[15] Brume successfully defended her long jump title at the next edition of the African Junior Athletics Championships in Addis Ababa.
This time, she was even more successful as she added the triple jump and 4 x 100 m relay title, and a bronze medal in the individual 100 meters to her collection.
[18] She was chosen for the discipline at the 2014 World Junior Championships in Athletics but, having flown to Eugene, Oregon just a day before competing, she performed poorly and was bottom of the qualifying.
The 18-year-old excelled in the Commonwealth Games long jump, clearing 6.56 m (21 ft 6+1⁄4 in) in the final to win the gold medal.
[21] Brume dedicated her victory to Emmanuel Uduaghan, Delta State's governor who invested in track and field infrastructure and support in the region.
Okagbare, who won a Commonwealth sprint double, was also a product of the system, and Brume stated that she was inspired by the older athlete's achievements.
[13] As a result of her own medal feats, Brume was given an athletic scholarship to study in the United States, with local government support.
She eventually ended the competition in fifth place, leaping a distance of 6.81 meters which was just 2 centimeters shy of her personal record, which she had set earlier in the year.
[3] She set a meeting record, and African lead of 6.82 m at the first leg of the 2018 World Challenge series in Kingston, Jamaica.
[33][34] In 2021, her younger brother Godson Okeoghene Brume broke the African u-18 100-meter record with 10.13 s. Alma Matar [35] She attended Delta State University