The Knicks have found a way to stash players with their D-League team in Westchester while having them make more than the minor league’s max of $25,000.

The Knicks have agreed to terms on a partially guaranteed deal on former Michigan State point guard Travis Trice, according to a source, and announced Virginia power forward Darion Atkins and Wesley Saunders of Harvard have signed their deals. All three are undrafted rookies.

Atkins and Saunders agreed to terms in August but weren’t able to take their physicals until after Labor Day because the team’s full medical staff wasn’t available.

Trice, Atkins and Saunders are considered training-camp bodies who will be cut when the rosters are reduced to 15 before the regular season. But they all have small guarantees in the $50,000-$75,000 range, hence, they can agree to play in the D-League for Westchester, knowing they have been compensated. This does not technically skirt any D-League cap rules.

It’s a good ploy by team president Phil Jackson and general manager Steve Mills for players they want to develop.

Trice, who played for the Miami in summer league, survived a mysterious illness in 2012 that led to headaches and weight loss and was diagnosed as a brain infection. As a senior, he averaged 15.3 points and 5.1 assists for a Spartans team that reached the Final Four.

Atkins, at 6-foot-8 and 241 pounds, averaged 7.6 points and 6.0 rebounds over 23.9 minutes in 33 games as a senior at Virginia and was ACC Defensive Player of the Year. He wasn’t even invited to the Chicago draft combine.

The 6-foot-5 Saunders averaged 12.6 points as a Harvard senior shooting guard and was a three time All-Ivy First Team selection.

Ex-Knick/Seattle Supersonic forward Spencer Haywood will be inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame Friday night in Springfield, Mass.

Haywood was nominated by the Knicks though his better days came in Seattle. The Knicks took up the fight to nominate him because the Oklahoma City Thunder, according to Haywood, do not recognize their Seattle past. Haywood played four seasons with the Knicks in the 1970s and is a former teammate of Jackson’s.

Former Knick/Net Dikembo Mutomobo also is being enshrined as is longtime referee Dick Bavetta, a Brooklyn native.