Los Angeles Chargers cornerback Casey Hayward congratulated Buffalo Bills safety Micah Hyde on his first career selection to the Pro Bowl via Twitter on Wednesday night.

It sure sounded like the former Packers cornerback threw some subtle shade for his old team into the message for Hyde, who left Green Bay for Buffalo this past spring.

Here’s the congratulatory tweet from Hayward:

Super happy for my brother @micah_hyde I'm proud of you bro. I guess we will be teammates once again lol. I'm glad you get to show your true skills with the Bills. love you bro. — Casey Hayward (@show_case29) December 20, 2017

The key line: “I’m glad you get to show your true skills with the Bills.”

The implication: Hayward knows Hyde’s skill set wasn’t fully maximized in Green Bay, a feeling he knows all too well.

Hyde signed a five-year deal with the Bills this past offseason. He played safety exclusively in Buffalo, picked off five passes and earned a Pro Bowl nod as a backup safety for the AFC.

While moved all over the defense in Green Bay, Hyde played most of his snaps at cornerback for defensive coordinator Dom Capers. He often made the most of it, especially late last season when the Packers were desperate for playmaking at cornerback, but his physical skills were always best suited for safety.

Hayward was groomed as a slot cornerback with the Packers but blossomed into one of the league’s top shutdown perimeter cornerbacks once he signed with the Chargers. Over the last two seasons, Hayward has totaled 40 passes defended and 11 interceptions.

It wouldn’t be the first time Hayward has criticized his old team.

“I’m glad now I’m a L.A. Charger. I got to show my true talents,” Hayward said in a July interview with Tyler Dunne of Bleacher Report. “Got to travel with No. 1s and show people what I can do. I’m glad I’m not there with those guys. I’m glad I’m here.”

Hayward and Hyde have both thrived in new roles within new defenses, while the Packers keep slogging on, trying to find answers – especially in the secondary. The undeniable success of the two departed defensive backs has only added pressure on Green Bay to make changes in leadership on defense.

The Packers did not have a player voted to the Pro Bowl.