JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Jacksonville's best win of its surprising season transpired at Indianapolis.
Not only did the Jaguars play without three starters, including two offensive linemen, they had a handful of players dealing with illness. They fell behind 10-0 in their second consecutive road game — they were coming off a huge victory at Denver — and were dealt the kind of early game adversity that would have caused recent iterations of this franchise to crumble.
The Jaguars rallied to win 23-17, their seventh consecutive victory, and showed just how ready they are for anything that comes their way in the postseason.
''That's the warrior mentality we've been talking about for quite some time,'' coach Liam Coen said Monday. ''Getting the job done regardless. That's what I'm proud of. No excuses. No flinch. No blink. Just keep competing. … I thought it was a gritty win for our guys.''
Jacksonville (12-4) can clinch the AFC South title for the third time in nine years with a victory against Tennessee (3-13) on Sunday. Although still in the hunt for the top seed in the conference, the Jaguars more likely will be trying to secure the No. 3 seed and a home playoff game in the wild-card round.
To earn the No. 1 spot and home-field advantage throughout the AFC playoffs, they would need to win and have Denver and New England both lose at home to the Los Angeles Chargers and Miami, respectively. The Broncos and Patriots are touchdown-plus favorites, according to BetMGM Sportsbook.
''Having a home game, especially having a home playoff game, obviously we love that,'' defensive end Travon Walker said. ''We really need that. As far as the atmosphere, there's nothing like once you get into the playoffs, a home game and the crowd's just electrifying.''
It's within reach for a franchise that finished 4-13 a year ago and had dropped 18 of its last 23 games before Coen arrived last January.