PORT ST. LUCIE – Yoenis Cespedes has nothing to say about anything, at least publicly.

Approached at his locker before the Mets’ initial full-squad workout of the spring on Monday, the veteran outfielder said he won’t be speaking to the media this season.

“Not today, not tomorrow, not at all year this year,” Cespedes said at Clover Park.

Why not?

“Because I don’t want to,” Cespedes said.

Cespedes, who is recovering from multiple ankle fractures sustained after encountering a wild boar on his ranch last May, was asked if he could say how he was feeling. Cespedes declined.

Cespedes last spoke to the media in spring training last season. He previously was recovering from surgery to remove calcifications from both heels.

Does Cespedes want to speak to the fans about how he is feeling?

“To my fans, maybe,” he said, before walking away.

Cespedes, who is entering the final year of his contract, agreed to a restructured deal for 2020 that guarantees him only $6 million (with incentives that could push the figure to $20 million). He was originally slated to earn $29.5 million, but took the pay cut to avoid the possibility his contract would be nullified by an arbitrator, following the incident with the wild boar on his ranch. Cespedes kept boar traps on the ranch, and sources indicated he was in the process of freeing the animal from one when the injury occurred, in an attempt to avoid an attack. As part of the restructuring, Cespedes’ contract was reduced from $29 million to $22.9 million in 2019.