For a regular season game in January, there was sure a lot of back and forth between the Thunder and the Portland Trail Blazers Tuesday night at Chesapeake Energy Arena.

The Thunder picked up the 123-114 win over the Trail Blazers as Paul George led the team with 36 points while Russell Westbrook added 29 points, 14 assists and 10 rebounds for his 14th triple-double of the season.

Westbrook also picked up a few new beefs on the night, as well.

During the game, Trail Blazers guard Evan Turner tried to use Westbrook’s infamous ‘Rockabye Baby’ move against Westbrook after scoring on him, to which Westbrook had a response for.

“I didn’t even see it, honestly,” Westbrook said. “He can rock right back to Portland.”

Following that, Westbrook appeared to have called Portland center Jusuf Nurkic a “clown” during his postgame media availability, with Nurkic firing back at Westbrook on Twitter.

For the third beef of the night, Westbrook went at Damian Lillard.

In the closing minutes of the game, and with Lillard at the free-throw line, Westbrook is seen yelling at Lillard in between shot attempts and it appears that Westbrook is telling Lillard he has “been busting that ass for years.”

The video of the incident:

Westbrook telling Dame he’s been busting that ass for years. Rematch is February 11th. pic.twitter.com/0cFnamzxu2 — Rob Perez (@WorldWideWob) January 23, 2019

Of course, the two teams are division rivals and play each other four times a year so there is still plenty left to be written on the season series with two more meetings set.

The Trail Blazers swept the Thunder last year 4-0 during the regular season while the Thunder snapped an eight-game losing streak in Portland earlier this month.

But, Westbrook may have a point in his trash-talk to Dame.

Westbrook is averaging 25.9 points, seven assists, 6.8 rebounds and 1.5 steals in 38 career games against the Trail Blazers. His 25.9 points are the third-most against any opponent, behind only the New York Knicks and Phoenix Suns, according to Basketball-Reference.

By contrast, Lillard is averaging 21.4 points, seven assists, 3.6 rebounds and 1.2 steals in 25 career games against the Thunder. His 21.4 points are the seventh-lowest against an opponent — his best is 27 point per game against the Golden State Warriors.

The battles between Westbrook and Lillard over the years have been quite a scene but the trash-talk between the two players Tuesday night may have been the first of its kind, even after all of these years playing each other.

Lillard spoke about the rivalry, as recounted by Jason Quick of The Athletic.

“I see him and I see how he is almost angry toward other people,” Lillard said. “So I take that same energy with him. I don’t speak to him before the game. I don’t shake hands. I don’t do none of that. I’m like, ‘It is going to be what it is going to be.’ That’s my approach.”

After the Thunder took the first two games of the series this year, the two teams will meet again on Feb. 11 back in Oklahoma City.

That should be a good one…