BOSTON — Wait ‘til next week.

That’s when the ancient New Yankees-Boston Red Sox rivalry could be ablaze again, with the two titans meeting in their first postseason series since 2004.

Of course, the Yankees must first advance past the Oakland Athletics in Wednesday’s AL wild-card game.

At least, manager Aaron Boone’s club will host that winner-take-all game – a prize the Yankees earned Friday night with an 11-6 victory against the Red Sox at Fenway Park.

“That’s huge, getting home-field advantage. You saw what happened last year,’’ Aaron Judge said, a reference to last year’s comeback against Minnesota in the wild-card game.

The Yankees went 6-0 in the postseason last year at home.

“In a lot of ways, we’re built for that ballpark,’’ Boone said of how the Yanks’ power plays at Yankee Stadium. “And I love that our fans will be making the right kind of noise for us.’’

Spotted to an 8-0 lead, Yankees lefty J.A. Happ tossed five shutout innings before surrendering a Steve Pearce grand slam in the sixth.

But fueled by a six-run fourth, the Yankees (99-61) reminded the AL East champion Red Sox (107-53) how their record team power might factor in a best-of-five Division Series.

By clubbing four homers on Friday, the Yankees matched the 1997 Seattle Mariners with 264 home runs, the most by any MLB team in one season.

Arriving back in the lineup for the first time since Monday (tight left hamstring), Aaron Hicks belted a three-run homer in the fourth, while Gary Sanchez, Luke Voit and Aaron Judge each contributed solo shots.

More:David Wright takes first Mets at-bat since 2016

More:Colorado Rockies clinch first back-to-back playoff berths

Judge's home run was his first in 12 games since he came off off the disabled list (chip fracture in right wrist). He had last hit a home run on July 21 against the New York Mets.

Just imagine how electric things will be in the Back Bay if these two teams are back here next Friday, for the Division Series opener.