The one baseball writer who didn’t make Jacob deGrom’s Cy Young Award win unanimous also apparently wasn’t in the mood to “Schmooze.”

Longtime WFAN host Steve Somers, who landed an interview with John Maffei of the San Diego Union-Tribune early Thursday, started the discussion in his classic, joking style about why the writer did not pick the Mets’ ace.

But it all went wrong. Here’s how the interview went down:

“There was one baseball writer, and we have him on the line right now,” Somers said. “John Maffei — not from Washington, where you would think homerism lives and thrives — John Maffei is with the San Diego Union-Tribune. John, can you look at yourself in the mirror. … John?”

“Can I?” Maffei said. “Absolutely.”

“No, no, no, no, you’re looking for 15 minutes of fame and attention,” Somers interjected.

That apparently didn’t sit too well with Maffei.

“Steve, this interview is over,” Maffei said. “Thank you, goodbye.”

Then he hung up.

“What?” a stunned Somers said. “Well, one of my better interviews. Here’s the thing. Where’s this guy’s sense of humor, taking a little bit too seriously here, don’t you think?

“I can’t believe that. The last time somebody hung up on me doing an interview was [former A’s owner] Charlie O. Finley when I was in Sacra-tomato [Sacramento], and Charlie didn’t like the questions, and he hung up on me.”

“So there it is. John Maffei and what, I mean c’mon already. Please, explain yourself. I can’t believe that. But nonetheless, there it is. We got John Maffei and he wouldn’t even … I mean he had no sense of humor as far as I’m concerned. … You know, and we wanted to find out why he voted for Mad Max [Scherzer]. That’s it. He didn’t have much tolerance. He didn’t have much patience. And certainly no sense of humor, that’s for sure. We had planned to have some fun with him.”

DeGrom received 29 of 30 first-place votes from the Baseball Writers’ Association of America in topping Scherzer and the Phillies’ Aaron Nola for the honor and becoming the fourth Mets pitcher — joining Tom Seaver, Dwight Gooden and R.A. Dickey — to win the award.

Scherzer, who had won the previous two NL Cy Young Awards with the Nationals, received Maffei’s first-place vote and finished second in the voting. He received 29 of 30 second-place votes.

But this was still a historic interview for Somers.

“There it was, the shortest interview I think I ever had,” Somers said. “That’s one for the books!”

The Rays’ Blake Snell won the AL Cy Young, edging the Astros’ Justin Verlander, with the Indians’ Corey Kluber finishing third.