“Hey, Greeney!”

“Yes, Golic?”

(A glare, and silence.)

The breaking-up ESPN duo of Mike Greenberg and Mike Golic, who have gained such a following for their opposites-attract chemistry while just talkin’ sports, have stopped speaking to each other off the set, according to a revealing Sports Illustrated report.

The show has soldiered on with its longtime voices feigning everything’s OK, with a December end to the radio program planned. But insiders are doubtful that Greenberg and Golic can survive another seven months together as they feud, with Greenberg leaving to host his own ESPN TV show and Golic sticking on the radio airwaves with new partner Trey Wingo.

“It’s really a poisonous atmosphere right now,” an ESPN employee who has worked on the show told SI. “Most of us don’t see the show lasting through its contractual end. But I give both these guys immense credit because when the light comes on, you would not know what’s going on. They are pros on air.”

The source of the tension between the longtime buddies, each of whom has the other to thank for his success, goes back years, appearing to stem from Greenberg wanting more than their radio show — and not telling his partner.

For years, ESPN has tried pumping more life into the radio show/simulcast that has thrived since its inception in 2000. Plans for the show’s move to New York, from ESPN headquarters in Bristol, were unveiled in 2015, and both Mikes sounded thrilled at the change of pace. The move, for unclear reasons, never came to fruition.

Greenberg appeared still ready for a change, and Sports Illustrated reported in September 2016 that he sought his own morning TV show. Golic had no idea this was on the table.

“From Golic’s perspective, he thinks Mike [Greenberg] should have come to him and told him he wanted to do his own thing,” an ESPN employee said. “But Greeney is very non-confrontational, truly a nice guy, and he would say that it wasn’t incumbent on him to tell Golic everything about what he wanted to do professionally. I guess I can see both sides.”

While Greenberg has sounded both nostalgic and excited as the duo comes to an end, Golic (and family) has adopted a different tone. Golic’s son Jake rebelled last week when the show finally addressed its mortality, tweeting at ESPN: “Am I allowed to tweet that you guys are idiots now, or do I need to wait a year to announce that?”

Golic himself shrugged off all responsibility for the show reaching its conclusion when announcing its goodbye.

“For me, it’s not my story to tell,” Golic said on May 17. “I’m going to continue doing this exact same show. It’s for others to tell who made this decision and if they want to tell it, how they want to tell it. Not my story to tell.”