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NEW YORK — Robinson Canó certainly could hear the whispers around Citi Field. Everyone else could — at 36, stuck in a season-long slump, was this eight-time All-Star all done?

He didn’t think so.

“One day it’s going to turn around,” Cano kept telling himself.

It happened Tuesday night when Canó hit three home runs in a game for the first time in his 15-year career, powering Jason Vargas and the New York Mets over the San Diego Padres 5-2.

Canó drove in all five runs and went 4-for-4, punctuating his performance with a pair of second-deck shots.

The second baseman began the day batting just .243 with six homers in his first season with the Mets. Yet before the game, manager Mickey Callaway expressed confidence that Canó would produce, putting him in the category of “Hall of Fame hitters.”

Canó connected at Citi Field for the first time since early April. It was just the third three-homer game ever by a Mets player at home — Lucas Duda and Kirk Nieuwenhuis both did it in July 2015.

“You’d like to do it, to see how it feels,” Canó said, pausing and smiling before adding, “it feels good.”

After singling in the first, Canó hit a solo homer in the fourth. Canó lined a two-run homer off Chris Paddack (6-5) in the sixth and a two-run shot in the seventh off Logan Allen.

Of Canó’s nine homers this year, five have come since the All-Star break. This was his 23rd career multihomer game and first since 2017 with Seattle.

“You don’t hit three homers if you’re declining,” Callaway said.

Acquired with closer Edwin Díaz from the Mariners in the offseason, Canó came with five years and $120 million left on his contract. Despite his struggles, Callaway said the Mets saw good things coming.

“He went through a tough stretch. Robinson Canó probably hasn’t been through many,” Callaway said. “It stands out a little more when it happens to a player like Robbie.”

Yoenis Céspedes was the previous Mets player to hit three homers, doing it in 2017. The feat has been accomplished by 13th different Mets players, with Céspedes doing it twice.

Vargas (5-5) pitched one-hit ball for six shutout innings, possibly enhancing his trade value. He put on a pitching clinic, getting the San Diego hitters to consistently flail away at his changeup.

The 36-year-old lefty permitted only a single by Eric Hosmer in the fifth, struck out eight and walked three. Rookie Fernando Tatis Jr. struck out three times and Manny Machado swung at a strike three that bounced.

Several scouts were at Citi Field, and no doubt the performance Vargas piqued their interest as the July 31 trade deadline approaches.

Vargas’ hardest fastball was clocked at 84.6 mph — Paddack’s slowest changeup came in a tick faster 84.7.

“I guess throwing really hard isn’t as unique as it used to be. I’m on the other end of the spectrum,” he said. “I’m the only one who throws it that slow.”

The anticipated showdown between rookie stars Pete Alonso and Paddack didn’t amount to much — the slugging Alonso walked twice and grounded out against the young fireballer.

“Going into it, it was obviously going to be a fun little matchup. We’ve been wanting this ever since our last 1-v-1, whatever you want to call it,” Paddack said.

“It was just kind of frustrating, especially Alonso. You don’t want to walk a guy that you’re trying to have a little competition with, but at the end of the day I thought I could have done a better job of executing my game plan.”

Díaz relieved with two on in the ninth and got his 22nd save in 26 chances, allowing an RBI double to Tatís before retiring Manuel Margot on a game-ending lineout with two on.