Photo of Trevone Boykin, Ciara, Russell Wilson
Screengrab, Instagram

Former Seattle Seahawks quarterback Trevone Boykin took a shot at former teammate Russell Wilson‘s Thanksgiving dinner.

Russell invited Trevone to dine with him, his wife Ciara, and their four children, instead of spending Thanksgiving alone.

Afterwards, Trevone took shots at Russell on the “House of Playmakers” podcast.

“Russell Wilson, I went to his house for Thanksgiving. The weirdest feeling …” he said. Trevone mentioned several of Ciara’s family members showed up.

Trevone said it was “weird” that Russell’s family members attended the dinner.

“I come from a traditional, country as- family. If I got as much money as Russell Wilson, my whole family would talk about me so bad if I didn’t fly everybody out for Thanksgiving,” he explained.

“His mama wasn’t there. Sisters weren’t there, you know what I’m saying? Even though, like … still weird to me.”

Trevone is a distant memory in the NFL because of his off-field struggles with the law.

The Seattle Seahawks signed Trevone as an undrafted free agent in 2016. He spent two seasons as Russell’s backup quarterback.

But the Seahawks released Trevone in March 2018 following his arrest on domestic assault charges. According to reports, Trevone broke his then-girlfriend’s jaw in a fight that was captured on surveillance video. He was sentenced to three years in prison for aggravated assault.

Only 32-years-old, Trevone’s NFL career is over. He now plays for the Dinos de Saltillo, an American football team based in Saltillo, Mexico.

X (Twitter) users lashed out at Trevone for being ungrateful.

One person wrote: “He extended an invitation to dude and he gets in front of mic to start speaking negative about him. This is so corny, man.”

Another person wrote: “Many people have Thanksgiving w/o family as they’re not in the same location, and instead have friends / teammates / coworkers as guests.”

A third person commented: “Boykin is weird for saying this, that man invited you into his home. Clown behavior for clout.”