“We feel really good about where we’re at going into Spring Training.”

That’s what Mets’ general manager Brodie Van Wagenen said on Monday at Citi Field, as the team truck was packed with equipment and sent off to Port St. Lucie for Spring Training.

The same holds true for the starting rotation, according to Van Wagenen, who is counting on his four main guys in Jacob deGrom, Zack Wheeler, Noah Syndergaard and Steven Matz, as well as fifth man Jason Vargas, the latter of which Van Wagenen is expecting a bounce back campaign from.

“We feel really good,” Van Wagenen said. “As you look at Jason Vargas as the fifth starter, very few fifth starters around the league have his pedigree. He ended last year with a strong finish after getting off to a tough start because of the Spring training He missed. But we feel good about Vargas. We think [Seth] Lugo and [Robert] Gsellman are both real rotation spot potential if we needed to go to them.

“We added Walker Lockett, we added Hector Santiago, we Rule Fived Kyle Dowdy, we feel really good about those new additions in addition to the guys we already had like Corey Oswalt,” he continued.

Vargas, 36, is in year No. 2 of a two-year contract he signed around this time last year. The veteran southpaw is owed roughly $8 million this year and has a club option for 2020.

Van Wagenen alluded to how Vargas picked it up last year after a rough start to his season. The new Mets’ GM said that Vargas’ “competitiveness” drove him to return earlier than he should have last year,  but once he had his feet underneath him, we saw what Jason Vargas could “really be.”

The California native concluded last season with a 7-9 record, a 5.77 ERA, a 5.02 FIP, a 1.413 WHIP and an 8.2 K/9 in 92.0 innings pitched. In the second half of the year, Vargas did improve, as he owned a 5-3 record with a 3.81 ERA in 11 starts.

Van Wagenen was asked if the opportunity arose, if he’d consider adding another player, perhaps a starter, on a MLB deal.

“I hope we are always doing things that make sense,” he said. “We’ll have a chance to go down [to Port St. Lucie] and not only see where our pitchers are, but make decisions about pitchers that exist around the league and see what the best opportunities are to make us better.”

The Mets had been connected to left-hander Gio Gonzalez in recent weeks, but there has been no traction in talks that have been publicly released as of Monday.

However, with Spring Training right around the corner, you never know. Van Wagenen said as much on Monday.

“I think there’s always opportunities, whether that’s trade or free agency,” he said. “As long as we continue to have an open mind and keep our eyes and ears on the ground for where talent exists, we’ll always look for opportunities.”