Earl Thomas has no regrets about giving former coach Pete Carroll a one-finger salute last season.

“I don’t regret my decision,” the new Ravens safety told ESPN. “If my teammates felt like it was toward them, I regret that part. But I don’t regret doing that to Pete.”

After breaking his leg during a Week 4 contest against the Arizona Cardinals, Thomas, who sought a trade or contract extension from the Seahawks last summer, gave Carroll the middle finger while being carted off. The six-time Pro Bowler felt his head coach was not “being honest” with him.

Though Thomas has not been in contact with Carroll, he’s eager about his new chapter in Baltimore, after signing a four-year, $55 million deal with the Ravens during free agency.

“I think my time just ran out,” Thomas said of his departure. “Pete and the front office didn’t value me like they used to, and I just talked to coach Carroll, and he was saying how he was trying to get me in the plans of getting a new contract. But I got hurt the next week. I think I hurt myself too by my actions getting carted off the field.”

Thomas will cross paths with his former coach later this year when the Ravens travel to Seattle in October.

This isn’t the first time Carroll and the Seahawks organization have come under fire from former members of the Legion of Boom. Last spring, 49ers cornerback Richard Sherman said he felt undervalued by his former team.

“I think at the end of the day it just became an issue of devaluing core players, players that are playing at a high level and really being curious about younger players and curious about the unknown,” Sherman said at the time, per ESPN.

“They say, ‘Maybe this guy’s going to be the next guy,’ instead of saying, ‘Hey, you have Hall of Fame talents in your secondary. How about you ride this out.’ It’d be like Pittsburgh saying, ‘Troy Polamalu is great, but let’s figure out what this guy behind him has.'”