Could Yankee farmhand Deivi Garcia’s subpar Triple-A campaign end with a call up to the bigs? The Bombers say it could happen.

Now that the RailRiders’ season is over the Yankees are sending Garcia to keep working out in their minor league complex down in Tampa just in case they need his live arm for the stretch run in the Bronx.

“It’s not out of the realm that at some point he could still be a factor,” manager Aaron Boone said of Garcia on Sunday.

It’s surprising, because he wasn’t much of a factor in Triple-A. At least not of a positive one. He was 1-3 with a 5.40 ERA in 11 regular-season games, six of them starts. Garcia had a solid 45 strikeouts, but was undone by 20 walks in 40 innings.

And the 5-foot-9 Dominican’s Triple-A season ended Saturday fittingly with his lack of control coming back to bite him. Garcia coughed up five runs in just a single inning of relief, as the RailRiders got swept out of the first round of the playoffs.

Garcia came on to start the fourth inning with the RailRiders down 6-1; but his two hits and four walks – and five runs later – they were well on their way to getting blown out 17-2 by Durham.

The Bombers hope to get Luis Severino (lat), Jordan Montgomery (shoulder), Ben Heller (forearm) and Dellin Betances (lat) all back before the end of the season to bolster the pitching staff. That could make Garcia’s promotion less likely – but it’s not impossible.

At just 20-years-old, Garcia’s stuff is undeniable. He breezed through Single and Double-A, and the Bombers are not only confident in his future but are leaving open the possibility he could help them in the present if need be.

“I think we continued to see progress,” Boone said. “We saw a very young, very talented pitcher make that next step, that next level of adjustment

“He’s flashed a lot of good things, even there at AAA, that got us excited. With the season he’s had, he’s put himself in very good position with us moving forward.”