Portland Trail Blazers forward Carmelo Anthony is the proud owner of one of the most notable 3-point celebrations in the basketball world. However, as it turns out, he may not be the original inventor of the move.

Iman Shumpert, who played with Anthony with the New York Knicks, chatted with Sham Charania of The Athletic and Stadium and shed some insight into how the gesture came to be. According to Shump, the now Blazers forward swiped the gesture from Rasheed Wallace, who played in New York in 2012-13.

“People don't realize, Melo doing the three-to-the-head, how that started was Rasheed Wallace. He always had a three-point celebration. He started the three-to-the-head and then Sheed got hurt,” Shumpert explained.

“But Sheed started this. And it was funny as hell because Melo, of course, is like, ‘Come on man, it's Melo man'… once the God do it, everybody go rogue with it. So, everybody's like, ‘yo the Melo three-to-the-head!' We all thought it was funny…And Sheed comes in one day…and he says, ‘Melo I'm not even gonna charge you for that.'”

Despite the swagger-jacking, Shumpert admitted that Melo made the celebration popular.

“But he did it, and like everybody's going crazy, little kids is doing it for their games, all the little street-ballers at Dyckman and the Rucker. Everybody's doing it… I told 'em to calm down, they was doin it so much. I was like, gee, that don't hurt y'all fingers? Like hittin' yourself in the head with straight fingers? Like that don't hurt?” Iman Shumpert said on how the current Blazers star made the 3-to-the-head rise to ubiquity.

It remains to be seen what Carmelo Anthony will say about this revelation. For now, fans can watch Shump tell the hilarious story and finally give Sheed the credit he apparently deserves.