Damari Brown Faces A Defining Miami Season Fans Have Waited For

As the Miami Hurricanes look to reclaim their championship glory, Damari Brown aims to overcome past injuries and uphold his family's legacy on the field.

Damari Brown doesn’t just wear a Miami Hurricanes uniform - he carries a family connection to the program’s championship standard.

The redshirt junior cornerback is entering his fourth year with the Hurricanes, and the expectations around him come with a little extra weight. His father, Selwyn Brown, was part of Miami’s secondary on the 1987 national championship team before moving on to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. Now Damari is trying to carve out his own place in the same program, and he believes he’s still just getting started.

Brown flashed early. As a freshman, he made an immediate impact with 14 total tackles, including 10 solo stops, four assists and 1.5 tackles for loss.

But injuries quickly changed his path. He was hurt in the 2025 opener against the Gators and missed the next 10 games before returning for the season’s marquee matchup against Syracuse in limited action.

After appearing in only two games, Brown redshirted to protect his NCAA eligibility. Last season brought more opportunity. He played in 13 games and started five, finishing with 24 total tackles, 16 solo tackles, eight assists, a pass broken up and a pass defended.

Then the injuries returned before the College Football Playoffs. Brown did not play in any of Miami’s four postseason games - against Texas A&M, Ohio State and Ole Miss, including the National Championship game against Indiana.

Even with that setback, Brown stayed put rather than entering the transfer portal. He’s expected to work as a rotational cornerback in Miami’s secondary, and he has at least watched from the sideline what it takes to get to the sport’s biggest stage.

At 6-2 and 195 pounds, Brown has the kind of size that stands out at corner. What hasn’t shown up yet is the takeaway production; in three college seasons, he still hasn’t recorded an interception.

Miami’s championship history is part of the backdrop here. The Hurricanes have won five national titles in football and nine overall across football and baseball, more than Florida’s seven and Florida State’s three when those sports are combined with basketball. The program’s 2001 undefeated team remains the benchmark, and the 1987 title team is where Brown’s family story enters the picture.

Now the question is whether Damari can turn all of that into his own breakthrough. If he stays healthy, he’ll have a chance to show it during fall camp and beyond.

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