A wealth manager who was struck by a golf cart during a round with colleagues at a posh New Jersey country club will be back in the green — with $3.65 million in damages for his injuries and lost wages, his attorney said in a statement.

Mario Zaburski, of Teaneck, was golfing with his business buddies at the Alpine Country Club in Demarest in July 2015, lawyer Evan Lide said in the statement.

He had just played the ninth hole and was walking on the fairway when he was struck by another player’s golf cart, according to Lide, of the firm Stark & Stark in Lawrenceville.

“The cart hit his right knee, and the impact upended him and threw him on his back to the ground,” the statement said.

He initially suffered from leg instability and sought medical attention a week after his injury, the lawyer said.

But four months later, an MRI revealed two disk herniations and a pre-existing condition of spondylolisthesis — slipping of the vertebrae — that did not respond to treatments.

The spondylolisthesis was originally considered a latent condition but “rendered traumatic and symptomatic” following the golf cart injury, the statement said.

Following a four-day trial last month, a jury in Bergen County ruled that Zaburski would receive $1 million in damages for pain and suffering, $150,000 for future medical expenses and $2.5 million for lost wages.

Zaburski, who had worked in the same position for nearly 17 years, went on disability to recover — but ended up using all the time allowed by the Family and Medical Leave Act, the statement said.

He was laid off in November 2016, just three weeks before he was given the all-clear to return to work.

His injuries prevented him from being re-hired in any similar positions.

“The jury understood that when Mario Zaburski was struck by the golf cart, he sustained permanent injuries that would forever impact his capacity to work,” Lide said.