MIAMI — Now he’s Jacob deBomb.

If it isn’t enough the reigning NL Cy Young Award winner is showing early signs he can match or surpass last season’s mastery, Jacob deGrom has added thunder to his game.

On a night deGrom’s pitching was enough of a spectacle — he struck out a career-high 14 batters over seven shutout innings — his second career home run elevated the performance to a new stratosphere.

“I told [Brandon] Nimmo, ‘I am not taking the first pitch,’ and I was fortunate enough to be on time,” deGrom said after the Mets completed a three-game sweep of Miami with a 6-4 victory at Marlins Park.

DeGrom, who allowed three hits and one walk, knew he needed to strike out the side in the seventh inning to establish a career high. And after JT Riddle and Lewis Brinson went down swinging to open the inning, deGrom put all his energy into ensuring Chad Wallach wouldn’t make contact. Wallach struck out swinging.

“Once I got the first two guys, then it became a goal,” deGrom said.

DeGrom was asked if he will most remember the strikeout mark from Wednesday or his home run.

“Probably the record strikeouts,” deGrom said. “The work in between, I was really working on getting my arm up where I wanted it to be and I felt like I was mechanically really good tonight.”

The right-hander has a 26-inning scoreless streak dating to 2018 — eclipsing his previous best of 24 ¹/₃ scoreless innings, established April 21 to May 18 last season.

DeGrom also added to his own major league record with a 31st consecutive start in which he allowed three runs or fewer. With his 26th straight quality start, deGrom equaled the record established by Bob Gibson in 1968.

It was a second straight dominant performance this season for deGrom, who fired six shutout innings with 10 strikeouts on Opening Day in Washington, after receiving a five-year contract worth $137.5 million earlier in the week.

“[DeGrom] just does the same thing every time and you look up at the end and it’s something really impressive,” manager Mickey Callaway said. “He continues this historic run.”

So the Mets will arrive at Citi Field for Thursday’s home opener in a “good spot” — a favorite catchphrase of Callaway’s — after winning five of six games to begin the season. The Mets started last season 11-1 under Callaway only to crater before the All-Star break and finish fourth in the NL East.

During spring training, Zack Wheeler playfully boasted he would be the Mets’ best-hitting pitcher this season, but he is now trailing deGrom, who launched a Trevor Richards fastball leading off the third.

DeGrom’s first career homer was hit on June 18, 2017, against the Nationals at Citi Field. Last season he hit .164 — just six digits below his ERA.

About the only blemish on the night for the Mets was Luis Avilan and Robert Gsellman’s struggles. The tandem combined to allow four runs in the ninth, forcing Callaway to use closer Edwin Diaz to get the final out.

Robinson Cano gave the Mets an insurance run in the seventh on an RBI double. Dominic Smith’s pinch-hit RBI single an inning later upped the Mets’ lead to five runs before Wilson Ramos knocked in another run with a single.

After deGrom’s blast leading off the third, Nimmo walked and Pete Alonso just missed his second major league homer. Alonso hit a shot that caromed off the top of the left-field fence for an RBI double that extended the Mets’ lead to 3-0.

It was just the latest loud hit for Alonso, who smashed a 444-foot homer to center field in the ninth inning of the series opener. Alonso was on the bench the following night to give Smith a start at first base, but was back in the No. 2 hole a night later.