Could Andrea Pirlo be leaving Italy for Yankee Stadium? Sources in The Bronx say not so fast.

The 36-year-old maestro will orchestrate Juventus’ midfield in Saturday’s UEFA Champions League final against Barcelona in Berlin, then will leave the Italian league power to join New York City FC, according to Spanish outlet AS. But sources have called that “speculation” and premature.

“Nobody has been signed,’’ the source said. “Everything you are reading right now is speculation. We’re looking at a number of options.’’

Sporting director Claudio Reyna was not immediately available for comment.

The MLS expansion side already is committed to paying $6 million apiece to Spanish striker David Villa and English midfielder Frank Lampard, who is expected to join the team next month. With US National Team member Mix Diskerud also in the midfield, Pirlo doesn’t seem to solve the biggest problems for a struggling team that sits dead last in the league despite one of its biggest payrolls.

But Pirlo, who has re-invented himself as a deep-lying playmaker, would upgrade the talent level of just about any team in the world, and with just one win and eight points through their first 13 games, NYCFC is in desperate need of any upgrades they can get. And co-owned by the Yankees and Manchester City – more accurately, big-spending City Football Group – they can afford to pay.

NYCFC pursued Barcelona midfielder Xavi, but the Spaniard decided to head to Qatari side Al-Sadd for copious sums of money. At that point, AS reported, Manchester City and NYCFC CEO Ferran Soriano moved their sights toward Pirlo, who has four goals in 20 league matches and another in nine Champions League tilts.

Lampard will be eligible to start playing July 8, the same time Pirlo would, if the speculation turns out to be accurate.

Juventus reportedly plans to ink German World Cup champion Sami Khedira away from Real Madrid as Pirlo’s replacement.