The proven Trixie Racer will meet rising talent Princesinha Julia on Sunday in the $100,000 Trapeze for 2-year-old fillies at Remington Park. The one-mile race is one of five stakes supporting the meet’s co-richest offering, the $400,000 Springboard Mile. The card, with total stakes offerings of $840,000, closes out the meet. It has a special afternoon post of 3 p.m. Central, and the Weather Channel forecast is for partly cloudy skies and a high of 44 degrees. There is a 50-cent pick four with a guaranteed pool of $100,000 on races 10-13. Trixie Racer won the first two starts of her career at Remington, including the $50,000 E.L. Gaylord Memorial at 6 1/2 furlongs Sept. 29. She then turned up at Delta Downs for the $100,000 My Trusty Cat, and closed from next to last to finish second behind fellow stakes winner High On Gin. The mile race over Delta’s six-furlong oval was Trixie Racer’s first at two turns. “I think she showed that she liked the distance enough last time,” said trainer Danny Pish. “I think it will be much better for her on a mile oval. She was able to make up ground – not quite as easy to do on a six-furlong track. One would think that style would fit Remington better. We’ll give her an opportunity to test the theory.” Danny Sorenson has the mount from post 6. Princesinha Julia is a two-time winner at a mile, having won a maiden special weight and a first-level allowance at Remington in her last two starts. “I think she’s an obvious talent who will get better with time,” trainer Steve Asmussen said. “She has a huge pedigree. All of her pedigree has done better at an older age.” Princesinha Julia is out of the A.P. Indy mare Love and Pride, who was a Grade 1 winner at 3 and 4 while earning $985,760. The filly’s sire, Pioneerof the Nile, won the Santa Anita Derby and sired Triple Crown winner American Pharoah. Ricardo Santana Jr., who teamed with Asmussen to win seven races on the Oklahoma Derby Day card in September at Remington, has the mount from post 3. Jeffrey Hawk Memorial Sleepy Eyes Todd, who ran a huge second in the Oklahoma Derby, will take on older rivals in the $100,000 Jeffrey Hawk Memorial, which also drew Grade 3 winners Shotgun Kowboy and Timeline and the capable Popularity. The Hawk Memorial will be run at a mile and 70 yards. It drew a field of 12. Sleepy Eyes Todd set the pace in the Oklahoma Derby and fought back along the rail in the stretch when challenged by three rivals, finishing 1 3/4 lengths behind the late-running winner Owendale. “We actually thought we were going to win the race,” said Miguel Silva, who trains Sleepy Eyes Todd for David Cobb. “He never saw the other horse coming from the outside. On the far side, he couldn’t see Owendale.” Sleepy Eyes Todd earned a Beyer Speed Figure of 95. The number is the best last-race figure in the Hawk Memorial. Jockey Ry Eikleberry, who won five consecutive races Dec. 9 at Zia Park, is in to ride Sleepy Eyes Todd. It will be the first time he’s been aboard the horse in a race, but he is quite familiar with him, said Silva. “He worked with him as a 2-year-old,” Silva said. “He knows him like the palm of his hand.” Sleepy Eyes Todd will break from post 9. “One of the nice things about this horse is he can do whatever you ask him to do,” said Silva. “He can come from behind. In the Oklahoma Derby, he was on the lead.” Shotgun Kowboy will have to overcome post 12 to win his third straight race at the meet. He began his streak in the $175,000 Oklahoma Classics Cup on Oct. 18, then defeated open company in an allowance at the Hawk Memorial distance in his last start Nov. 14. ◗ Remedy, who was second in last year’s Grade 3 Remington Park Oaks, returns to town for the $100,000 She’s All In. The mile and 70-yard race is for fillies and mares. She enters off an allowance win at Churchill on Oct. 31, her first start since February. ◗ Lady Orchid returns to racing with 3-year-olds in the $70,000 Useeit, a mile race for fillies bred in Oklahoma. She was second last out in the $145,000 Oklahoma Classics Distaff. ◗ D Toz shakes two of the top Oklahoma-breds in training – Welder and Shotgun Kowboy – when he returns to the 3-year-old ranks for the $70,000 Jim Thorpe.