BOSTON — All is forgiven, Giancarlo Stanton.

If any upside exists from the latest Yankees injury epidemic, it’s that folks need worry no longer about the damage the streaky Stanton can inflict upon his savage teammates.

Like so many victories in this wackadoo season, the Yankees’ 10-5 triumph over the Red Sox on Sunday night at Fenway Park came with a nasty surcharge.

Mike Tauchman, the previously little-known outfielder who had contributed so much, so surprisingly to the Yankees’ success — prompting many of his fellow players to wear “Sockman” T-shirts, on which a cartoon Tauchman flies while rocking a cape — left the game in the bottom of the fourth inning with what the team called a tight left calf and will undergo testing in New York on Monday.

“Certainly a concern,” Aaron Boone acknowledged after the long game.

“It’s pretty disheartening,” Tauchman said. “Being out there with the guys, it’s been amazing. … Whatever the prognosis is, whatever the treatment protocol is, I’m just gonna attack that and get back on the field as fast as I can.”

While Tauchman refused to speculate on the injury’s severity — he did admit that he had been receiving treatment recently on the calf — his grim words and expression spoke volumes, as did Boone’s.

It fit the team’s narrative rather well that Tauchman contributed a double, his 18th, and a homer, his 13th, driving home two runs and scoring two, before adversity struck in the form of Brock Holt’s two-out single to left field, a rather ordinary line drive, in the fourth.

“Coming in on that ball, I felt it grab up on me,” Tauchman said. “I felt a little like I got kicked, which would be weird, because I was the only person in left field.” Following a visit from Boone and head athletic trainer Steve Donahue, Tauchman limped off the field under his own power.

Cameron Maybin, who hadn’t seen game action since Aug. 31 thanks to an achy left wrist, took Tauchman’s place and went 1-for-2 with a single. He’ll get most of the starts in Tauchman’s absence, Boone said, even though the manager previously acknowledged that Maybin’s injury will likely require offseason attention.

“I’ve got to play through some stuff,” Maybin said. “But I feel better.”

If Tauchman is indeed done for the season, or even just gone for an extended period, the Yankees’ playable outfield becomes Aaron Judge (who crushed his 21st homer Sunday), Brett Gardner, Maybin, Clint Frazier and Tyler Wade. The Aaron Hicks renovation project took a huge hit this past week with the news that his ailing right elbow still isn’t right; he’s getting a second opinion Monday and certainly can’t be counted on to return.

Unless the Yankees can create one more miracle — Zack Zehner, anyone? — their outfield currently doesn’t overflow with options. In theory, Judge, Gardner, Maybin and Frazier can constitute a championship outfield, yet that’s asking quite a lot from the last three.

Re-enter Stanton, who slowly is rehabilitating a strained PCL in his right knee, working out at the Yankees’ minor-league complex in Tampa. No guarantee exists that he’ll make it back in time. Yet the pontificating (including some from the fellow writing this column) about whether Stanton’s strikeout-prone offensive game would ruin the Yankees’ improved offense, would lead to a déjà vu of last year’s American League Division Series loss to the Red Sox, is now more dated than your television with an antenna.

We all love to play the “Choose your playoff roster” game. Even if the Yankees opted for 13 pitchers and 12 position players — they went with 12 pitchers and 13 bats in last year’s ALDS — you’d be hard-pressed to select 12 currently healthy players (not including Maybin) that would justify leaving off Stanton in the name of quality preservation. Sorry, for all that Mike Ford has contributed as an impressive rookie, I’ll take Stanton over him.

Where have you gone, Giancarlo Stanton? A fan base turns its lonely eyes to you. If ever an opportunity existed for a do-over, this would be it.