TAMPA, Fla. – Here was a possible window into Aaron Boone’s opening day lineup.

Luke Voit was in the cleanup spot for a second straight night, with slugging catcher Gary Sanchez batting sixth in Wednesday’s exhibition game against the Philadelphia Phillies.

A revised look at what could be the Yankees’ opening day lineup:

1. Aaron Hicks, CF (assuming his back issue has subsided)

2. Aaron Judge, RF

3. Giancarlo Stanton, DH

4. Luke Voit, 1B

5. Miguel Andujar, 3B

6. Gary Sanchez, C

7. Gleyber Torres, 2B

8. Troy Tulowitzki, SS

9. Brett Gardner, LF

Before the game, Boone said he was “considering’’ Voit as the Yankees’ No. 4 hitter.

And that’s remarkable from a big-picture vantage, considering he began last season at Class AAA Memphis, buried in the St. Louis Cardinals’ system.

Now, Voit could be hitting cleanup on a club that boasts Judge and Stanton, each of whom has hit 50-plus home runs in a season.

Stanton blasted his second homer of the spring, a massive solo shot that nearly cleared the left-center field scoreboard in Wednesday night's 5-5 tie against the Phillies.

More:Home run happy Yankees believe they can top the power mark they set last season

“I could see him possibly being in the three-hole, too,’’ Boone said of Voit. “You’ll probably see him anywhere from third to sixth.’’

Boone was quick to add that the Yankees’ first base job was not settled. However, Voit came in with a “leg up’’ on the position and has done nothing to cede it, despite Greg Bird’s healthy and successful spring.

“I don’t even know, in my mind, if I look at it as a competition,’’ Boone said. “The hard part about it for me is, inevitably, if we go one way or another, I feel so good about both guys.

“I feel we’re looking at two impact players. That’s the difficult part about it,’’ Boone said. “But we’re not there yet. I’m just excited that both guys are in such a good place. And really looking the part right now.’’

In the designated hitter’s slot against the Phillies, Voit is now slashing .280/.400/.520, with two homers and six RBI in 25 at-bats. He went 1-for-3 with an infield hit, an RBI and a walk on Wednesday.

Playing first base on Wednesday night, Bird is slashing .357/.471/.571 with one homer and six RBI in 28 Grapefruit League at-bats. Bird went 1-for-2 with an RBI and a walk on Wednesday.

More:Yankees' 1B job an either/or proposition between Luke Voit, Greg Bird

The Aaron Hicks factor

One potential path of having both Bird and Voit on the opening day roster is if Hicks begins the season on the injured list.

Hicks hasn’t played in a Grapefruit League game since March 1, due to his sore lower back.

The switch-hitting center fielder has so far responded well to a cortisone injection. However, the Yankees plan to “take it slow’’ with Hicks “before we really dive back into baseball activities,’’ Boone said. “We’ll see how these next couple days unfold.’’

It’s still uncertain when Hicks will be declared ready to participate in games.

And even if he gets more live looks at pitching on the minor league side, there might not be enough time to prepare him for the season opener, exactly two weeks from Thursday at Yankee Stadium against the Orioles.

If Hicks is delayed at the beginning of the season, Stanton could play regularly in left field, with Gardner switched to center. Voit would potentially become the DH, opening up first base for Bird.

On deck

Struggling this spring with his command, reliever Dellin Betances is scheduled to pitch in a simulated game on Thursday morning.

Betances hasn't fretted about his velocity this spring, which topped out at 93 mph in his last Grapefruit League outing, on Sunday. And the club has stood by that assessment, though progress will rapidly be expected.

Vying for one of the two current rotation vacancies, Luis Cessa draws Thursday's 1:05 p.m. start against the Blue Jays at Dunedin. Cessa tossed four scoreless innings his last time out, yielding just one hit against the Orioles.

Tulowitzki is on the travel list to Dunedin to face his old club; Tulowitzki was blunt in his opinion that the Jays didn't believe he could play anymore, releasing him with two years and $38 million left on his contract.

Andujar, Torres, DJ LeMahieu, Clint Frazier, Estevan Florial and Austin Romine are also expected to make the trip.