Grade 1 winner Bottle of Rouge could earn some Kentucky Oaks qualifying points on Sunday when she launches her 3-year-old season in the $250,000 Sunland Park Oaks. The one-mile race will offer its first five finishers points on a scale of 20-10-6-4-2. A field of eight has signed on for the Sunland Oaks, which is one of six stakes on a card featuring the $500,000 Sunland Park Derby. First post for the 10-race program is 12:25 p.m. Mountain. The forecast is for partly cloudy skies and a high of 73 degrees, according to AccuWeather. Bottle of Rouge became a Grade 1 winner in September when she captured the Del Mar Debutante over Explora, who would go on to run second in the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies. Bottle of Rouge also advanced to that race, finishing sixth to close her 2-year-old campaign. For her return, she shows a strong series of works at Santa Anita. “Bottle of Rouge, we’re just trying to find a good spot for her,” trainer Bob Baffert said. :: Access the most trusted data and information in horse racing! DRF Past Performances and Picks are available now. The Sunland Oaks has been a sweet spot for Baffert, who has won eight runnings of the race. He took the 2011 renewal with Plum Pretty, who went on to win the Kentucky Oaks. Juan Hernandez has the mount on Bottle of Rouge, who has been effective from both on and off the pace for owner Jill Baffert. Bottle of Rouge drew post 4. Cashed also invades from Santa Anita. She is moving back to dirt after finishing second by a neck in the California Cup Oaks at a mile on turf Jan. 17. “She was doing really well and that race was right there, but we’ve always thought dirt for her,” trainer Doug O’Neill said. “She’s just a big, strong filly, and most of your dirt horses are kind of built like that, so we’re excited. We know its deep waters, and we think we can swim with them.” The last time Cashed ran on dirt, she was second in the Grade 2 Starlet at Los Alamitos in December. Edwin Maldonado has the mount from post 2 for Reddam Racing. “She hasn’t run a bad race,” O’Neill said. “She looks like a colt. I mean, she just has an Olympic-athlete type of body to her. She should be forwardly placed. She’s got a lot of grit to her and a lot of size and a lot of fitness, and with a little bit of luck, I think she’s got a really good chance to be right there.” Not a Lady has experience over the Sunland surface. She shipped in and closed for second in the local prep, the Borderplex at 6 1/2 furlongs on Jan. 18. Trainer Steve Asmussen likes the stretch-out in distance Sunday. “She’s done better in her two-turn races than her one-turn races,” he said. The last time Not a Lady ran around two turns, she won the Toby Keith at a mile at Remington Park. Asmussen has won the Sunland Park Oaks three times – including the last two runnings – and also will saddle Touch of Magic. Coffee Connection, winner of the Borderplex, returns for the Sunland Oaks. Pashmina will get good support after running third in the Untapable and fourth in the Silverbulletday, both at Fair Grounds. Ivy Girl will be scratched, according to reporting by Daily Racing Form’s David Grening. :: Get the Inside Track with the FREE DRF Morning Line Email Newsletter. Subscribe now.  Harry Henson Corrina Corrina, who is the all-time richest New Mexico-bred Thoroughbred, will look to win the $100,000 Harry Henson for the second year in a row Sunday. She will be leaving the statebred ranks behind for the one-mile race for fillies and mares. The field is a deep one and includes A Thousand Miles, who won the Zia Park Oaks in November; Aye Candy, who is a half-sister to $12 million earner Senor Buscador; and Wild Bout Hilary, who won the Grade 3 Bayakoa in 2025 at Oaklawn. Practical Dream, who earlier in her career was a stakes winner in Southern California, is moving to two turns off an eighth-place finish in the Bold Ego, which was won by Aye Candy. Practical Dream was shortening up in distance from a Zia Park allowance win in which she covered 6 1/2 furlongs in 1:15. “I’m excited to get her around two turns,” trainer Justin Evans said. “She showed some brilliance in the past. The race at Zia was really fast going six and a half furlongs that day. Unfortunately, we had to sprint her five and a half the other day, and she’s [such] a big, gorgeous filly that five and a half is not her wheelhouse.” Juan Hernandez has the mount from post 4. Bill Thomas Memorial Evans will have three of the five starters in the $100,000 Bill Thomas Memorial that also drew millionaire Ryvit. The race will be run over 6 1/2 furlongs, and it’s the first of the stakes Sunday. The Evans trainees are Clovisconnection, who breaks from the rail; Katonah, who starts from post 2; and Neiman, who starts from post 5. “I’ve got ’em bookended for sure,” Evans quipped. “A really good group of good, old geldings. We’ve had some really good luck in the Bill Thomas in the past. We won it with Warren’s Knockout years ago, and Redneck Humor won that race two years in a row. It’s a race we really like to run in.” Clovisconnection enters off a fourth-place finish in The Chosen Vron Stakes on Nov. 8 at Del Mar. “Clovisconnection is coming off a little layoff, but he’s got a fantastic résumé,” Evans said of the earner of more than $500,000. Katonah was fourth last out in a first-level allowance at Santa Anita that carried a claiming option of $50,000. “Katonah is a really interesting horse,” Evans said. “Mr. [David] Bernsen claimed him and sent him out here with this kind of race in mind. We’re going to try him cutting back in distance.” Neiman won a Zia allowance in November in a blazing 1:07.80. “He’s a brilliantly fast horse,” said Evans, who was pleased to draw the outside with Neiman. ◗ The card includes a pair of stakes for 3-year-olds bred in New Mexico. The one-mile offerings each have a purse of $100,000. Caprock Cutie leads the 10-horse Peppers Pride, while Speed Merchant, who is 5 for 6, is the one to beat in the Red Hedeman Mile. :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.