Two professional athletes — one basketball and one football player — are coming together to pay for the funeral for Atatiana Jefferson, who was fatally shot through her window by a Texas police officer, according to a new report.

Sacramento Kings small forward Harrison Barnes — who has Texas roots after spending three seasons with the Dallas Mavericks — and his wife, Brittany Barnes, are paying about 90 percent of the funeral expenses, a representative for the player told the Dallas Morning News.

“My wife and I want to do something for that family,” Barnes said in an interview with NBC Sports Bay Area. “It was a tragic situation that happened and no one should be killed during a wellness check, but the biggest thing is … anytime someone has to go through that, the last thing you want to have to worry about is trying to come up with the money for a funeral. It’s about the family, it’s about everything they’re going through and our prayers are obviously with them.”

Philadelphia Eagles defensive tackle Malik Jackson is paying for the remainder, attorney Lee Merritt, who is representing Jefferson’s family, told the paper.

Merritt, who has an office in Philadelphia, separately set up his own GoFundMe page that had raised nearly $240,000 for the family by Friday morning.

Police were called to Jefferson’s Fort Worth home early Saturday after a neighbor noticed her door was left open and grew concerned, according to initial reports.

But authorities said this week that they were not sent on a welfare check at all — but instead on a call that cops often handle as a potential burglary.

Documents released Tuesday indicate that Jefferson had picked up her gun before she was killed because she heard a noise outside.

Jefferson had been up late with her 8-year-old nephew playing video games when she heard movement outside the house around 2:30 a.m. and grabbed the gun, according to the arrest warrant for Police Officer Aaron Dean, who was charged with Jefferson’s murder Monday night.

Dean resigned earlier that day after Fort Worth interim Police Chief Ed Kraus said he would have fired him if he had not stepped down.