OLDSMAR, Fla. – Hall of Fame trainer Shug McGaughey has won with both of his starters at the Tampa Bay Downs meet and will look to keep that perfect record intact with a pair of solid contenders on Saturday’s nine-race card. Hereditary will try to snap a six-racing losing streak when he drops sharply in class for an optional $32,000 claimer, and Suburb will make her career debut in a $22,500 maiden special weight race. Hereditary looked like a horse to watch in 2015 after winning a maiden special weight race at Gulfstream Park and an allowance at Keeneland, but he hasn’t been able to replicate that form in his recent starts, all at the optional $62,500 claiming level or higher. He returned from a seven-month layoff Dec. 26 to make his turf debut at Gulfstream and didn’t take to the surface, finishing last of 11 and leading McGaughey to put him back on the main track. “I’m trying to get him down a little bit [in class] to see if I can get him on the right track,” McGaughey said. “I ran him on the turf, and he ran terrible, so I had this spot, and he’s doing good, so I’m really anxious to see how he does in there. At one time, I thought he had a chance to be a really nice horse. I had some trouble with his feet, but he’s over all that. I’m looking forward to running him on Saturday.” Hereditary will face eight other older horses in race 8, a second-level, $23,500 allowance/optional claimer going one mile and 40 yards on the main track. He owns the highest Beyer Speed Figure in the field, a 94 earned for a fifth-place finish at Belmont Park last May. The other top contenders include Capital Letters for trainer Ian Wilkes and Philm Noir for trainer John Simms. Capital Letters also is stepping down from the optional $62,500 claiming level and has turned in three consecutive bullet workouts here. Two starts back on Oct. 8, he set a fast pace in a 1 1/8-mile race at Keeneland and finished a close third with an 88 Beyer. Philm Noir has won both of his starts at the meet, including a $25,000 claimer going seven furlongs Dec. 9. Race 7 drew a field of nine 3-year-old fillies going six furlongs on the main track. Suburb, a Claiborne Farm homebred by City Zip, debuts off a long series of works, including four last month at Payson Park in south Florida. McGaughey typically doesn’t have his first-time starters fully cranked, having won with just two of his last 33. “It’s taken me a while to get her to the races – nothing major, just little things – and she seems to be doing really well now, so I’m looking forward to running her,” McGaughey said. “It’s a good place to get her started, win, lose, or draw.” The field includes seven first-time starters. The most seasoned runner is Consulting, who will make her dirt debut after most recently finishing third in the $75,000 Selima Stakes on the Laurel Park turf course in September for trainer Tom Proctor. Consulting, a Glen Hill Farm homebred by Maclean’s Music, has turned in five consecutive sharp workouts here since Dec. 8.