MOOSIC, Pa. — Rap music blares through the stadium tucked into Pennsylvania’s Endless Mountains as Clint Frazier waves his white glove and matching Nike Jordan cleats above his head to the beat.
The 24-year-old is making his grand entrance from the Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre clubhouse — located on the same level as the concourse at PNC Field — winding through the stands and onto the grass to join his teammates for stretches on a Thursday afternoon.
Frazier seems the loosest of them all.
Just over a week has passed since the Yankees reportedly turned down a proposed trade that would have sent the talented, controversial outfielder and three top prospects to Arizona for lefty pitcher Robbie Ray.
Two hours after trade deadline passed on July 31, and 30 minutes before he took the field for a game in Rochester, Frazier tweeted a scene from “Toy Story 2” that depicts Woody emerging from a brown box to the delight of his toy pals.
“That was me acknowledging that everyone had already written me off, and here I am,” Frazier told The Post. “I’m still a Yankee, no matter how much people want me to be traded.”
He also is a RailRider, as he’s been since the Yankees demoted him in mid-June.
In his 53-game stint with the Yankees, Frazier hit .283/.330/.513 with 11 home runs, but the returns of Giancarlo Stanton and Aaron Judge — combined with his defensive horrors in the corners of the outfield — landed the 6-foot-1, ginger-haired outfielder in Scranton with his two orange cats, Big Papi and Lil Baby.
Frazier initially struggled to find his groove back in the minors, but since the deadline, he has hit .290/.313/.548 with two home runs, two doubles and five RBIs in seven games. In 40 games at Triple-A this year, he carries a slash line of .250/.301/.469 with seven home runs and 18 RBIs.
Frazier won’t admit that the deadline passing without him being traded helped yield better results.
But asked the same question, Frazier’s Triple-A manager, former major leaguer Jay Bell, told The Post: “I think [the trade rumors] weighed on him a little bit. He handled it OK, but nonetheless it still weighs on you a little bit. After the deadline passed, it’s like, ‘OK, here I am, let’s go. Let’s get after it,’ and he’s done a nice job.”
Frazier has improved at the plate and defensively. The Yankees instructed Bell to play Frazier in left field, a position that could be up for grabs with the big club next season.