Montaric Brown answered the call when the Jaguars needed it

Montaric “Buster” Brown made plays in big moments in his first start of the year.

Montaric “Buster” Brown was on the field for one defensive snap in the Jacksonville Jaguars’ first five games. But he was tossed into action in Week 6 when cornerback Tyson Campbell pulled up grabbing at his hamstring against the Indianapolis Colts.

After that game, Brown said “[when] my number gets called, I gotta step up.” On Thursday night, he stepped up.

Against a New Orleans Saints offense with three-time Pro Bowler Michael Thomas and 2022 first-round pick Chris Olave at wide receiver, Brown didn’t look like an inexperienced liability. Instead, the second-year cornerback was credited with allowing only four receptions on 10 targets.

When the Saints had one play left to tie or win the game in the final minute, quarterback Derek Carr looked to Olave to beat Brown one-on-one. The Jaguars 2022 seventh round pick shut the play down.

“I was expecting the fade the whole time,” Brown said in the locker room after the win. “They kept trying it, I wasn’t thinking about nothing inside. It was the fade. And they threw it. I was expecting it the whole time.”

It wasn’t a perfect performance from Brown, who missed a couple tackles in space. But it was a showing that earned him compliments from coaches and teammates after the game.

“We were missing Tyson Campbell, so it’s next man up, and Buster’s the next man,” Jaguars coach Doug Pederson said. “He’s worked hard to put himself in this position. He works hard in practice.

“It’s not always going to be perfect or pretty or all of that, but you know what? He made plays when he needed to, and that’s the most important thing. Really proud of the way he played today.”

“He’s only in his second year, so he’s still growing,” Jaguars safety Rayshawn Jenkins said. “He’s still got way more room to grow, but man, way to start off in his first start. Man, hats off to Buster with that ‘next man up mentality’ and doing what he had to do to get the job done.”

The Jaguars haven’t provided a timetable for Campbell’s injury. The third-year cornerback was listed as a non-participant in the team’s week worth of practices and was officially ruled out Wednesday.

If Campbell isn’t ready to play in Week 8 against the Pittsburgh Steelers, the Jaguars have reason to feel like they have a competent replacement on the outside in Brown.

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Montaric Brown: ‘My number gets called, I gotta step up’

The Jaguars are relying on Montaric “Buster” Brown to take the reins at cornerback in Tyson Campbell’s absence.

When the Jacksonville Jaguars’ top cornerback Tyson Campbell pulled up grabbing his hamstring on an Indianapolis Colts punt in Week 6, it was second-year cornerback Montaric “Buster” Brown who was thrust into the lineup for the rest of the game.

Now Campbell is expected to miss Week 7 and potentially more time after that. On Tuesday, Jaguars defensive coordinator Mike Caldwell made it clear that it’ll be Brown starting in his place against the New Orleans Saints, and said that the team won’t be doing much else to compensate for the loss of Campbell.

“If you move too many people around, you’re moving too many people around,” Caldwell said. “Just put one guy in and that’s what they’re here for. We saw what [Brown] did in the offseason and what he did in training camp. He deserves to be here and gets the opportunity to go out there and play.”

Brown, a seventh round pick in the 2022 NFL draft, played 63 defensive snaps during his rookie season. After playing only one snap through the first five weeks of the 2023 season, Brown was on the field for 54 snaps Sunday against the Colts.

“I feel like it went alright,” Brown said of his performance in relief of Campbell in the locker room after the win. “I could’ve did some things better, but my number gets called, I gotta step up. Unexpected that Tyson went down so when my number got called, I had to step up and do what I had to do.”

Caldwell gave a similar assessment of Brown’s showing against the Colts, although he thought communication in the secondary, as a whole, was lacking at times Sunday.

“I thought he did good. He tackled well, he was in coverage, and communication is something that’s not just him, it’s everybody that we have to get better at,” Caldwell said. “It’s just an area where we’ll get the calls to him and let him understand the technique he’s playing. He did a decent job.”

With just a few days to prepare for his first start of the season, Brown is feeling confident that a year’s worth of development in Caldwell’s defense has him ready to go Thursday.

“I’m very much a different player [than last year],” Brown said. “I’m playing faster, I’m seeing what the offense is trying to do and I took a lot in last year, so it’s definitely helped me and I’m better this year.”

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Jaguars 2023 roster review: CB Montaric ‘Buster’ Brown

Montaric “Buster” Brown earned a spot on the 53-man roster, but that didn’t mean much play time in his rookie year.

The brunt of the offseason is in the books and training camp is still off on the horizon. Join us in the NFL’s dead zone with a player-by-player review of the Jaguars roster ahead of the 2023 season.

Montaric “Buster” Brown earned a spot on the Jacksonville Jaguars’ 53-man roster at the end of preseason, beating out sixth-round pick Gregory Junior, among others. That didn’t result in much play time for the seventh-round rookie, though.

Instead, Brown frequently landed on the Jaguars’ list of weekly inactives and his limited time on the field didn’t go well.

After Shaquill Griffin landed on the injured reserve early in the year, a rotating cast of cornerbacks got a turn in the starting lineup opposite Tyson Campbell. That included Brown, who got the start for a December game against the Detroit Lions. He only played 20 defensive snaps in that contest and 63 on the year.

A year after being the last member of the Jaguars’ 2022 draft class, Brown will enter his second NFL season with a slight experience edge over a bevy of first- and second-year players battling for roster spots in the Jacksonville secondary.

Contract (2023): $870,000 base salary, $28,955 prorated signing bonus, $898,995 cap hit.

Acquired: Jaguars drafted Brown with the No. 222 overall selection in the seventh round of the 2022 NFL draft.

PFF grades

  • 37.3 (2022)

Statistics:

  • Six tackles (2022)

Highlight:

Quote: “My standard is to always put my best effort out there. So my job is just to get one percent better every day. Just compete every day.” – Brown

Calvin Ridley (No. 0) Travis Etienne Jr. (No. 1) Rayshawn Jenkins (No. 2) C.J. Beathard (No. 3) Tank Bigsby (No. 4) Andre Cisco (No. 5)
Chris Claybrooks (No. 6) Zay Jones (No. 7) Logan Cooke (No. 9) Parker Washington (No. 11) James McCourt (No. 12) Christian Kirk (No. 13)
Kendric Pryor (No. 14) Tim Jones (No. 15) Trevor Lawrence (No. 16) Evan Engram (No. 17) Nathan Rourke (No. 18) Sammis Reyes (No. 19)
Daniel Thomas (No. 20) Latavious Brini (No. 21) JaMycal Hasty (No. 22) Foyesade Oluokun (No. 23) Snoop Conner (No. 24) D’Ernest Johnson (No. 25)
Antonio Johnson (No. 26) Divaad Wilson (No. 27) Tevaughn Campbell (No. 29) Montaric Brown (No. 30) Darious Williams (No. 31) Tyson Campbell (No. 32)
Devin Lloyd (No. 33) Gregory Junior (No. 34) Ayo Oyelola (No. 35) Christian Braswell (No. 36) Tre Herndon (No. 37) Qadree Ollison (No. 38)
Jamal Agnew (No. 39) Erick Hallett (No. 40) Josh Allen (No. 41) Andrew Wingard (No. 42) Kaleb Hayes (No. 43) Derek Parish (No. 43)
Travon Walker (No. 44) K’Lavon Chaisson (No. 45) Ross Matiscik (No. 46) De’Shaan Dixon (No. 47) Chad Muma (No. 48) Leonard Taylor (No. 49)
Shaquille Quarterman (No. 50) Ventrell Miller (No. 51) DaVon Hamilton (No. 52) Willie Taylor III (No. 53) DJ Coleman (No. 54) Dequan Jackson (No. 55)
Yasir Abdullah (No. 56) Caleb Johnson (No. 57) Raymond Vohasek (No. 59) Darryl Williams (No. 60) Samuel Jackson (No. 62) Coy Cronk (No. 64)
Chandler Brewer (No. 67) Brandon Scherff (No. 68) Tyler Shatley (No. 69) Cole Van Lanen (No. 70) Walker Little (No. 72) Blake Hance (No. 73)
Cam Robinson (No. 74) Cooper Hodges (No. 75) Anton Harrison (No. 76) Josh Wells (No. 77) Ben Bartch (No. 78) Luke Fortner (No. 79)
Kevin Austin Jr. (No. 80) Seth Williams (No. 81) Elijah Cooks (No. 84) Brenton Strange (No. 85) Gerrit Prince (No. 86) Jaray Jenkins (No. 87)
Oliver Martin (No. 88) Luke Farrell (No. 89) Henry Mondeaux (No. 90) Jordan Smith (No. 92) Tyler Lacy (No. 93) Folorunso Fatukasi (No. 94)
Roy Robertson-Harris (No. 95) Adam Gotsis (No. 96) Nick Thurman (No. 97) Michael Dogbe (No. 98) Jeremiah Ledbetter (No. 99) Brandon McManus
Jacob Harris

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