Gary Lineker left BBC pundits in hysterics with a brutal dig at Wayne Rooney's managerial record during their FA Cup final coverage.
Man United and England legend Rooney joined the BBC's punditry line-up for the showpiece between Man City and Crystal Palace.
With the Eagles having taken a surprise first half lead through Eberechi Eze, former Man City defender Micah Richards asked about how Palace boss Oliver Glasner would address his side at half-time.
'Being a manager and you're 1-0 up, what do you tell the players at half time?' Richards asked Rooney.
'Do you change the way you play?'
Before Rooney could reply, Lineker quickly quipped 'His teams were never 1-0 up'.
Lineker's brutal dig led to Rooney, Richards and fellow pundit Glenn Murray bursting into laughter.
The Match of the Day host followed up with 'Sorry Wayne' in a quick apology.
Rooney, who took the joke in good spirits, responded 'Let's just get back to the game.'
Lineker's comment came with Rooney having returned to punditry after being sacked as Plymouth Argyle boss in December.
Rooney was sacked with Plymouth rock bottom of the Championship after winning four matches, while suffering 13 league defeats.
He was succeeded by Miron Muslic, who led the Pilgrims to seven wins from 21 matches, but the club were ultimately relegated to League One after finishing three points from safety.
In total, Rooney has taken charge of 178 matches in his managerial career across roles at Derby County, DC United, Birmingham and Plymouth.
He has overseen just 45 wins, while suffering defeat 87 times and drawing 46.