Maybe there will be a small forward from Baltimore on this season’s Knicks roster.

Not Carmelo Anthony, but 6-foot-7 Jamel Artis, the Pittsburgh senior swingman who went undrafted but impressed on the Knicks’ summer league team enough to sign a partially guaranteed contract last week. Artis, who is 24 and averaged 18.2 points, 4.9 rebounds and 3.3 assists as a Pittsburgh senior, will fight for the final two roster spots when camp opens in late September.

“I feel great about making the team,’’ Artis told The Post in a phone interview after working out at the Knicks practice facility Monday. “It’s just my competitiveness. I feel I bring a lot to the game and am better than a lot of people, but I want to keep being humble. I feel I’m better than some guys that got drafted.’’

Artis is represented by the newish agency of Manhattan natives, Daniel Hazan and Andrew Hoenig, both die-hard Knicks fans in their mid-20s who remember not so long ago standing in front of the Garden, trying to get player autographs.

“It’s a dream having a player on the Knicks,’’ Hazan said.

Knicks coach Jeff Hornacek took a special interest in Artis after summer league ended July 6, working out with him individually back in Tarrytown right after. After a poor first game, Artis went on to average 10.1 points, shooting 16-of-30 in the final four contests.

“There was a lot of positive energy, getting me familiar with the offense,’’ said Artis, who has trained at their Tarrytown campus virtually the whole time since mid-July. “Like today he’s telling me how to close out shorter, harder. He’s just telling me input on certain things I need to work on. It’s a good sign the coach is teaching me things on his own.”

The summer-leaguers played a lot of triangle – as team president Phil Jackson was fired the day of the first practice, it was too soon for a makeover. Artis reports some triangle sets could remain.

“We’re mixing it up a bit, running a little bit of triangle, but for the most part we’re playing basketball,’’ Artis said. “Guys can get up and down, score the basketball. We still have some [triangle] sets. At the end of the day, we’ll play within the triangle but not as much as Phil Jackson would have.’’

The Knicks like Artis’ versatility, his smart defense and rebounding. According to Artis, his ballhandling, vision, passing ability and outside shooting also stand out.

“I bring a lot of the toughness, passion,’’ Artis said. “Coming from Baltimore, I didn’t get things handed to me. Baltimore made me the man I am.’’

Anthony, whose Knicks future is unclear, took a liking to Artis when they met in Manhattan at his Sky gym during a predraft workout in June with former Knicks developmental coach Chris Brickley.

“He knew who I was,’’ Artis said. “He showed me respect and a lot of love and support. I would love for Melo to stay in New York to watch him every day. He’s one of the guys I look up to. He told me to stay humble, keep the edge and never give up.’’

The Knicks have 14 guaranteed contracts, leaving free one regular roster spot and one spot open for a new two-way contract that has a player split time between G-League Westchester and the Knicks.

“I’d love to play the 2 or 3 – it’s mostly interchangeable,’’ Artis said. “They don’t have many 3’s there.’’