R Adios Jersey will be racing without blinkers for the first time in the $65,000 Sheer Drama, which is part of the Rainbow 6 jackpot sequence that will have a mandatory payout Saturday at Gulfstream Park. The estimated pool is $1.5 million. The Rainbow 6 has not been solved over the last 20 cards. The pool heading into Saturday's card is $338,577, according to a press release from Gulfstream.  The Rainbow 6, which is a 20-cent bet, will cover races 5-10 on Saturday. The feature is the Sheer Drama, which goes as the ninth race. It’s a seven-furlong sprint for fillies and mares bred in Florida, and R Adios Jersey should go favored as a three-time stakes winner who has represented herself well against such quality rivals as Frank’s Rockette. But she will be doing something new Saturday – racing without the blinkers she has worn in her 13 career starts. She’s won six times and was just edged last out when second after contesting the pace against open allowance rivals July 1 at Gulfstream. :: Bet with the Best! Get Free DRF PPs and Cashback when you wager. Join DRF Bets. The Sheer Drama field includes some promising 3-year-old fillies in Charlie’s Wish and Flakes, both stakes winners at Gulfstream. Rosie’s Halo is another key player in the field after defeating open company by six lengths last out at Gulfstream. Here is a look at the remainder of the races in the Rainbow 6 sequence. Race 5: The Rainbow 6 opens with $10,000 claiming route race for 3-year-olds and up on Tapeta. Gooch Go Bragh won over Winning Factor and Watch the Music on July 29, and all three look like major players again Saturday. Winning Factor was the favorite that afternoon, just as the popular claim had been in his five prior starts. Watch the Music is returning to the 1 1/16-mile distance of his last win on form for trainer Bobby Dibona, who is winning at a 37 percent rate this meet at Gulfstream. Race 6: The second leg brings together 2-year-olds bred in Florida for a maiden special weight sprint. The distance of 6 1/2 furlongs can be a demanding one for some sprinters, and the three starts Jigsaw has under his belt should serve as a nice foundation for the task. He’s also back on dirt, site of his best races to date. On a pedigree point, Jigsaw’s dam won 15 times from 73 starts and earned more than $450,000. The first-time starter Go Billy Go is half-brother to Starship Bonita, a two-time stakes winner at 2 who earned $577,237. Go Billy Go is a son of Free Drop Billy, a young stallion who is getting 6 percent juvenile debut winners from a limited sample and 11 percent 2-year-old winners overall. Go Billy Go’s dam has produced five 2-year-old winners. Arrogancy is another contender. He just missed in his debut last out for Dibona and the next day his workmate was a debut winner at Gulfstream. Race 7: The starting gate remains set at 6 1/2 furlongs for a first-level allowance for 3-year-old fillies. Trust Me will be back on Lasix after racing without the diuretic last out in the Azalea Stakes. The first two finishers from the race, Charlie’s Wish and Flakes, go back in the Sheer Drama. Trust Me put up a Beyer Speed Figure of 89 when defeating older rivals off the bench in June. She is a candidate to wire the field Saturday. Flag Woman could go favored as a four-time winner facing some less-experienced rivals. She is moving back to both open company and dirt; the last time she raced on the main track against such foes she romped by 13 lengths. Flag Woman’s last two wins have come over older rivals. Race 8: This is another first-level allowance on the card and it’s for 3-year-olds and up at one mile and 70 yards on Tapeta. Volcanic moved to the synthetic surface for the first time in June and liked it, winning off by more than four lengths at Gulfstream. He won on Tapeta again one start later and last out was just edged on the local synthetic track. Volcanic and Cashier Check own the field’s best last-race Beyer Speed Figure on Tapeta, an 83. Another of interest in the field is Centrodelantero. Trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. made a few effective changes with the promising 3-year-old son of Carpe Diem last out, adding blinkers and moving him to Tapeta. Centrodelantero responded with a runner-up finish and now the runner who was Group 1-placed in Peru meets older rivals for the first time. Race 10: The finale matches $12,500 maiden-claiming fillies and mares at five furlongs on Tapeta. Miss Unconcerned’s speed should serve her well as she shortens some in distance. She moves to Tapeta for the first time for breeder, owner, and trainer Tom Proctor, who wins at a well-above average rate with his synthetic-track starters. Other contenders include Acquired Taste, Areuokwiththis, Romashka, and Macassa. :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.