There’s a bunch of starry tandems in the NBA this season: the Lakers’ LeBron James and Anthony Davis, the Nets’ Kyrie Irving and Kevin Durant, the Clippers’ Kawhi Leonard and Paul George, the Rockets’ James Harden and Russell Westbrook, the Warriors’ Stephen Curry and Draymond Green.

The Knicks? They now have Julius Randle and Marcus Morris.

The Knicks made it official Tuesday, snaring Morris from the Spurs’ grasp with a one-year, $14.8 million deal that uses up the final batch of their $70 million of cap space.

The Knicks also announced the reworked deal of shooting guard Reggie Bullock, giving them the maximum 15 players on the roster. According to a source, Bullock will receive a two-year deal starting at less than the $4.8 million room exception annually, with the second year a team option.

After spending more than $70 million on the 2019-20 payroll in the first two weeks of free agency, the Knicks’ goal is to win this season – not tank. Morris and Randle could be the starting forward tandem with second-year man Kevin Knox moving to the bench.

“With Reggie and Marcus we are adding two more versatile, hard-nosed and accomplished players to an already improved roster,” general manager Scott Perry said in a release. “We value both players’ perimeter shooting ability and their strong presence on the court and in the locker room. We’re excited to have them in New York and are confident they will excel playing for this team under Coach (David) Fizdale.”

Last season, his eighth in the NBA, Morris became a key contributor to the Celtics, averaging 13.9 points and 6.1 rebounds on 44.7 percent shooting. The 29-year-old shot a solid 37.5 percent from 3-point land. Knicks brass thought he had a very strong season. The Knicks become his fifth team.

“He works hard, has serious approach to his craft, and is an excellent teammate,’’ said a personnel man who had been with Morris at a former stop. “Winning is important to him, and he’s focused on getting better. I feel he is a solid starter in this league.’’

It was a sloppy way to get their potential starting small forward after Morris originally agreed to a two-year, $20 million deal with the Spurs.

The Knicks turned toward Morris after Bullock’s physical contained red flags. The Knicks backed out of a two-year, $21 million agreement with Bullock, concerned about his fitness, and worked on a revised, cheaper deal. Bullock has dealt with a series of injuries – meniscus, back and plantar fasciitis – in his career. According to a source, Bullock is out indefinitely and is not expected to be available for the start of the regular season.

Morris’ super-agent, Rich Paul, was not involved directly in Morris breaking his verbal agreement with the Spurs, according to a source, and the Knicks and Morris worked on a new deal together. The source reports Paul preferred Morris stick to his original agreement and the two are headed toward a breakup over the incident.

Morris, who is from Philadelphia, got cold feet about playing for Gregg Popovich in San Antonio. Morris has been widely panned for backing out of an agreement with a proven winner to join the 17-65 Knicks. The Spurs had cleared cap room to sign Morris by trading Davis Bertans and restructuring DeMarre Carroll’s contract; they later pivoted and signed Trey Lyles instead.

“I had to make this decision based on the best situation for me and my family,” Morris told The Athletic over the weekend. “This is no knock on the Spurs. I have respect for them.”

“There’s two sides to the story,” one NBA official said.

The Knicks have arguably the deepest 1-through-15 roster in the league but no star. They entered free agency without a power forward on their roster and have added four who can play the position: Randle, Morris, Bobby Portis and Taj Gibson.

Charles Oakley told the Associated Press this week the Knicks are simply mediocre.

“Do they have an ‘A’ player on their team? I don’t think so,” said Oakley, the former Knick embroiled in a feud with owner James Dolan. “They got maybe one ‘B’ and a lot of ‘Cs.’”

That is still to be determined.

RJ Barrett, Knicks No. 3 pick, officially on Team Canada’s invite list for late August’s World Cup. He hasn’t ruled out going to training camp. Ignas Brazdeikas, the Knicks’ second-round pick also from Canada, is eyeing playing for his native Lithuania in the event staged in China.