In today’s edition of “Nothing Good Ever Comes From Having A Twitter Account,” the Baltimore Ravens posted a tweet that managed to insult both its own quarterback and the quarterback the team beat in Super Bowl XLVII.

LFW: Think Flacco is overpaid? Pundits say Kaepernick takes over title of most overpaid QB. http://t.co/3PPQyNBkAf pic.twitter.com/cf0uvyuUyG — Baltimore Ravens (@Ravens) June 5, 2014

The first part of the tweet refers to Joe Flacco’s oft-criticized $120 million mega-deal that was signed after the QB led Baltimore to a Super Bowl title in 2013. The second part, and the inspiration for the tweet, is about the recent extension signed by San Francisco 49ers quarterback Colin Kaepernick. A column on the team’s official website compares the two contracts.

In dissing Kaepernick by calling him overpaid, the Ravens back-handedly insult Flacco by acknowledging that some think he’s overpaid. It’s an interesting use of the “cut off your nose to spit your face” method to social media. Why even go there? (This isn’t the first time in recent weeks that the Ravens Twitter account would have been better served staying offline.)

Think of how other teams could use this strategy in tweets:

Dallas Cowboys: “Think Tony Romo chokes in big games? Pundits say Peyton Manning does too.”

Washington Redskins: “Think our name is offensive? Wait ’til you get a load of the Atlanta Braves.”

Philadelphia Eagles: “Think Chip Kelly’s ego is big? Have you met Bill Belichick?”

Oakland Raiders: “Hey, at least we’re not Cleveland.”

The funniest part of the Ravens tweet is that after the agent bluster cleared and the funny money was taken away, Kaepernick’s deal isn’t all that good. In the long term, it could earn him far less than what Flacco is getting. As Pro Football Talk notes, the 49ers are really only on the hook for $13 million guaranteed at signing, not the $61 million that was reported on Thursday. (That figure relates to an injury payout.)

So if you believed Flacco was overpaid (which is a debatable point anyway), you can’t use Colin Kaepernick as a comparison. And if you’re the official Twitter account of a team, you should probably just stick to posting pictures of players at OTAs.