CC Sabathia is making one last Yankees pitch — to get Gerrit Cole in pinstripes, that is.

The recently retired Yankees hurler said he has spoken “many times” with the most coveted free agent in this winter’s class, and that “if you give that motherf–ker enough money, he’s going to want to come here.

“I am speaking from experience,” Sabathia said on an episode of his “R2C2 is UNINTERRUPTED” podcast, a highlight of which dropped Tuesday.

Sabathia, the Vallejo, Calif. native, signed a seven-year, $161 million contract with the Yankees in 2008, which at the time was the largest deal for a starting pitcher.

That, of course, will be shattered by the 29-year-old Cole, who is from Newport Beach, Calif. and could command up to $300 million on the open market with the Yankees among many teams expected to line up for his services.

“Me and Gerrit Cole have spoken at length many times about me pitching as a Yankee as a West Coast Guy,” Sabathia said. “This is crazy, this is shaping out… like the same offseason I had.”

The Yankees already have missed out twice on Cole, who went 20-5 with a 2.50 ERA with Houston last season. They failed to sign Cole after drafting him the same year Sabathia signed, and then were outbid by the Astros, who acquired Cole from Pittsburgh in 2018.

Cole’s hometown Angels perhaps are the biggest front-runner to sign the righty. The Angels desperately need star pitching to pair with Mike Trout.

Houston may be a long shot to re-sign Cole, after he infamously told a media relations official, “I’m not employed by the team,” when asked to speak with reporters immediately following Game 7 of the World Series.

Cole eventually did speak with media, while wearing a Boras Corp. hat representing his agent Scott Boras.

Sabathia in late October told The Post he has yet to discuss a potential front office role with the Yankees, which he expressed interest in last season, the final of his 20-year career.