ARLINGTON, Texas — The Next Jeter has arrived for the Yankees.

Not at shortstop but at second base. A middle-of-the-diamond presence. A bat that can hit anywhere in the order. A short right-handed stroke that is a rare combination of power and ability to hit to all fields.

This is where the comparison most rings true: There is a calmness well beyond his years.

All that describes Gleyber Torres, and No. 25 has been a marvel for the Yankees.

Joe Girardi once likened Aaron Judge to Jeter in the way he carries himself. Really, it’s Torres, not Judge, who is Jeterian — a 21-year-old kid who plays with a veteran’s poise.

Nothing fazes him — tough opponent, big series, getting hit with a pitch, offense, defense. He takes it all in stride. Whatever Torres is called upon to do, he does not flinch.

There is good reason for that.

On a night lefty Cole Hamels tied the Yankees in knots for seven innings in a 6-4 Rangers victory at Globe Life Park, Torres crushed his seventh home run of the season, third in two nights, and singled to raise his average to .333.

Torres told The Post where all that inner calmness comes from, and Jeter is a part of the equation.

“It has to do with my experience as a young baseball player,’’ Torres said through interpreter Marlon Abreu. “When I was a youngster, I used to play with people that were much older, and what I learned at an early age is that I needed to relax in order to compete and be better. Once I understood that, yes, they are older, but if I am able to relax, I can just enjoy the game and play the game and good things will happen.

“Now today when I face all these teams, I try to do the same thing. Stay calm.’’

Growing up in Caracas, Venezuela, Torres modeled himself after another Caracas ballplayer, the great shortstop Omar Vizquel, who played 24 years in the majors, winning 11 Gold Gloves.

There was a Jeter influence, too.

“I’ve had the opportunity to watch a lot of video and Derek did so many good things, to me, he was like The Captain of Baseball,’’ Torres said. “He was that guy and I watched him and kind of learned from him. I used to watch a lot of his interviews and how calm he was during those interviews and then coming up with the Yankees, you actually get to see more and you hear more of the stories because now you are here as a Yankee.’’

That has helped make Torres, who came over from the Cubs in the Aroldis Chapman deal in 2016, a complete player.

When Jeter was 21, he came up to the Yankees for 15 games in 1995, posting a slash line of .250/.294/.375 with no home runs.

The next season, Jeter was here to stay, but his first 26 games of that season, his slash line was .258/.383/.337 with one home run.

In Torres’ first 26 games, he owns a .333 average and is the youngest Yankee to hit seven home runs over his first 26 games. His two home runs off Bartolo Colon in the 10-5 victory over the Rangers Monday night made him the second-youngest player in Yankees history to accomplish that feat.

The youngest was Mickey Mantle in 1952. Those seven home runs have come over Torres’ last 14 games.

Brett Gardner broke down Torres this way to The Post: “He is very, very strong. His bat stays in the zone for a long time. He’s got a good idea what he can do up there at the plate and he can drive the ball to all fields. A good breaking-ball hitter. A good fastball hitter, really good on the other side of the ball out there on defense too, really smooth at second base. He’s a special player.

“He feels this is where he should be and he is comfortable with it all.”

Yes he is, and the start to his career is positively Gleyberian.