ARCADIA, Calif. – Big fields and low takeout combine for an appealing all-turf pick three Sunday at Santa Anita – 11 runners in each leg, 15 percent takeout. The daily wager on the final three turf races has become one of the most attractive options at Santa Anita. Since the start of the winter meet in December, the median payoff – half higher, half lower – for the $3 wager has been $426, while the average pool has been more than $83,000. Contention runs deep in the Sunday turf sequence. Race 5 is a sprint for California-bred maidens, race 7 is a sprint for California-bred allowance fillies and mares, and race 9 is a mile race for entry-level allowance fillies and mares. The card does not include a stakes race. Race 5 begins the turf pick three, and 4-year-old second-time starter Jimmy Winkfield would be a deserving winner of the six-furlong race following a promising debut at 6 1/2 furlongs on the main turf oval. Jimmy Winkfield broke slowly, recovered to race midfield, angled out, and finished evenly for third. It was an ideal debut by the Steve Knapp-trained Grazen gelding. Armando Ayuso rides Jimmy Winkfield. :: Santa Anita Classic Meet! Get DRF Past Performances, Clocker Reports, and more. His rivals include Little Raymond, third by a head two starts back, and Royal Rumor, who adds blinkers after racing greenly in his sixth-place debut. Royal Rumor is trained by Carla Gaines, whose second-start maidens win at double the rate of her firsters – 18 percent compared to 9 percent. Race 7 includes the most conspicuous favorite in the turf sequence. Christel Clean finished second in both recent starts at the California-bred allowance level – on the hill and the flat. Sunday’s race is six furlongs on the flat, and Christel Clean has a versatile style that allows her to press the pace or rally from behind. Christel Clean’s trainer-jockey combo is reliable with chalk. John Sadler and Ayuso are 8 for 11 with favorites the past three years, according to DRF Formulator. Christel Clean’s rivals include nonwinners-of-three claiming winner Idessia and Tiger of the Sea, an improving allowance filly who handles turf and dirt. Twelve are entered, 11 can start. Race 9, a turf mile for fillies and mares, ends the sequence. The class of the field is Take Another Card, runner-up twice this season in turf sprint stakes won by Grand Slam Smile, the program favorite Saturday in the Grade 3 Royal Heroine Stakes. Take Another Card, trained by Simon Callaghan, can handle the two-turn allowance trip. She won the California Cup Oaks, a turf mile, in early 2025. Antonio Fresu rides Take Another Card, whose main rival is unproven on turf. Our Moonlight, trained by Dean Pederson, finished in the money three times on dirt this season. She misfired in her only turf start last summer, with an alibi. Our Moonlight steadied early, was unable to establish her typical forward position, and finished next to last. It was a toss race. If she handles grass in her second try, Our Moonlight could win the turf mile with a better trip under regular rider Tiago Pereira. Santa Anita racing resumes Thursday with a make-up card. :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.