trophy winner Marcus Mariota and 2015 passeffici­ency leader Vernon Adams as Oregon’s offensive coordinato­r, and McKenzie Milton as head coach of the Central Florida team that went from winless to unbeaten in two years.

“I told you guys, I’m always careful about making comparison­s, but he’s doing some things like quite a few of the special guys I’ve been around,” Frost said. “There’s no way I would have been ready to do what he’s doing right now as an 18yearold. It says a lot about who he is as a person.”

Martinez’s 04 record as the starter — he missed the Cornhusker­s’ loss to Troy because of an injury — belies the individual numbers he has posted.

He set school freshman records with 384 yards passing and 441 yards of total offense in last week’s 4124 loss at No. 15 Wisconsin. It was his second straight game with more than 400 yards of total offense.

He has completed 59.7 percent of his passes for 229 yards per game, with five touchdowns and three intercepti­ons. His rushing average of 63.3 yards ranks second among Big Ten quarterbac­ks, behind Penn State’s Trace McSorley, and would be higher if it weren’t for 10 sacks.

What makes Martinez so dangerous in Frost’s nohuddle spreadopti­on offense is his ability to extend plays with his legs. He has repeatedly scrambled out of trouble, and he’s elusive on designed runs. On his signature run of the season, a 41yarder for a touchdown in the opener against Colorado, he juked a cornerback in the backfield before taking off down the sideline and somersault­ing into the end zone.

At that moment, he said, his confidence skyrockete­d. On the previous possession, he had fumbled.

“It was just me playing football and I realized I can do these things,” he said. “I needed to be a little bit smarter with the way I was running the ball a little bit. Obviously, I still need to fix some of my ball security issues that I’m having, but knowing that I can play. I can play at this level and do it well.”

Do it well?

That’s an understate­ment to Northweste­rn coach Pat Fitzgerald, who will see Martinez up close Saturday when the Cornhusker­s visit the Wildcats.

“He’s a magician right now,” Fitzgerald said. “He makes a lot of things happen. He’s very talented with his arm, obviously athletic and makes a lot of guys miss and is very impressive to watch.”

Martinez was a fourstar recruit at Clovis West High School in Fresno, Calif., even though he missed his senior season after shoulder surgery. He originally was headed to Tennessee but flipped his commitment to Nebraska after Frost took over.

He enrolled in January so he could go through spring practice and became Nebraska’s first true freshman quarterbac­k to start an opener.

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