None of that will be remembered as the pain of a third successive ODI defeat to Bangladesh will gnaw away at New Zealand for some time after they were unable to defend 307 in Fatullah early today.
Bangladesh completed a 3-0 sweep in the series - or a Bangla-wash as it's been dubbed by the locals - and have now won their last seven ODIs against New Zealand on home turf.
They reached 309 for six - having chased down with some comfort easily the highest total made on the ground three hours earlier. They had five balls to spare and the raucous, packed crowd have a national team of which they can justly be proud.
New Zealand have a solitary T20 international to play in Dhaka on Wednesday before they leave for Sri Lanka and five limited-overs internationals await them against a significantly stronger nation than Bangladesh.
Captain Brendon McCullum has come home with a back injury; Taylor is skipping the Sri Lankan trip; Kane Williamson is recovering from a fractured thumb. Things have gone badly pear-shaped in the last week.
For the first time in the series, it wasn't the batting which let the side down.
Taylor's unbeaten 107 off 93 balls led the way. At one point he clobbered 42 off 13 balls and completed his hundred with two balls left in the innings. He had a life at 12, when fast-medium Rubel Hossain dropped a caught and bowled chance.
But he got better, and more damaging, as his innings progressed.
Lefthander Munro, cheekily reverse sweeping his way towards a maiden century for New Zealand, fell at 85, off 77 balls, having shared a 130-run stand with Taylor.
Earlier, tyro Devcich sparkled in an encouraging performance to give the innings the early impetus it needed.
The game, frankly, was New Zealand's for the taking with a half-decent bowling display. The series had already been lost, but they had a royal chance to regain some pride.
Instead the bowlers began badly, Bangladesh's openers, man of the match Shamsun Rahman and Ziaur Rahman belted 61 in 7.4 overs and the pace didn't let up. Shamsun, in his second international, rattled away to 96, rarely troubled.
Bangladesh's batsmen produced stands of 61, 65, 75 and 50 all in smart time to keep well ahead of New Zealand on the comparative run rate.
With Taylor and Luke Ronchi having smeared 73 in the last 5.2 overs, New Zealand's scoring rate soared towards the end, but Bangladesh had that covered too.
New Zealand's ground fielding was sub-standard, all the bowlers struggled to even get a consistency to their work.
Naeem Islam's 63 and Nasir Hossain's unbeaten 44 were important contributions and the win was achieved without captain Mushfiqur Rahim contributing with the bat.
He made just two, out to a brilliant one-handed catch above his head at square leg by Taylor. And consider Bangladesh's best player, world No 1 allrounder Shakib al Hasan missed the series with Dengue fever, and their dashing opener Tamim Iqbal sat out the final game.
This wasn't even Bangladesh's best XI. Grim times indeed for New Zealand.