Future Hall of Famer Vince Carter plans on playing one more season in the NBA, but he doesn’t have a team yet.

“We are still working on it,” Carter told The Post in a conference room at the NBA’s Midtown offices following a sitdown he had with commissioner Adam Silver. “In the pecking order, I know where I fall.”

After Carter retires as a player following this season, he will be moved up the pecking order when NBA TV free agency begins. He is expected to be sought after by all the major networks for big NBA roles.

It is not only because of Carter’s big name, but also his preparation for what is next.

He minored in communications at North Carolina. He went through the Players Association’s “Sportscasters U” camp. Now, as an active player, he’s been on big platforms such as ESPN and Turner and anywhere in between, having done games on TV and radio, as well as studio. He has even worked the sidelines and has a podcast on The Ringer.

Next month, he will again call the Jr. NBA Global Championship on Fox Sports’ networks. The championships for girls and boys will be on big Fox. While the 13-and 14-year-old boys and a lot of the coaches look starry-eyed at Carter, he does his homework to try to find out their stories.

“Vince’s potential as a broadcaster is off the charts, and when the time comes, he’ll be able to pick the job he wants because of all the hard work he’s already put into this business, all while still being an active Hall of Fame NBA player,” said Bardia Shah-Rais, Fox Sports VP of production.

Carter has the knowledge and the smile, but for him to eventually cut through and be a star, he will have to be willing to be critical to be truly incisive.

“I wouldn’t go (the) Stephen A. (Smith) route,” Carter said, bringing up the omnipresent, outspoken ESPN personality. “I wouldn’t go the quiet route. … I want to explain the game where you are watching it and say: Ah, that makes sense.”

What hasn’t been his thing is trying to hook up with a team just to pick up a ring.

“Not my thing,” Carter.

Why?

“Just not my thing,” Carter said. “I prefer to play because I know I can compete at that level. That’s what I enjoy.”

He would go to a contender, of course, but he wants to be part of a rotation, no matter where he ends up. The next time he is sitting full-time at the side of the court, he could be calling the game.

Transactions: TNT/NBA TV decided not to renew the contracts of Rosalyn Gold-Onwude and Mike Fratello, according to sources.

Players Only — which TNT and NBA TV ran for about eight weeks — is also out, as The Athletic first said.

Speaking of Stephen A. Smith, he taped an episode of “CenterStage” with Michael Kay (before Kay had vocal surgery) that debuts this week on YES. Since The Post reported that Smith could make $8-10 million in his next contract, it seems relevant that Smith took the advice he got from President Trump (before he was president) to heart:

“‘Stephen A. … you’re doing good, you’re doing good … but there’s more things for you to accomplish,’” Smith said Trump told him. “And I said, ‘OK.’ And he said, ‘Take my advice. When you go to a bank and you borrow $3 million and you can’t pay it back, you got a problem. … But when you go to a bank and you borrow $300 million and you can’t pay it back, we’ve got a problem. … The moral of the story is, the more someone invests in you, the more they must work to ensure your success.’

“And when he said that to me, I held onto that for the rest of my career, because so many times, I was big about, ‘Well, you know what, this is what I do.’ And as long as I’m in the public eye, I’m a bit ubiquitous, I’m gonna be relevant. But guess what? If you come cheap, you’re also expendable. But when you cost more, they have to work more diligently to ensure your success.”