JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- There is a feud brewing in the Jacksonville Jaguars’ locker room.

Players are choosing sides and it seems like the younger players are lining up on one side and the older players on the other. It’s friendly right now, but it could explode at any moment and potentially tear the team apart.

Windmill vs. Pee Wee Herman.

Those are the sack dances of defensive ends Andre Branch and Jared Odrick. They were both on display in last Thursday night’s 19-13 victory over Tennessee at EverBank Field. Odrick did the Pee Wee Herman dance after he sacked Marcus Mariota midway through the fourth quarter and Branch did the windmill -- preceded by some other gyrations -- after he dropped Mariota on the game’s final play.

Branch kicked off the feud by saying the windmill -- which involves twirling his arms as he leans back -- requires much more coordination and not just anyone can pull it off.

"You don’t have to be able to do dance to do Jared’s sack dance," Branch said. "You have to have rhythm to do mine.

"We know it [the windmill] is better. I can do Jared’s dance. He can’t do mine."

Andre Branch said his windmill sack dance requires rhythm and coordination and has the support of the younger generation of Jaguars. Rick Wilson/Jacksonville Jaguars

Odrick conceded that the Pee Wee Herman might not be as fluid and rhythmic as the windmill, but he likes it because it’s a classic. He also defended his own sense of rhythm.

"There’s a difference in the dance when you do have rhythm," said Odrick, who brought the dance with him from Miami. "I think people realize that and witness that when they see my hips vs. a guy like Steve Smith that tried doing it the other week. Stiff, no hip movement, no hip gyration.

"I’m all about the hip gyration."

Jared Odrick's sack dance is a throwback and typically has some support among the Jaguars' older players who have actually heard of Pee Wee Herman. Rick Wilson/Jacksonville Jaguars

There are some clear lines being drawn inside the locker room, with several of the younger players siding with Branch’s windmill.

"I have to go with my dog Dre," defensive end Chris Smith said. "That [the early part of his dance against Tennessee] was a lot of creativity, and then he came back to his originally, the windmill. Jared’s dance is good, though."

Receiver Allen Robinson, who turned 22 in August, didn’t even hesitate when asked which dance was better. He apparently thought Odrick was having some kind of fit after his sack.

"I don’t know what Odrick’s sack dance is at all," Robinson said.

Being told about Pee Wee Herman didn’t make a difference, either.

"That was a little bit before my time," he said.

That's no excuse, Odrick said.

"They need to go find out what it is," he said. "They need to go find out what the Pee Wee Herman dance is. They need to know who Pee Wee Herman is, what his big adventure was all about, and what was in the bottom of the Alamo."

Pee Wee Herman was a little before running back Toby Gerhart’s time, too, but he picked Odrick over Branch. Odrick also has the support of perhaps the most important person in the locker room: quarterback Blake Bortles.

"Pee Wee Herman is just awesome," he said.

There is at least one player who remains neutral, though. Rookie tight end Ben Koyack, who several players said was the team’s worst dancer after watching him perform during a rookie event, won't choose a side.

"I don’t think I’m really qualified to critique anybody’s dancing, in all honestly," he said. "I’m not going to build them up so they try and make me dance again. I don’t think anyone wants to see that.

"I’m just going to go ahead and leave it a draw."