LEXINGTON, Ky. – Born into a racing family, Sean Feld has experienced a lifetime of racetrack adventuring in his 36-plus years on the planet. Aside from visiting dozens of venues in the U.S., Feld also has enjoyed a day (or night) of racing at tracks in Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. “I keep a spreadsheet listing them all,” Feld said. “It’s in the triple digits.” Feld has lived in Lexington since 2005, having moved from his native California to attend the University of Kentucky. “Never left,” he said, having thoroughly immersed himself in the Thoroughbred industry as a bloodstock agent, breeder, and owner, occasionally exercising his entrepreneurial spirit in the meantime. Last month, he and a friend, Chris Brothers, bought the popular Charlie Brown’s restaurant in the Chevy Chase neighborhood of Lexington. “With the races in town, we’ve had some great crowds the last couple of weekends,” said Feld. “It’s really going well.” :: Bet Keeneland with Confidence: Get DRF PPs, Picks, and Betting Strategies. Shop Now.  There might be a few drinks on the house Wednesday night after Feld returns from Keeneland, where a 4-year-old gelding named Evan Harlan will carry his silks as the 9-5 morning-line favorite in the featured sixth race, the lone allowance on an eight-race card that starts at 1 p.m. Eastern. There is a $60,500 carryover in the $1 pick six. “My dad and I were partners in his breeding,” said Feld, referring to his father, Bob. “He’s a three-quarter brother to Miss Temple City,” a Feld family homebred who defeated male rivals in 2016 in winning a pair of Grade 1 races over the Keeneland turf, the Maker’s 46 Mile and Shadwell Turf Mile. “Hopefully he’ll run as well over the course as she did,” said Feld. Based at the Fair Hill training center in northern Maryland with Graham Motion, Evan Harlan will have Joel Rosario aboard from post 3 when he returns from a 73-day layoff as part of a full field of 12 older turf horses. The $110,000 first-level allowance will be run around three turns at 1 1/2 miles. Evan Harlan “breezed alongside Hurricane Dream [April 1] at Fair Hill,” said Feld, referring to a Motion-trained gelding who ran to a 4 1/2-length allowance romp on the April 7 meet opener. “He’s really been training well. Rosario rode him perfectly when he broke his maiden at Aqueduct last fall, so hopefully we’ll get the same result Wednesday.” Among those set to oppose Evan Harlan are the Michelle Nihei-trained duo of Mount Rundle (post 9, John Velazquez) and Always Above (post 10, Joe Talamo). Always Above, as the 3-1 program second choice, seems to rate a slightly better chance, although both 4-year-olds have shown themselves capable of earning Beyer Speed Figures in the 80s range, and that’s about what will be required to win this. Fringe players in an interesting cast include C Falls (post 5, Luis Saez) and Master of the Ring (post 11, Tyler Gaffalione). Sunshine and a high near 80 are in the local forecast. ◗ The name of a 3-year-old filly in the eighth and last race Wednesday evokes sad memories of what happened at Keeneland nearly a year ago. Callie’s Grit, trained by Joe Sharp, is named for Callie Witt, an exercise rider who died the morning of April 29 from a tragic accident on the synthetic training track. Witt, 20, hailed from Nebraska. Her namesake filly has trained very well since getting a break following two races last summer, said Sharp. “She’s a runner,” he said. :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.