TAMPA — Power followed by more power followed by yet more power. It almost does not matter how Aaron Boone lines them up, he will have muscular results. The possibility exists, in fact, to break records.

No, not with homers, though a lineup with Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton plus Gary Sanchez and a healthy Greg Bird certainly can threaten the all-time mark.

This is about the strikeout potential of this Yankees bullpen, which certainly has a chance to become the first to strike out 30 percent of the batters it faces.

Track record indicates it is possible.

Four of the 11 highest percentages of all time were generated by the past four Yankees pens, including its 29.1 percent mark last year. And the 2017 Yankees did not promote Chad Green until the second week of May or begin using him frequently until June. And they did not obtain Tommy Kahnle and David Robertson until late July.

Among relievers last year, Green finished third in strikeout percentage (41 percent), Kahnle eighth (37.5) and Robertson ninth (37.1). Oh yeah, Dellin Betances was sixth (38.3) and Aroldis Chapman 16th (32.9). That is five of the top 16. The only other teams that have two of the top 16 on their roster this year are the Astros (Ken Giles and Joe Smith) and Padres (Brad Hand and Kirby Yates). And in the cases of Chapman, Betances and Robertson, you know it is not a fluke because they rank first, third and seventh all time in strikeouts per nine innings (minimum 250 relief appearances).

And, of course, this is the greatest strikeout environment ever. There never has been this much velocity in the game. Plus, launch-angle-obsessed hitters are willing to whiff in exchange for long balls.

Still, even within this climate, this Yankees pen has a chance to reign like none before it. Brian Cashman called it “our strength.” Aaron Boone said, “I feel this group is really capable of being special.”

It was special last year, holding opponents to a .621 OPS — 13 points better than any team and the best in the majors in four years. The pen held opponents to a .201 batting average — 19 points better than any team and the best in the majors since 2002.

Yet, strangely, the Yankees were 18-26 in one-run games. If they had been even .500 (22-22), they probably would have won the AL East rather than settling for a wild card.

One-run results are fickle, and a ricochet in the Yankees’ favor could mean as much to the bottom-line win total as the addition of Stanton. After all, the ability to miss bats late in close games at a historic rate should provide a substantial edge.

Cashman said he builds an entire staff — not just a pen — with groundballs and strikeouts in mind. But he did say the length of this bullpen is designed with protecting a rotation, particularly if the Yankees have to go to an inexperienced sixth starter. In that situation with, say, Domingo German or Chance Adams, the Yankees might be able to ask the young starter to just give them four or five innings and the pen will take it from there.

But, as pitching coach Larry Rothschild noted, this all only works if the other starters regularly provide length so as not to overtax the group. Boone, however, imagines having “so many guys I trust in high-leverage spots” that he can interchangeably deploy relievers without overusing them.

The Yankees also have Adam Warren, who had his best relief season last year, plus Chasen Shreve, who actually has averaged 10.2 strikeouts per nine innings in three Yankees seasons. The Yankees are trying to convince Shreve to nibble less and attack with strike one and pitch ahead more, a formula they think would make him another pen weapon.

This is the optimistic part of the year, and the Yankees have seen nothing in spring to make them believe Green and Kahnle are one-year wonders. They have been impressed with the work Betances did in the offseason to keep his delivery intact and that he is over his 2017 late-season meltdown. They believe that having a reliever with Robertson’s accomplishments not only agreeing but wanting to pitch whenever he is needed has imbued the whole pen with a team-oriented spirit. For example, Green and Warren are not the only ones being stretched to potentially get more than three outs.

We will see if all holds — health and the positive attitude. But if it does, this Yankees bullpen has a chance to power its way into the history books.