Noah Syndergaard, simmering all season about his inability to convince Mets brass to line him up with his preferred catchers, became livid over the weekend when he had to throw again to Wilson Ramos rather than Rene Rivera or Tomas Nido, industry sources told The Post.

Syndergaard or his representatives have implored the Mets multiple times this season to have the righty pitch to someone other than Ramos, especially since he threw seven shutout innings to Rivera in his previous start. Syndergaard first confronted pitching strategist Jeremy Accardo, then Mickey Callaway this past weekend when he recognized Ramos would be catching him Sunday. He then had a half-hour sit-down with Brodie Van Wagenen, but received no satisfaction. Ramos started against the Phillies.

“I wouldn’t call it an incident,” Van Wagenen said before the Mets faced the Diamondbacks on Monday night at Citi Field. “Noah and I met, we’ve had ongoing dialogue with many of our players over the course of the season. Specifically with Noah, we had dialogue going back to earlier in the season where we had opportunity to hear his thoughts and we were able to share information with him about what is in the best interest of the team and what gives us the best chance to win.”

In general, Van Wagenen’s front office believes the pitcher-catcher dynamic is overstated and favors the best offensive matchup against the opposing pitcher. The Mets also want to avoid pitchers having personal catchers. In addition, Van Wagenen is invested in Ramos, having handed him a two-year, $19 million contract this offseason. And Ramos, after a tepid start, has been among the Mets’ best hitters in the second half, making it harder to pull him from the lineup. The Mets are 25-14 in the second half with Ramos catching, and 9-6 this season when Ramos catches Syndergaard.

However, this season Syndergaard has an 8.10 ERA in two games with Travis d’Arnaud, a 5.09 ERA with Ramos in 15 games and a 2.45 ERA with Nido in 10 games. He threw seven shutout innings the only time he matched up with Rivera. In 22 career games with Nido, Syndergaard has a 2.17 ERA and it is 2.52 in 29 games with Rivera.

Callaway downplayed the situation, saying he and Syndergaard speak regularly. But the manager pointed out the choice of catcher is ultimately his call and not Syndergaard’s.

“You can’t make everybody happy and it’s not about making guys happy,” Callaway said. “It’s about winning at this point.”

Callaway was asked if Syndergaard’s success throwing to Nido and Rivera is considered when constructing a lineup.

“You always take that into account, but what you also take into account is Ramos has been the best hitter in Major League Baseball for the past month-and-a-half,” Callaway said. “You weigh all those things.”

Last season when he was Jacob deGrom’s agent, Van Wagenen encouraged the ace to demand to pitch to Devin Mesoraco because deGrom felt so much more comfortable throwing to him than the other Met catchers. The request was mainly granted with Mesoraco starting 21 of deGrom’s final 25 starts in his Cy Young season.

Van Wagenen also said his administration would be based on a players-first credo, and Syndergaard does not feel as if that is playing out with him.

The pitcher-catcher discord, along with Syndergaard being floated as trade bait both last offseason and at this past July 31 deadline, has led to further fraying between Syndergaard and the team. The expectation is that this offseason the Mets will again consider trading Syndergaard, who can be a free agent after the 2021 season.

Syndergaard holds no personal animus toward Ramos. He sees this simply as what helps him perform best and, thus, what he views is best for the team. But Syndergaard feels Nido/Rivera call a better game than Ramos, help him defend the running game better and better aid in getting low strikes called.

On June 9, Syndergaard threw seven one-hit shutout innings against Colorado with Nido catching him for the second time this year. He was upset to see Ramos in the lineup for his next start against the Cardinals and let his bosses know he wanted Nido. He didn’t get Nido. With Ramos catching,

Syndergaard yielded five runs and five stolen bases in six innings and was considering taking his complaints public.

But Syndergaard incurred a hamstring injury that landed him on the injured list for two weeks. When he returned, Nido was his catcher for the next seven starts, coinciding with his best run of the season and the Mets’ surge back into contention. Ramos then caught two of his next three starts and Syndergaard pitched well both times to Ramos.

On Aug. 28 against the Cubs, however, Syndergaard incurred perhaps his worst start in the majors, allowing 10 runs in three innings with Ramos catching. Rivera was behind the plate for the next start and Syndergaard threw seven shutout innings against the Nationals.

With night games this past weekend on Friday and Saturday and a day game on Sunday, Syndergaard figured Ramos would get the two night games and either Nido or Rivera would catch him in the Sunday matinee. When he saw Nido get the start Saturday with Marcus Stroman on the mound, Syndergaard understood that Ramos would not be sat for two straight games. So he lobbied Callaway and Van Wagenen to change that decision.

But Ramos started Sunday. He had a two-run homer, three RBIs and three hits. Syndergaard, though, labored through five innings, permitting four runs and being pulled after 78 pitches.

It only added to Syndergaard’s heightened frustration and growing unease in his relationship with the Mets.

“I think every player should appreciate a front office and organization that is willing to listen to them,” Van Wagenen said. “We have conversations and factor in all kinds of information into our decision-making. We have won a lot of games with Wilson Ramos behind the plate.”

— Additional reporting from Mike Puma

Purchase event tickets to The Amazin’ 1969 New York Mets: A World Championship for the Ages presented by The Paley Center for Media and New York Post. Enter promo code: NYPOST to unlock tickets only available for Post readers.