Trainer Jerry Hollendorfer might not be holding all the aces for Monday’s $100,000, Grade 3 All American at one mile on the Golden Gate Fields main track, but he has three of them. Hollendorfer plans to run G. G. Ryder, coming off a victory in the Grade 3 San Francisco Mile on turf; Summer Hit, the winner of the past two All Americans as well as the Grade 3 Berkeley two years ago before it switched places with the All American; and Outside Nashville, 2 for 2 in stakes at Golden Gate. G. G. Ryder and Summer Hit are based at Golden Gate, where Hollendorfer’s wife, Janet, serves as his adjutant general. “They’re running well in the place they’re at,” Jerry Hollendorfer said, explaining why the pair is based here and runs here. How well? G. G. Ryder has a 9-5-3-1 record on the main track, including a second in last fall’s Berkeley. He has four wins and a fourth in five turf starts, including two stakes wins. Summer Hit has seven wins and a pair of seconds in nine main-track starts, and one win and three seconds in four turf stakes starts. The three seconds in the past three San Francisco Miles were by less than 1 1/2 lengths combined. Outside Nashville is 7-4-1-1 with a fifth on the main track and has won his past two starts here. “He runs well on synthetics, and we got [Juan] Hernandez to ride him,” said Hollendorfer. Ready to challenge are Blues Blaster, Eagle Screams, Hypnatique, and Pepper Crown. Southern California-based Living The Life and Majestic City are weighing the possibility of coming north, while locally based Star Student is listed as possible. The four local challengers wound up preparations Sunday, with Blues Blaster earning a bullet with his six-furlong drill in 1:14, the best of nine works at the distance. Hypnatique worked five furlongs in 1:00.20, while Eagle Screams went the same distance in 1:01. Pepper Crown, who won two of the track’s graded stakes last year, the San Francisco Mile and Berkeley, worked one mile in 1:42 at Pleasanton. Both Summer Hit (1:02.40) and G. G. Ryder (1:03) worked five furlongs Friday at Golden Gate. Outside Nashville worked six furlongs in 1:14 at Santa Anita on May 10. Not only does Hollendorfer have a trio of talented horses, but he also has a trio of talented riders. As usual, Russell Baze, the world’s winningest jockey and the leader in the Golden Gate standings with 114 wins, will ride Summer Hit. Ricardo Gonzalez, second in the standings with 98 wins, will try to pilot G. G. Ryder to his second straight graded victory after riding him in the San Francisco Mile. Hernandez is third in the standings with 84 victories. Gonzalez, who had the first four-win day of his career April 18, had another four-bagger Saturday, scoring back-to-back wins in the third (Down Low Mama, $5) and fourth (Really a Princess, $3.80) and then in the eighth (Miss Centerfold, $5.20) and ninth (Inside Scoop, $28.40). Hollendorfer has been using Gonzalez with more frequency. “He’s a young rider and very successful. He learns and is always trying to learn,” said Hollendorfer. “He has an advantage because he’s small and able to eat and stay strong.” Hope’s Love eyes June debut California Chrome’s baby sister Hope’s Love was the morning-line favorite for her debut Friday but contracted a mild virus that forced trainer Steve Sherman to scratch her. “She’s got some big shoes to fill,” said Sherman. “She’s not him. She’s small; he’s big. The fact she’s his sister would be the only comparison. I feel more pressure for her than for me.” Hope’s Love worked eight times, ranging from one furlong March 15 to a half-mile. Her final work May 3 was a bullet half-mile drill in 47 flat, the best of 67 works that day. Sherman said there’s a June 13 maiden race that she’ll point to. While he watched Friday’s race with interest, he said he didn’t know how Hope’s Love would have fared while taking on Ibelievewewillwin, the 6-5 favorite who won by 5 1/2 lengths. “There was a runaway winner,” he said. “Would it be different if we’d run?” Sherman said what he likes best about the filly is that “she’s got guts. She’s very, very competitive in her works. I think she could be nice. What I’ve always liked in horses is if they’re competitive and always want to try.” Suspensions and fines It was a tough week for Carson Sullivan, currently tied for sixth in the jockeys’ standings. He received a three-day suspension (this Friday through Sunday) for “altering course without sufficient clearance and causing interference” aboard Special Memories in Thursday’s sixth race. He then picked up a five-day suspension (May 25 to June 4) for “failure to make a proper effort to maintain a straight course in the stretch” in Saturday’s sixth race, where Catzanova was disqualified from second to third. Trainer Peter Eurton was fined $1,000 for failure to properly report the gelding of On Draft, who ran eighth in the third race April 25.