PHOENIX – The homegrown product takes the spotlight Thursday at Turf Paradise as an Arizona-bred program will feature five $60,000 stakes: the Lyman & Bradley Rollins at 6 furlongs for 3-year-olds and up (race 5); the Dwight D. Patterson at 1 1/16 miles for 3-year-olds and up (race 6); the Gene Fleming Breeders Derby at 1 1/16 miles for 3-year-olds (race 7); the Joanne Dye Breeders Oaks at six furlongs for 3-year-old fillies (race 8); and the Ann Owens Distaff at six furlongs for fillies and mares (race 9). ◗ Ramblin’ Man and Hey Pilgrim, the one-two finishers in the Cactus Wren here March 4, separated by just a neck, lead a field of six in the Lyman & Bradley Rollins. Ramblin’ Man comes into this off three straight wins and figures to stalk from his outside post and make a run. Hey Pilgrim, who was the 6-5 favorite in the Cactus Wren, has the rail, speed, and versatility. Both runners are owned by Kevin Owens and trained by Kory Owens. :: Want the best bonus in racing? Get a $250 deposit match, $10 free bet, and free Formulator with DRF Bets. Code: WINNING Annie’s Boy, owned by Michael Feigenbaum and trained by Rafael Barraza, is a threat, having won two sprint stakes this meet. He drops after dueling and fading to eighth in the Phoenix Gold Cup here March 11. ◗ Moonlite Graham, a 5-year-old gelding owned by Scott Herbertson and trained by Jonathan Wong, heads a field of six in the Dwight D. Patterson. The son of Uh Oh Bango comes off a front-running win on turf here March 28, and while he switches footing here he’s won twice on dirt so that shouldn’t be a bother. Mystic Reality may be the one to catch as he’s been primarily sprinting and showing high speed for owners Ray and Gale Richardson and trainer Rafael Barraza. ◗ Brazen Now may be the one to beat as seven 3-year-olds go in the Gene Fleming Breeders Derby. Owned by Kevin Eikleberry, J. Lloyd Yother, Marvin Fleming, and Reunion Racing Stables LLC and trained by Eikleberry, the 3-year-old gelded son of Into Mischief comes off a romping 6 1/2-length win in the Arizona Stallion here March 28. He has only sprinted, however, so this distance is uncharged waters. Bango for Bucks, owned by Tom Bartol and Richard Dezonno and trained by Bill Beshears, might have been the best of this crop of Arizona-breds as he started his career with five smart outings including three wins. His last two races this meet, however, weren’t nearly as good so he attempts to bounce back to form. Like Brazen Now he tries this longer trip for the first time. In fact, none of the entrants has been beyond 7 1/2 furlongs. ◗ Mischievousofficer heads a field of eight fillies in the Joanne Dye Breeders Oaks. Owned by Randy Howg and trained by Robertino Diodoro, the daughter of Lotsa Mischief was last seen finishing a sharp second, beaten just a neck, in a restricted claiming sprint here Dec. 23. She’s worked steadily for this return. Big Heat, owned by Triple AAA Ranch and trained by Dan Kenney, looms the main danger. Despite being a maiden through four starts, she’s shown talent. The daughter of Mr. Big returns to sprinting, which may be her best game, and gets blinkers. ◗ Arizona Sun looms a short price as the mare brings strong form into defense of her Ann Owens Distaff title vs. nine rivals. Owned by Howg and trained by Diodoro, the 5-year-old daughter of Ministers Wild Cat romped by over six lengths in this race last year. She may actually be better this year as she comes here having won three of her last four, all stakes. The three wins came on dirt; the loss in that stretch, a third, came on turf and she’s better on dirt. Her rivals include My Crafty Gal, second in this last year and freshened since running fourth against allowance foes here Feb. 17; J T’s Lena and Foundation, one-two finishers in a smart allowance tilt here March 25; Burnadebt, second to Arizona Sun in the Cactus Flower here March 4; and Last Punch, a sharp second in a fast allowance race here March 31.