A man who spent 13 seasons throwing NFL passes isn’t giving ESPN a pass.

Trent Dilfer watched the dimes dropping in front of him Monday night and no longer had the audience to break down the throws, with only Twitter to turn to.

The longtime NFL quarterback, notably with Tampa and Seattle, had been at ESPN since retiring in 2007 until he was laid off in April’s massive cuts. With him left “Dilfer’s Dimes,” a segment in which the former quarterback analyzed the best passes of the week.

Without Dilfer, the backup Monday night booth — used only during ESPN’s Week 1 doubleheader — included Beth Mowins, making history as the second woman ever to call an NFL game; Rex Ryan, who received poor reviews in his debut, as well as the confusing, awkward, exhilarating presence of Sergio Dipp. Dilfer manned Ryan’s spot in previous years and was a regular on “Monday Night Countdown.”

On Twitter, Dilfer offered effusive praise for Mowins, who “carried me” during a college football game years earlier. As for her partners, Dilfer was tellingly silent.

“She was great, very hard job and she killed it,” Dilfer wrote. “No comment on the rest.”

Without ESPN, the 45-year-old Dilfer still is studying signal-callers, but with “Elite 11,” a high school quarterback competition that will be broadcast on NFL Network.