The Post ranks all 32 teams at this point in the offseason (2015 record in parenthesis):

1. Patriots (12-4)

The Martellus Bennett signing could make Rob Gronkowski (and their offense) unstoppable.

2. Panthers (15-1)

They’re loaded with young talent, though letting Josh Norman walk will hurt.

3. Seahawks (10-6)

Russell Wilson led the NFL in passer rating last year and still is just 27 years old.

4. Cardinals (13-3)

The league’s deepest team added a pass rush via trade (Chandler Jones) and draft (Robert Nkemdiche).

5. Packers (10-6)

Green Bay gets Jordy Nelson back, as well as a slimmer Eddie Lacy on a team that won 10 games last year.

6. Steelers (10-6)

There are major questions in the secondary, but as long as they have Ben Roethlisberger …

7. Bengals (12-4)

Enough talent to merit a much higher ranking, but Marvin Lewis’ 0-7 playoff record is no fluke.

8. Vikings (11-5)

A fancy new stadium, an excellent draft, one of the league’s best coaches and a young team firmly on the rise.

9. Chiefs (11-5)

With the Broncos decimated and Jamaal Charles and Justin Houston slated to return, Kansas City is the AFC West’s new favorite.

10. Cowboys (4-12)

Ezekiel Elliott could be a star, but Dallas’ hopes hinge on how Tony Romo’s collarbone holds up.

11. Colts (8-8)

If Andrew Luck can get healthy and stay that way, they still are the team to beat in the AFC South.

12. Broncos (12-4)

Enjoy that Lombardi Trophy, guys, because huge free-agency losses and Mark Sanchez under center don’t equal a repeat.

13. Redskins (9-7)

They’re in very capable hands with GM Scot McCloughan, and the Josh Norman signing was huge.

14. Raiders (7-9)

Everybody’s favorite sleeper did well in free agency and has one of the league’s most promising young QBs in Derek Carr.

15. Giants (6-10)

One of the wildest spending sprees in the history of free agency had better pay off … for GM Jerry Reese’s sake.

16. Texans (9-7)

They’re the only ones who think they landed a franchise quarterback in Brock Osweiler.

17. Ravens (5-11)

Last year was an injury-filled aberration, and teams with Ozzie Newsome as GM don’t stay down for long.

18. Jets (10-6)

This ranking would improve in a hurry if they come to their senses and re-sign Ryan Fitzpatrick.

19. Bills (8-8)

This team looks pretty much the same as it did at the end of last season, which isn’t exactly encouraging.

20. Falcons (8-8)

Are they the team that opened 6-1 or the one that limped to the finish at 2-7? Bet on the latter.

21. Bears (6-10)

They were very busy in free agency, but none of the newcomers look like big difference-makers for a team stuck in a rut.

22. Rams (7-9)

A new city and new potential franchise quarterback in Jared Goff, but the same ol’ Jeff “8-8” Fisher.

23. Eagles (7-9)

The fact Sam Bradford was afraid to compete with an FCS (formerly Division I-AA) quarterback from North Dakota State doesn’t bode well.

24. Jaguars (5-11)

They loaded up in free agency and had the league’s best draft, but six straight seasons of double-digit losses is hard to overcome.

25. Dolphins (6-10)

Laremy Tunsil was a draft-night steal (gas mask and all), but the rest of it just looks like more trademark Dolphins blah.

26. Lions (7-9)

Calvin Johnson will be tough to replace, and the Vikings’ rise means the NFC North isn’t getting any easier.

27. Buccaneers (6-10)

Jameis Winston with a solid group of receivers will at least be interesting to watch.

28. Chargers (4-12)

A team with a lot of holes and an uncertain future in San Diego. Hey, at least they’ve got the weather.

29. Saints (7-9)

The league’s worst defense by a mile last year didn’t get any better, and Drew Brees is a year older.

30. Titans (3-13)

Yeah, we can’t figure out this whole “sign DeMarco Murray then draft Derrick Henry” thing, either.

31. 49ers (5-11)

If anyone understands what new coach Chip Kelly and GM Trent Baalke are doing, please let us know.

32. Browns (3-13)

With 25 rookies in camp, the first year of Cleveland’s great “Moneyball” experiment is going to be ugly.