It’s difficult to picture Nate Solder as a college tight end.

It’s even more absurd to think of the tallest player on the Giants doing circus tricks.

But it’s not so wild to think of the left tackle changing positions to accommodate a rookie next season.

“I’ll do whatever it takes to be successful on this team,” Solder told The Post, before delivering a one-liner: “If they ask me to spin a hula hoop around my head, I’ll do that.”

The team-first attitude is no surprise given Solder spent seven seasons in the Patriots’ factory before signing the then-largest contract for an offensive lineman in NFL history (four years, $62 million) as a free agent in 2018.

But it is significant now that the Giants likely played their way out of drafting Ohio State pass-rusher Chase Young and into the territory in which offensive tackles Andrew Thomas (Georgia), Tristan Wirfs (Iowa), Jedrick Wills (Alabama) and Austin Jackson (USC) could be enticing options.

Wirfs and Wills are experienced right tackles who could slide into a spot likely vacated by one-year stopgap Mike Remmers. Thomas and Jackson are multi-year starters on the left side who could face a bigger learning curve.

“Some things translate over; some things you have to re-adjust your thinking,” Solder said of the positions. “It’s kind of like a right-handed person trying to write left-handed. You are not going to be as fluid and natural at it, but you can train yourself. You can do well and be successful.”

The 6-foot-9, 316-pound Solder, who played tight end for two years at Colorado before moving to left tackle, broke into the NFL at right tackle. Taken by New England in the first round (17th overall) in 2011, Solder found a place around the entrenched Matt Light.

“I was under the impression they made the decision, ‘We are going to pick this guy because he can eventually replace Matt Light,’ ” Solder said. “But, if I wouldn’t have been a good player, then they would’ve had to do something different.”

Now, he is Light.

Conventional wisdom suggests the Giants would follow the Patriots’ plan: Leave Solder alone and introduce a rookie at right tackle, considered a less pressurized position because it is not protecting the quarterback’s blind side.

Solder, who will count for $19.5 million against the 2020 salary cap, is ranked the NFL’s No. 42 tackle this season by Pro Football Focus. He is charged with allowing 11 sacks.

“A lot of people on the outside said I had a great rookie year, but I certainly struggled through a lot and felt like my head was barely above water most of the time,” Solder said. “Just being in the NFL is a challenge.”

One thing the Giants do not have to worry about with Solder is trampling his ego.

As he has continued to be an iron man — playing in at least 15 games in all but one of his nine NFL seasons — he pointed a finger inward earlier this season as “first on the list” of Giants who need to perform better.

Solder also was nominated as the Giants’ nominee for the NFL Walter Payton Man of the Year award.

When Solder signed his record-setting contract, he said it would be a shame if he didn’t use the money to benefit others, and he and wife Lexi have contributed to domestic and international causes, such as Compassion International, Fresh Truck and Boston Children’s Hospital.

“I feel like I’m more of a fan than I am doing the work,” Solder said. “Those people are in there day-in and day-out making a difference. All I can do is support them. Whatever financial contributions are a drop in the bucket to what they are doing all the time. We do it all as a family, so that’s really special.”