When Brian Cashman arrives at the General Managers meetings Monday in Scottsdale, Ariz., the Hot Stove segment of MLB’s offseason will be in its infancy.

After Gary Sanchez muscled ahead of Brian McCann with a sizzling final two months of the 2016 season, the Yankees GM is bound to be asked if he is open to discussing moving the left-handed-hitting catcher.

At the end of the season, after McCann reached 20 homers for the eighth straight year, he said he would discuss with the front office what awaits him going into his third season in pinstripes.

“I don’t have a scheduled meeting,’’ Cashman said. “He hasn’t asked.’’

McCann, who turns 33 in February, has a full no-trade clause in a contract that has two years and $34 million remaining. According to BB Abbott, McCann’s agent, any discussion will be originated by the Yankees.

“If we need to address something from the Yankees, they will let us know,’’ Abbott said in an email. “Until then, we are allowing the club the space to run and build their club.’’

The Braves, for whom McCann was a seven-time All Star prior to signing a five-year, $85 million deal with the Yankees in December 2013, the Nationals and Astros have been mentioned as possible destinations. However, the money left on the deal and the no-trade clause are hurdles.

Asked if McCann has drawn attention from other clubs, Cashman said, “I wouldn’t say, and obviously he has a full no-trade.’’

After dealing Aroldis Chapman, Andrew Miller and Carlos Beltran at last July’s trade deadline for some high-end prospects, the Yankees might feel they are a better team keeping McCann instead of trading him.

Sanchez was terrific in the final two months, but he hasn’t caught a full season in the big leagues and experienced the grind — physically and mentally — that comes with it. With Alex Rodriguez no longer bogarting the DH spot, there will be ample at-bats for McCann, and a reduced work load behind the plate could lead to fewer nagging injuries and allow McCann to be a more effective hitter. Of McCann’s 69 homers as a Yankee, 46 have been hit at Yankee Stadium.

“Based on his success the past season, Sanchez is the everyday catcher,’’ Cashman said of the soon-to-be 24-year-old, who batted .299 with 20 homers and 42 RBIs, posted an OPS of 1.032 and threw out 41 percent of would-be base-stealers in 53 games. “[McCann] can DH and catch a minimum of two games a week. We have two power-hitting catchers, one right and one left who hit 20 homers.’’

Dustin Ackley and Nathan Eovaldi were among five Yankees reinstated Friday from the 60-day disabled list. Also coming off the shelf were right-handers Chad Green, Branden Pinder and Nick Rumbelow.

Ackley and Eovaldi are eligible for arbitration, but could be non-tendered.

Ackley played in 28 games and required season-ending right shoulder surgery. He made $3.2 million last year. Eovaldi, a free agent after the 2017 season, is expected to miss all of the year after having Tommy John surgery. He made $5.6 million this past season.

Catcher Kyle Higashioka and right-handed pitcher Domingo German were added to the 40-man roster.