Aaron Hicks and Edwin Encarnacion won’t be featured in the Yankees lineup anytime soon. Neither will Clint Frazier.

When Saturday’s doubleheader ended with both Hicks and Encarnacion en route to the Yankees’ ever-growing injured list, Frazier had a potential avenue back to The Bronx. But even the weakening of their offense, and outfield depth, wasn’t enough for the Yankees to end Frazier’s lengthy stay at Triple-A.

“No,” Boone said, when asked if the team had considered promoting Frazier. “No.”

Frazier, who was caught off guard by his June 16 demotion, hit .283 with 11 homers in 53 games with the Yankees this season. Since July 15, the 24-year-old has batted .304 with five homers for Scranton/Wilkes-Barre.

Though Frazier’s shoddy defense prompted the Yankees to instead call up outfielder Mike Tauchman on a pair of occasions, Frazier’s bat could now provide value — potentially as a designated hitter — with Encarnacion, and his 30 home runs, joining Giancarlo Stanton, Gary Sanchez, Luke Voit and company on the injured list.

“I know some people have thought he’s fallen out of favor and we’re sending him down there and trying to send a message — none of that’s true,” Boone said Thursday on WFAN. “Clint has worked his butt off. He’s obviously played an important role for our team. When that right spot or situation opens up where he can become a regular player for us, then he very much gets back into that conversation.”