The Post’s Marc Berman takes a look at the Knicks’ training camp roster. Camp opens on Monday:

Pos., Player, Age, Ht., Wt.

PG, Kadeem Allen, 26, 6-3, 215

On two-way contract, showed grit, shotmaking (46.1 FG percentage) in 19 games late last season.

SG/SF, RJ Barrett, 19, 6-7, 200

The Duke rookie phenom once thought to be a future No. 1 pick comes in with scoring mentality and so much hype, but summer league raised red flags.

SF, Ignas Brazdeikas, 20, 6-7, 215

Trading up to 47th in second round to snare Canadian sniper from Michigan could prove as smart as Mitchell Robinson pick, with inside-outside scoring knack.

SG/SF, Reggie Bullock, 28, 6-7, 205

Spinal fusion surgery puts new signee’s return to court up in air but gives club another outside shooter.

SG, Damyean Dotson, 25, 6-6, 210

Offseason shoulder surgery could stunt his progress after showing “3 and D’’ skills as sophomore.

SG, Wayne Ellington, 31, 6-5, 200

Outside-shooting threat who has bounced around but remains relevant because of his 3-point shooting (37.1 percent last season).

PF, Taj Gibson, 34, 6-9, 230

Rugged Brooklyn native has always wanted to be a Knick and now gets chance to bring fire to front-line.

G, Amir Hinton, 22, 6-5, 190

Led college basketball in scoring (29.4 ppg) last season, but Division II Shaw University rookie earmarked to begin pro career with G-League Westchester.

F, V.J. King, 22, 6-6, 190

Undrafted rookie was a bench player for Louisville as a junior, averaging just 6.1 points while shooting 40 percent, and did little in summer league, but GM Scott Perry remembers his McDonald’s All-American days and will let him play for Westchester.

SF, Kevin Knox II, 20, 6-9, 215

Perhaps their most important player, the 2018 lottery pick still has star potential after bumpy rookie season, especially struggling on defense.

SF, Marcus Morris, 30, 6-9, 235

Knicks scouts loved his season with Boston as two-way force and will push Knox after deciding to break verbal agreement with Spurs to stay on East Coast.

PG, Elfrid Payton, 25, 6-4, 185

Perry drafted Payton in the lottery for Orlando and hasn’t given up on his prowess to become a big-time penetrating point guard — just like he didn’t give up on Mario Hezonja.

PG, Lamar Peters, 21, 6-0, 185

Knicks still have one two-way contract to offer, and undrafted Mississippi State playmaker looked good as passer in summer league after averaging averaging 11.9 points and 5.2 assists as senior.

C/PF, Bobby Portis, 22, 6-11, 250

Signed to be Mitchell Robinson’s backup in the pivot as the high-energy big man, Portis has progressed as a perimeter threat (39.3 3-point FG percentage last season)

PG, Frank Ntilikina, 21, 6-6, 200

The French 2017 lottery pick boosted his trade value with a strong World Cup performance and has chance to cement his uncertain future with big camp.

PF, Julius Randle, 24, 6-9, 250

Without any pressure on a bad Pelicans squad, he emerged as dominant scorer (21.4 ppg, 52 FG percentage) but signing three-year, $63M deal has former Lakers underachieving lottery pick squarely in Broadway spotlight.

C, Mitchell Robinson, 21, 7-1, 240

Was the success story of last season’s tankfest, emerging as a shotblocking rookie building block and alley-oop king in 66 games after being a draft steal at 36.

PG, Dennis Smith Jr., 21, 6-3, 195

Worked intensely on 3-point shot during offseason with assistant Keith Smart, and pressure is on 2017 lottery pick as chief asset from Kristaps Porzingis blockbuster.

SG, Allonzo Trier, 23, 6-5, 200

Undrafted Arizona sniper proved lots of GMs wrong with a splashy rookie season (10.9 ppg) but has to be more unselfish after ticking off teammates with reliance on isolation.

PF, Kenny Wooten, 21, 6-9, 200

Showed explosive shotblocking ability at summer league after going undrafted — his athleticism giving him shot to lock up team’s remaining two-way contact slot abandoned by ailing Kris Wilkes.