Yankees' Jazz Chisholm, right, reacts after his solo home run...

Yankees' Jazz Chisholm, right, reacts after his solo home run during the second inning of a baseball game against the Philadelphia Phillies, Monday, July 29, 2024, in Philadelphia.  Credit: AP/Chris Szagola

PHILADELPHIA — The lineup Aaron Boone fielded Monday night was, in a word, different. And by Tuesday night, after the 6 p.m. trade deadline, it may well be even more different.

Even after Monday’s lineup produced six homers — two by Aaron Judge, who upped his MLB-leading total to 39; two by Jazz Chisholm Jr. and one each by Ben Rice and Anthony Volpe — in a 14-4 victory over the Phillies at Citizens Bank Park.

The Yankees (63-45), suddenly with three straight victories, are a half-game behind the AL East-leading Orioles. Led by three RBIs each from Chisholm, Juan Soto and Judge — who has 33 homers and 80 RBIs in his last 71 games — they outslugged the Phillies (an MLB-leading 65-41).

The Yankees have amassed 40 runs, 54 hits and 20 walks in the last four games.

“It’s super-exciting,” said Chisholm, who used Judge’s bat to hit his second homer off catcher Garrett Stubbs. “Who doesn’t want to come over and help a playoff-contending team win? These guys have been welcoming me with open arms and I can’t do much more except go out there and play my best.”

“He’s electric,” Judge said. “He’s excited to be here, he’s having fun. He’s definitely making a big impact so far.”

Giancarlo Stanton, who returned as the DH after a long stint on the injured list with a hamstring strain, certainly will be in Tuesday’s lineup when the Yankees go for a fourth straight win. However, other than Judge, Soto and Chisholm (and probably Volpe and Austin Wells), everything should be considered on the table.

The deadline looms, and general manager Brian Cashman continued working the phones Monday deep into the night trying to improve his roster — and, in the words of several rival executives, doing so “aggressively.”

Said Judge: “Other teams are making moves, so hopefully we start making moves too. We’ll see.”

Cashman made one big splash over the weekend, acquiring the dynamic Chisholm from the Marlins. He started in centerfield on Sunday night and looked more than competent while playing third base for the first time in his professional career on Monday night.

“I felt really comfortable at third,” he said. back in the infield felt great. That’s where I feel like I deserve to be.”

The Yankees believe Chisholm, a natural shortstop with a good arm, can make the transition because of his experience on the left side of the infield and his overall athleticism. He handled everything hit his way, successfully starting a 5-4-3 double play in the bottom of the first — after Judge’s homer gave Luis Gil a 1-0 lead in the top half — and making a diving catch of Nick Castellanos’ liner leading off the seventh.

Chisholm hit his 14th homer of the season and first as a Yankee in the second, an opposite-field shot. Two batters later, Rice made it 3-0 with his seventh homer. Soto’s two-run double and Wells’ two-out, two-run triple in the fifth gave the Yankees a 7-2 lead. They went ahead 9-3 in the seventh on Judge’s 430-foot two-run blast.

What can’t be ignored is that the Yankees — whose pitching staff produces a lot of ground balls — started players at the corner infield spots who are learning those positions on the fly: Chisholm and Rice, who was drafted as a catcher.

“Look, there’s definitely things we gotta work through from that standpoint,” Boone said before Monday’s game. “Concerned? Maybe a little bit, but the one thing I know is I feel like we’re a much better roster today than we were a day ago, two days ago. Getting Giancarlo back, bringing in a dynamic player like Jazz, makes for a better roster and definitely more upside. Not a complete product yet, but we’ll work hard to make sure we do the best we can with it.”

For that reason, bringing in more corner infield help can’t be ruled out. Nor can anything on the pitching front.

The Yankees are borderline desperate for a lockdown bullpen piece or two. But as their rotation has mostly regressed the last five weeks — Gil, good of late, was OK against the powerful Phillies, allowing three runs, five hits and three walks in 5 1⁄3 innings in which he struck out eight — the Yankees have been engaged in the starter market, too.

“Right now, not thinking anything of it,” Nestor Cortes, Wednesday’s scheduled starter, said of his name coming up in various trade scenarios. “I have a job to do Wednesday and that’s my focus.”

Boone, who played 12 years in the big leagues, called it an “unsettling time for guys.”

“I look forward to getting through these next 24 hours where] it’s like, ‘All right, here we go, boys, this is what we’ve got, let’s go get ’em,’ ” he said. “I don’t know [if there will be additional moves]. Anything’s possible, I would say.”