TAMPA, Fla. — Last week the Yankees signed staff ace Luis Severino to a four-year deal worth a guaranteed $40 million that kept him away from arbitration during the life of the deal.

Monday, stud reliever Dellin Betances said his agent, Jim Murray, and general manager Brian Cashman discussed a multi-year deal that would have kept Betances from becoming a free agent at the end of this coming season. That dialogue figures to keep going.

So, did the Yankees reach out to Aaron Judge during the offseason to see if he was interested in a multi-year deal? He is eligible for arbitration after this season.

“No, nothing,” Judge said through a smile Tuesday at George M. Steinbrenner Field, where he participated in the first full-squad Yankees spring training workout. “I am focused on the season. I haven’t heard anything.”

After getting Severino signed Friday, Cashman explained the Yankees’ thinking on extensions.

“On individual cases we have approached certain players. We are always open with the right people to do things if at all possible,” Cashman said. “We have had conversations with some, not all. If they lead to multi-years [deal], great. [Severino’s] did. So far, some have failed. It takes two to tango.”

Like many Yankees, who won 100 games a year ago before losing to the Red Sox in the ALDS, Judge believes the 2019 model is improved over the 2018 one due to better health and the offseason additions — which didn’t include Manny Machado or Bryce Harper.

“We won 100 games last year and had a lot of guys injured and a lot of guys beat up,” said Judge, who missed six-plus weeks with a chip fracture of the right wrist. “Just adding [Adam] Ottavino, that’s the guy I watched in the offseason and kept praying, let’s pull the trigger on him. He has some nasty stuff. [Zack] Britton as well. I don’t want to face that guy.

“Getting [J.A.] Happ back, what a job he did for us. Then when you add [Troy] Tulowitzki and [DJ] LaMahieu.”

A year ago Judge arrived in spring training not having swung a bat due to offseason surgery on the left shoulder. This past winter, Judge wasn’t bothered by his wrist.

“One hundred percent healthy. That was the kind of thing I was looking forward to this offseason. I actually had a normal offseason,’’ said Judge, who hit 27 homers and drove in 67 runs in 112 games a year ago. “It was a difficult start to [2018], but this year I took a couple of weeks off and worked on a couple of things I needed to work on, and it was nice.”

As for the wrist, Judge admitted to a bit of concern about an injury that was supposed to cost him three weeks and sidelined him for more than double that.

“In the offseason, I was a little worried about it, but it’s 100 percent and feels like nothing ever happened,’’ Judge said.

Manager Aaron Boone said he could “flirt” with hitting Judge in the leadoff spot, but Judge didn’t want to tackle that issue.

“I don’t know. I am not getting paid to make those decisions. I am getting paid to go play right field. Wherever I bat, I’ll bat,” said Judge, who has one big-league at-bat in the No. 1 spot but didn’t start that game. “That’s up to upstairs and the manager wherever I go.”

As always, the expectations surrounding the Yankees is for them to win the World Series. That is certainly Judge’s goal, and having him healthy for an entire season — something that hasn’t been the case in any of his two full years and part of another — will go a long way in determining if the Yankees can do that.