Two runners that passed the Harris Farm Stakes on dirt at Fresno will run on Tapeta at Golden Gate Fields against the Harris Farm runner-up Sunday in the $75,000 El Dorado Shooter. The El Dorado Shooter is for California-bred 3-year-olds and up going six furlongs. The Harris Farm also was for California-breds as part of the Golden State Series of stakes. In Our A and War Games passed the race and Top Harbor ran second, and the three are among a field of five in the El Dorado Shooter. :: Bet the races with confidence on DRF Bets. You're one click away from the only top-rated betting platform fully integrated with exclusive data, analytics, and expert picks. Trainer Cliff DeLima wanted to run War Games in the Harris Farm, but the gelding had not been nominated to the Golden State Series and was ineligible. In Our A passed the Harris Farm because trainer Ellen Jackson preferred to run him on Tapeta. “It didn’t make sense to run there on dirt with this race coming up,” said Jackson. A 5-year-old full brother to multiple stakes winner Bulletproof One, In Our A has 5 wins and 4 seconds in 9 career starts, all at Golden Gate Fields. In Our A has had some soundness issues, which also played into Jackson’s decision to keep him on the familiar Tapeta surface. In Our A looms the likely favorite in the El Dorado Shooter. He is riding a two-race win streak, with both victories coming in allowance sprints against open company. In Our A has won from both on the lead and from a stalking position. “He’s perfectly happy to do what you ask,” Jackson said. Both War Games and In Our A make their stakes debut in the El Dorado Shooter. War Games, a 4-year-old Cycletron gelding, has five wins and a pair of seconds in 10 starts at Golden Gate Fields. He set the pace as the even-money favorite before settling for second behind Top Harbor in his most recent start, an allowance sprint at Golden Gate on Sept. 25. In August, War Games and In Our A split decisions, runing first and second in a pair of allowance sprints. War Games looks like the speed of the race Sunday. “He tries hard,” said DeLima. “He’s all business all the time.” The 3-year-old Top Harbor returns three weeks after his second-place finish in the Harris Farm, which is fine with trainer Tim McCanna. “You don’t have to work them hard when coming back like this, and he’s been doing good,” said McCanna. “He’s not overmatched here.” Top Harbor likes to sit back early and make a late run, and he will be dangerous if In Our A and War Games take a bit out of each other early in the race. Jamming Eddy, third in the Harris Farm, and R M C Hook’em round out the field.