HALLANDALE BEACH, Fla. – Less than three weeks shy of his 10th birthday, Tut’s Revenge will attempt to get a little closer to the $1 million mark in career earnings Sunday at Gulfstream Park when he takes on nine younger rivals in the co-featured ninth event, the second of three optional-claiming and allowance races on the card. Tut’s Revenge has won 13 of 65 lifetime starts for earnings of more than $910,000 but has not visited the winner’s circle since leading throughout to capture the Kentucky Downs Preview Mint Millions Turf Mile at Ellis Park 16 months ago. Tut’s Revenge, who began his career at Remington Park, was claimed for $62,500 by his present connections, Flying P Stable and Mike Maker, in January 2024. The claim has returned big dividends as Tut’s Revenge earned $300,000 last year. Tut’s Revenge, who will be making his local debut Sunday, is the only member of the field racing under the optional claiming price of $25,000. He will face a lineup that includes five 3-year-olds, a group topped by Bay of Bengal, wire-to-wire winner of his only two starts since joining trainer Graham Motion’s barn earlier this year. Bay of Bengal has the highest last-race Beyer Speed Figure, an 82, of any member of this field. :: Get Gulfstream Park Clocker Reports from Mike Welsch and the Clocker Team. Available every race day.  “They always thought he was perhaps better than he had shown earlier in his career, and I was really surprised the price he paid (23-1) when he won his last start in New York. Of course, I wasn’t smart enough to bet on him myself,” Motion said with a laugh by phone from his winter base at Palm Meadows on Friday. There is plenty of speed signed on against Bay of Bengal, but Motion doesn’t believe his horse necessarily needs the lead to extend his win streak. I think he’s been in spots where there wasn’t much pace in the race and he just took the initiative,” Motion explained. “But I wouldn’t be averse to see him take back a little this time.” Other key contenders include last-out winners Ironsides, Quereme Pass,and Lachaise. ◗ Earlier on the card, a well matched field of 2-year-olds also will go one mile on the grass under high-priced optional-claiming and allowance conditions. The group features Skipping Stars and Teleport, the second- and fifth-place finishers, respectively, in the Armed Forces Stakes here Nov. 1, along with Kentucky invader Knoty Knicks and the stakes-placed Strategic Reserve, who will be making his turf and two-turn debut. Test Score settling in Motion reported that his Grade 1-winning turf specialist Test Score has arrived at Palm Meadows following a long, long van ride from Del Mar, where he finished a troubled third as the 4-5 favorite in Sunday’s Grade 1 Hollywood Derby. The race closed out a 3-year-old campaign during which Test Score won 3 of 8 starts, including the Grade 1 Belmont Derby and Grade 2 Twilight Derby, while earning $1.36 million for owner-breeder Amerman Racing. “I was a little nervous because we had to van him all the way back, but he got in last night and seems well,” Motion said. As bad as the trip was coming back from California, it wasn’t as painful as the trip Test Score endured in the Hollywood Derby. :: Play Gulfstream Park with confidence! DRF Past Performances, Picks, and Clocker Reports are available now.  “He really had a brutal trip in the race. It was hard to watch and very frustrating to have had him out there a month and have that happen,” Motion added. “But he certainly has been really honest to us all year.” Motion said he will see how Test Score responds to the traveling, but if he does well he will seriously consider bringing him back in the $1 million Pegasus World Cup Turf here Jan. 24. :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.