HALLANDALE BEACH, Fla. – Although Woodbine-based Gail Cox spends most of the winter freshening her stable at the Payson Park training center in Indiantown, Fla., she will on occasion make the 90-minute drive down the turnpike to run one of her horses at Gulfstream Park. On Saturday, Cox will send out Miss Vyvyanne as one of the favorites in the $75,000 Golden Beach overnight handicap. The Golden Beach is scheduled for five furlongs on turf, although with heavy rains here Thursday there is a strong possibility the race could end up being decided at the same distance over the synthetic Tapeta track. The headliner drew a field of eight that also includes Grade 3 winner and likely favorite Creed’s Gold. Turf or synthetic won’t matter to Cox, considering Miss Vyvyanne, who will be her fifth Gulfstream starter this winter/spring, has split her 10 lifetime victories equally over the two surfaces. The speedy filly brings a three-race win streak into the Golden Beach, having closed her 2025 campaign with a pair of turf tallies at Woodbine before opening her 2026 season by capturing a high-priced optional-claiming and allowance dash in impressive fashion over the Tapeta during the late stages of the recently concluded Championship meet. :: Access the most trusted data and information in horse racing! DRF Past Performances and Picks are available now. “I always thought she was better on the turf, but the way she won that last race it’s obvious she loves the Tapeta here,” Cox said. “The synthetic track here is a bit different than the one at Woodbine. It’s a lot speedier than ours, which is obviously an advantage for her.” Miss Vyvyanne has played catch me if you can in the majority of her career wins, including her current winning streak during which she has led at every call in each race. She could face a real challenge for the lead Saturday while breaking just to the outside of Demar’s Legacy, who has a similar front-running style. “Obviously, our filly seems to run her best on the lead, so having the other filly in the race is a concern,” Cox said. “We’ll just have to play it off the break.” Demar’s Legacy had a three-race winning streak of her own snapped in her most recent start when finishing third, beaten two lengths by Creed’s Gold, after setting the pace through midstretch in the Lightning City Stakes over the turf on Feb. 14 at Tampa Bay Downs. She would definitely benefit should the Golden Beach come off the grass, having registered four of her five career wins on the Tapeta. Like Miss Vyvyanne, Creed’s Gold is a very versatile sort. She closed her 2025 campaign winning the Grade 3 Hendrie Stakes over the synthetic course last summer at Woodbine, went to the sidelines for seven months, then picked right up where she left off when returning to capture the Lightning City by 1 3/4 lengths in her lone start this season for trainer Mark Casse. The lineup also includes Cart Girl Sam and Breezero, who finished second and third, respectively, behind Miss Vyvyanne when the trio met for the first time earlier this winter; Great Venezuela, who captured a similarly conditioned overnight handicap on the Tapeta in her 2025 finale; and the stakes-placed Le Amazonia and Tree C’s Kai. Miss Vyvyanne will be ridden in the Golden Beach by Pietro Moran, who has been aboard the filly for each of her last three victories. Moran, the 2025 Eclipse Award-winning apprentice jockey, rode with a good measure of success upon switching his tack locally, having registered eight victories from 36 mounts during the latter stages of the Championship meet. He also won the first race on opening day at Keeneland last Friday aboard the 2-year-old Suspicions for trainer Wesley Ward. :: Subscribe to the DRF Post Time Email Newsletter: Get the news you need to play today's races!  “He’s a great kid and a talented rider,” Cox said of Moran. “He loves this filly and wanted to come back down from Keeneland to ride her here Saturday.” Saturday will be Moran’s final day at Gulfstream, according to his agent, Cliff Collier. “Unfortunately, he didn’t get to start here until late in the meet because track officials wouldn’t let him ride here until he got his P-1 visa,” Collier said. “He’ll return to Woodbine when the meet opens on April 18, but now that he’s got all his paperwork, the plan is to come back to Gulfstream for the entire meet next winter.” :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.