Earl Thomas still wanted to give Pete Carroll the verbal version of the middle finger.

Thomas, according to The Athletic, was screaming at the Seahawks coach after a Ravens defensive touchdown in their 30-16 win in Seattle. Though Carroll reportedly did not hear Thomas’ taunts, Seahawks linebacker Bobby Wagner pushed Thomas away.

“You knew I was going to say something,” Thomas told reporters after, according to the Baltimore Sun. “I definitely said what I had to say. It was between me and them. It felt great, man, just to see Marcus (Peters) run down the sideline, Marlon (Humphrey) scoop the fumble recovery up and score. That’s a good way to close the game.”

Thomas’ time in Seattle ended last September amid a contract dispute and a broken leg. As the safety was getting carted off the field, Thomas gave the Seahawks sideline, directed at Carroll, the middle finger. Those sour feelings festered over the past 13 months and Thomas, who signed a four-year, $55 million with Baltimore in the offseason, was able to exact revenge in the matchup between playoff contenders.

“I definitely came in here with a purpose, and we got it done,” Thomas said after the victory, which included two defensive touchdowns — an interception return by Peters and a fumble return by Humphrey.

Thomas exchanged jerseys with Seahawks quarterback Russell Wilson and there appears to be no friction between him and his former teammates. The frustration is all focused on Carroll, whom Thomas ignored postgame.

“When Earl broke us down, all week, really, we kept saying, ‘Earl, we got you. Earl, we got you,’” Humphrey said. “The Seahawks moved on from him. I think everyone knew they felt like he didn’t have it anymore. It wasn’t like a happy go-away. It was more like, ‘You don’t got it anymore. We don’t really want you.’ We felt like it’s just a game, but for Earl, it’s a little bit more.”