Center Mitchell Robinson may have someone to compete with for most blocks in training camp.

Oregon power forward Kenneth Wooten, the 6-foot-9 leaper who impressed during the Las Vegas Summer League, has agreed to terms on an Exhibit 10 contract to attend Knicks training camp and fight for a roster spot, The Post has learned.

The Exhibit 10 deal guarantees Wooten $50,000 as long as he plays 45 days with the Westchester Knicks, should he be cut from the Knicks’ 15-man roster. The high flyer went undrafted and committed to the Knicks’ summer league team in Las Vegas, where he posted 10 blocks in four outings, playing 52 minutes.

His agent, Mitchell Butler, who played at UCLA and with three NBA teams, told The Post he considers Wooten “a top 5 athlete coming in with running, jumping and how quick his feet move.”

Butler believes Knicks brass sees him as having a future with the big club.

“He’s freakish,’’ Butler said.

Wooten played two seasons at Oregon, where he was third all-time in career shot-blocking (169), but some observers were surprised when he stayed in the draft.

The Knicks have a maximum 15 guaranteed contracts, so Wooten may not see any NBA action until later in the season. There’s speculation the club will deal some of their one-year free-agent signees at the trade deadline for draft picks.

Knicks coach David Fizdale said after last season he had wanted to add defenders to the club for the 2019-20 season. Butler and Fizdale have known each other since their high-school days in the Los Angeles area.

“The club is positive on Kenny,’’ Butler said. “His summer-league games resonated with the organization. Mitchell Robinson is good on the defensive end and to have Kenny coming in with no drop-off, that’s a big thing. Both of those guys on the loor, they literally shut off the inside and make teams shoot from the perimeter.’’

After the draft, Butler zeroed in on the Knicks because of Fizdale, despite having several options.

“[Fizdale] always appreciated guys who did the little things and comes from organizations like Miami and Memphis that appreciated glue-type guys,’’ Butler said. “I wanted to get him to a coach like that where he‘d have chance at the next level.’’

Butler played at UCLA from 1989 to 1993. He compared these Knicks to the Washington Bullets squad he joined out of UCLA that contained budding studs Rasheed Wallace, Chris Webber and Juwan Howard.

“Kenny has to play with infectious energy he did in summer league and show them he’s worth having around the big team over the next couple of years,’’ Butler said. “They’re poised with young talent to compete in the East In two years. It’s a process for them but they got good pieces.’’

The Post reported Wooten likely would have been the Knicks’ pick at 55 if they didn’t trade up in the draft for Iggy Brazdeikas.

“I’m trying to show the coaching staff I’m a hard-working guy who can rebound the ball,” Wooten told The Post in Las Vegas. “That I’m able to make passes to my players really well, I’m able to defend really well and be able to provide a lot of rim protection.”