The beef between the two resurfaced on Tuesday following Lillard’s release of his own diss track. On Monday, morning Lillard responded to Shaq’s diss track in a tweet saying “Ha….training camp starts tomorrow but he’s definitely getting a round out of me.”

After he teased fans of a potential diss track, Lillard finally released his own aimed at Shaq on Tuesday morning. Lillard tweeted a link of his diss track with the message “Ok I’m going to practice now.”

Titled “Can’t Stop the Reign,” Lillard’s rap is about Shaq being a hater and pokes fun at the commericals that Shaq has starred in. The Trail Blazers point guard even took shots at Shaq’s time spent with the Los Angeles Lakers. “And Kobe won you them rings though,” rapped Lillard.

The beef between Shaq and the Portland Trail Blazers point guard began when Lillard appeared on “The Joe Budden Podcast.” During his appearance, the two were discussing 90’s rap as well as different NBA players who have stepped into the world of rap. Lillard told Joe Budden “I think I rap better than Shaq.” Lillard then followed up that comment by questioning the legitimacy of Shaq as a rapper in the 90’s. “People weren’t looking at it like it’s a real rapper. It was like, ‘That’s Shaq rapping,’” said Lillard.

O’Neal took notice to Lillard’s comments pretty quickly and released a diss track on Thursday via his Instagram. Titled “The Originator” Shaq rapped over the beat of Dr. Dre’s “What’s The Difference” taking shots directly aimed at Damian Lillard. In the diss track, O’Neal called Lillard a worse player than Sacramento Kings star Trevor Ariza while also rapping that the Portland Trail Blazers point guard should not compare himself to real MVP candidates like Russell Westbrook and Steph Curry.

This is not the first time Lillard has released diss tracks about his fellow NBA stars. In June of this year, Sacramento Kings forward, Marvin Bagley appeared on ESPN’s “First Take.” While on the show, host Max Kellerman asked Bagley who the better NBA rapper was, himself or Damian Lillard. “Man, me…I’ma go with myself,” said Bagley.

Later that same evening, Bagley doubled down on his claim and released a diss track aiming directly at Lillard, titled “No Debate.” Following this track, Lillard quickly returned the favor and released his own diss track titled “MARVINNNNNN.”

Using a six second sample from Drake’s 2018 diss track to Pusha T “Duppy Freestyle” Lillard went after Bagley and said, “When you come at the King, you best not miss.”

After Bagley failed to respond to this diss track, Lillard delivered a second diss track entitled “Bye Bye.” Bagley finally responded a day later with his own diss track but afterwards the two NBA stars decided to call off the beef through Twitter.

The current feud between Shaq and Lillard does not appear to be over but there has yet to be a new track released. Until then, fans across social media await a response from Shaq.