MINNEAPOLIS — Luis Severino will take the mound on Monday night at Target Field 364 days after his previous playoff performance, when he gave up six runs in three-plus innings in an ALDS Game 3 loss to the Red Sox that all but doomed the Yankees’ season.

It led to questions about Severino tipping pitches or if he had warmed up enough before the game.

That outing, Severino said Sunday, won’t be on his mind as he tries to close out the ALDS against the Twins.

“For me, I don’t think about past situations or games like that,’’ Severino said before the Yankees worked out at Target Field on Sunday. “When games like that happen, I will go the next day to the video room and see what was going on or what happened that I couldn’t get batters out. But after that, it’s over. You always know that I’m a guy that, if I had a bad game, I will do my best to get better and try to do a better job.’’

Now he gets his chance.

Pitching coach Larry Rothschild said he is confident he will make the most of it, and he doesn’t plan on bringing up last year’s struggle.

“We’ll concentrate on what he needs to do [Monday],’’ Rothschild said.

And he can put to rest some of his previous postseason issues.

“The biggest thing is for him to focus on what he needs to do to get guys out,’’ Rothschild said. “Last year’s got nothing to do with what he needs to do [Monday].”

Like everyone else, though, Rothschild will find out Monday whether Severino has put it behind him.

He has shown encouraging signs over the last three weeks, when Severino looked terrific his first two outings after missing most of the season with rotator cuff inflammation and a strained lat.

The right-hander wasn’t as sharp in his previous outing in Texas, but he is healthy and throwing well.

“I think I am [at] my best,’’ Severino said. “I had three outings before this, so that’s … what I do in spring training, before I head into the season, so I think that’s good enough to be at my best.”

He also hasn’t pitched since the three-inning, 72-pitch outing against the Rangers on Sept. 28.

Since then, he said he’s been doing “a lot of throwing.”

And he hopes to have picked up ways to attack Minnesota’s lineup from having watched Masahiro Tanaka — and to a lesser extent, James Paxton — handle it during the first two games of the series.

Severino smiled when asked about his last playoff appearance against the Twins, when he retired just one batter, gave up three runs — and two homers — in a performance that was overshadowed by the Yankees’ comeback win in the 2017 wild-card game.

“I don’t even remember that,’’ Severino said with a laugh. “That was a tough game, but that was two years ago.”

Aaron Boone doesn’t worry too much about what Severino has done in previous Octobers.

“Well, I think, first, [he’s] had good and bad in the postseason,’’ the manager said. “You talked about Minnesota, but then last year, he pitched the wild-card game and pitched great for us [with four shutout innings against Oakland]. So I expect him to handle it.’’

The past experience could help.

“The one thing I’ve kind of always said with [Severino] is, for being a young man, he’s been through a lot at the big-league level,’’ Boone said. “He came up as this huge phenom, had some struggles, went to the bullpen, kind of had a lot of success, then emerged as this Cy Young candidate. Has had huge successes in the postseason, has had some times where he stumbled, now been through the first major injury of his career where he was out a significant amount of time. And I think all those things that he’s gone through, hopefully serve him well moving forward.”