Carpal tunnel syndrome for the scoreboard operators? Torn rotator cuffs for the Yankees’ first- and third-base coaches? Laryngitis for John Sterling?

This was a day to consider the possibilities in The Bronx.

The Yankees’ three most dangerous hitters went deep in the same game Wednesday afternoon, for the first time, and the rest of the industry had to shudder at what occurred and what could come. What if Aaron Judge, Giancarlo Stanton and Gary Sanchez make a habit of this?

Then there’ll be plenty of games like this 7-2 coasting over the terrible Rays at Yankee Stadium, the Yankees’ second straight win and a sweep of this quick series, as each of the three sluggers contributed a two-run homer. There’ll be far more shell-shocked pitchers like Tampa Bay starter Blake Snell, who mumbled and stumbled afterward as if he had gone 12 rounds with 1988 Mike Tyson.

“Those guys, they are great hitters, but you need to get ahead of them,” said Snell, who gave up the first-inning blast to Stanton and the third-inning bomb to Sanchez before yielding to Matt Andriese, who in turn surrendered Judge’s fourth-inning round-tripper. “You can’t afford to go 2-and-0 to guys that can now sit dead red on a certain pitch and do the damage that they’re paid to do.”

Man oh man, the damage. As per MLB.com’s Statcast calculations, the three homers traveled a total of 1,246 feet, with Stanton’s second-deck shot to left field (on a 1-and-2 count, by the way) leading the way at 458, and exited the trio of bats at a sum of 333 miles per hour; Stanton set the pace there, too, at 118.

“We’re just doing our job,” Judge said.

Judge and Sanchez, the returning studs, both got off the schneid, as neither man went deep in the Yankees’ first five games. Judge, the reigning American League home-run champ, at least had been getting on base — he owns a .444 on-base percentage for the season — whereas Sanchez had been mired in an 0-for-17 slump. Stanton, meanwhile, had been quiet since stroking a pair of homers on Opening Day in Toronto and had struck out a career-high five times in Tuesday’s home opener, so his opening blast carried special value — especially since he proceeded to strike out three more times.

“The thing here is, it’s not just us,” Sanchez said through an interpreter, referring to himself, Judge and Stanton. “[Tuesday], Didi [Gregorius] had an amazing game, and he was able to hit a couple homers. I’m fully confident with what the lineup can do and we have really good players here.”

He’s right; the Yankees’ deep roster and lineup make them an even greater threat to win it all. However, the top three needle-movers are the guys who can hit the ball the farthest. Who can obsess opposing managers and pitchers and therefore make it easier for guys like Gregorius to produce.

When asked how tough it can be for a left-hander like Snell to face Judge, Stanton and Sanchez consecutively, Rays manager Kevin Cash said: “Righty or lefty, it really doesn’t matter. Those guys can hit. They’ll hit anything when you make mistakes. We saw that today.

“The pitch that Stanton hit was kind of a spinning slider trying to go below. Those guys make their money really keying off mistakes and not missing them. And they didn’t miss them.”

The weather has been so dreadful this week, with snow postponing play on Monday and rain delaying it Tuesday and Wednesday, that when the sun finally arrived in the top of the fourth inning, the Stadium crowd cheered. This proved a smoother show than Tuesday’s bumpy, wintry home opener, during which Gregorius carried the team past Stanton’s platinum sombrero and bullpen mishaps.

If the power trio can stay healthy, then it’s going to be awfully difficult for the Yankees to miss the playoffs. And it’ll be awfully hard for folks around the league to turn away from the highlights.

“Hopefully we’ll put some back-to-back-to-backs in there,” Stanton said. “But it was good that we all got one today and helped the team.”

The rest of the industry has been formally warned: Proceed with caution. The possibilities, if you work for the other side, are daunting.