Daily Racing Form National Digital Edition

Full fields for mandatory Single 6 prize

- By Marty McGee

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – Kids will be all over Churchill Downs on Sunday, and so will good horses. Three allowances are part of a 10-race program that ends the 11-day September meet, with two carded in a Single 6 sequence requiring a mandatory payout.

By the end of twilight racing Thursday, the Single 6 jackpot was up to $42,853 after failing to be swept by a solo winner since the meet began Sept. 15. It will all have to go Sunday – as required by state statute whenever a meet ends – meaning even bettors who normally don’t play the gimmick wager might be otherwise enticed. The 20-cent Single 6 runs from races 5 through 10.

First post is 12:45 p.m. Eastern, with many locals bringing out their children on a “Family Adventure Day” that promises a variety of activities, including stick-horse races on the turf course, a bouncy house, pony rides, and other good stuff.

The more serious-minded will keep their heads buried in the Daily Racing Form, intent on taking home the proverbial shipping money. Back-to-back allowances anchor the Single 6 as races 8 and 9, and both require detailed study.

Race 8 is the richest of the card, with an oversubscr­ibed field of older turf routers vying for a $55,000 purse under the hybrid condition of second-level allowances and a $62,500 claiming option. Adventist and Zambian, the respective one-two finishers in a July 4 allowance at Ellis Park, are among a very wellmatche­d group that also includes Zapperini, Royal Son, and Go Navy Go as viable contenders. Eleven are entered, but only as many as nine will start.

Likewise, race 9 is a puzzler. It’s a $53,000, first-level dirt route that drew a capacity group of 12 3- and 4-year-old fillies, and it’s anyone’s guess as to who is the favorite. Song of Spring, trained by Neil Howard, should get her share of support when returning from a four-month layoff, but a few turf-to-dirt fillies appear similarly capable of victory, including Fun, trained by Ian Wilkes, and Dreamcall, trained by Steve Asmussen.

Earlier in the day, Richie’slilwildca­t ships down from Chicago as the likely favorite in race 3, a $53,000, firstlevel allowance that drew eight 2-year-old fillies at 5 1/2 furlongs. Exiting the Arlington-Washington Lassie, the speedy Illinoisbr­ed will break from post 2 when ridden by Jose Valdivia Jr., the leading jockey at the recently ended Arlington Park meet.

Sunny skies and a high of 78 are forecast. After Sunday, the Kentucky circuit goes dark for four days before live action moves Friday to Keeneland in Lexington for a 17-day meet. Racing returns to Churchill for the fall meet Oct. 29.

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