For the fourth time in 10 racing days this month, the $2 pick six has a carryover at Santa Anita on Friday. There were no winning tickets on Sunday, the most recent day of racing, leaving the pick six pool with a start of $60,494. The pool of new money may exceed $400,000. The pick six covers the fourth through ninth races on a nine-race program that begins at 1 p.m. Pacific. The pick six consists of three dirt and three turf races. The races have fields of six, eight, eight, seven, 10, and eight before scratches. Two of the turf races will be limited to eight starters with also-eligible lists, since the temporary rails will be set 30 feet from the permanent position, significantly reducing the width of the course. The fourth race, a one-mile maiden special weight, has the smallest field with six entrants and may have a single selection for some ticket holders. :: Play Santa Anita racing with confidence. Get DRF Past Performances, Clocker Reports, and more. Decisive Win, a Nyquist colt trained by Doug O’Neill, will make his second start and first at a mile. Decisive Win was fourth by seven lengths behind Crude Velocity in a maiden race at 6 1/2 furlongs on March 7. Decisive Win set the pace before fading. Crude Velocity, unbeaten in three starts, is rated as one of the nation’s top 3-year-olds after an attractive win in the Grade 2 Pat Day Mile at Churchill Downs on May 2. The complexion of the fifth race, a starter allowance at six furlongs on turf, depends on whether Liam Smith draws into the race from the also-eligible list. Liam Smith won a starter allowance at 6 1/2 furlongs on dirt by 11 lengths on Feb. 6 in his last start. Trained by Jeff Mullins, Liam Smith has not started on turf. A half-brother, B G Lee, won two turf races earlier this decade. Liam Smith is quick enough to lead and could be joined in that capacity by Burning Rubber. A quick pace will help Money Makes Money, who won a starter allowance at six furlongs on turf on April 30 in his first start in more than 10 months. The 5-year-old mares Miz Clubcali and Outrageous could get favorable trips in the sixth, a $12,500 claiming race for fillies and mares at 5 1/2 furlongs. Runners such as Sensational Z Z, the winner of an 870-yard race at Los Alamitos on April 25, and Wishes to Riches, unraced in 15 months, are quick enough to lead and may prove tough to catch. The longest race of the day is the seventh, an allowance race at 1 1/4 miles on turf. Trainer Michael McCarthy starts Catch the Breeze, a troubled sixth in a similar race on April 19, and the appealing Poor Connection, the winner of a starter allowance on March 29. :: Get the Inside Track with the FREE DRF Morning Line Email Newsletter. Subscribe now.  Oubabe, second in an allowance race at 1 1/4 miles on turf last October, starts for the first time since a fifth-place finish in an allowance race for California-breds on dirt in February. Trainer Leonard Powell said last weekend that a return to turf and a longer distance will help Oubabe. Powell expressed concern about the competition, however. “I don’t think he’s as good on dirt as turf,” Powell said. “In the last two races, he didn’t have enough early speed and he hated the kickback. I would have liked to have stayed with Cal-breds.” Makenarita and Bear’s Board will draw support in the eighth, a conditional $10,000 claiming race for fillies and mares at a mile. The race lacks a standout. Makenarita needed 13 races to beat maidens and was a respectable second in a race at this level on April 25 after a wide trip. Bear’s Board starts for her lowest claiming price in an effort to reverse a four-race losing streak. The ninth race, a maiden special weight for California-bred fillies and mares between the ages of 3 and 5 at six furlongs, is led by Lyndee’s Dream, Marla Hooch, She’s No Quant, and Zip Me Up. Marla Hooch and Lyndee’s Dream finished first and third in a similar race on April 18. Marla Hooch, a nose winner, was disqualified to second for causing interference. She’s No Quant was third in two turf maiden races for sprinters in March and April and should be forward early from an outside post. Zip Me Up overcame a slow start to finish third in a similar race at Del Mar last August. She is trained by Carla Gaines, who is effective with runners returning from lengthy layoffs. :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.