DENVER — One man's flowers are apparently another man's sours.
''Great team effort. Just thankful that a small market team like us can come into a place like Mile High and get it done,'' Jaguars coach Liam Coen cracked after Jacksonville's statement 34-20 win in Denver on Sunday that snapped the Broncos' 11-game winning streak and tightened the AFC playoff race before the holidays.
Coen used an innocuous comment — or attempted compliment — from Broncos coach Sean Payton earlier in the week as a rallying cry for his upstart team, which has won six straight games, vaulting into the mix for the AFC's top playoff seed at 11-4, a game behind both the Broncos and Patriots.
Several of his players repeated some form of what they considered Denver's diss in the aftermath of Jacksonville's signature win. But Payton insisted he meant no disrespect last Wednesday when he mentioned the Jaguars hailing from a ''smaller market.''
Asked last Wednesday about the challenge of facing Jacksonville, Payton praised Coen and his staff as well as the Jaguars' offense, defense and special teams in trying to make the point that they had closed in on the playoff field and seemingly weren't getting their proper respect nationally.
He ended his windy list of obstacles the Broncos were facing in the Jaguars with this summation: "As you look at them and you watch the tape, it's a smaller market but you see a real good team.''
Which, in fact, are the facts.
The Jaguars are third in the AFC playoff positioning heading into Week 17, and like the Green Bay Packers, Buffalo Bills, New Orleans Saints and Tennessee Titans, they operate in one of the league's smaller metro areas and television markets.