Colonel Liam and Domestic Spending, who dead-heated for win in the Grade 1 Old Forester Turf Classic on the Kentucky Derby undercard, are headed for a June 5 rematch in the Grade 1 Manhattan Stakes. The two 4-year-olds were headed early this week to Belmont Park and were said by their trainers to have exited the Turf Classic in good condition. “He looks fine,” trainer Chad Brown said of Domestic Spending. “If he trains on like we hope he will, it’s on to the Manhattan.” Brown, as if often the case, figures to have multiple runners in the 1 1/4-mile Manhattan, which he has won six times in the last nine years. Brown also mentioned the Chilean import Master Piece, Rockemperor, and Tribhuvan as candidates for the Manhattan. Digital Age, who was fifth in the Turf Classic, is likely to get some class relief in his next start, Brown said. Colonel Liam came into the Turf Classic, where he was heavily favored, after winning the Pegasus World Cup Turf and the Muniz Memorial, and while he could not win Saturday’s nine-furlong contest outright, he did get a career-best 100 Beyer Speed Figure. :: Join DRF Bets and get ready to watch and wager on the Preakness with a $250 first deposit bonus  “I thought he ran very well, kicked on well, maybe was a touch keen in a race that didn’t produce a lot of pace,” said Colonel Liam’s trainer, Todd Pletcher. Colonel Liam, like Domestic Spending, will try a distance as long as 1 1/4 miles for the first time. A bulky, powerful horse with speed and stamina, Colonel Liam seems to lack the athleticism and raw turn of foot Domestic Spending possesses. Belmont’s larger turf oval and the Manhattan’s longer distance could suit his horse, Pletcher believes. Also headed to a Belmont Stakes undercard start is Jackie’s Warrior, whose 91 Beyer Speed Figure from his Pat Day Mile win doesn’t do his performance justice. Jackie’s Warrior set splits in the one-mile Pat Day that seem impossible: 21.75, 43.68, and 1:07.97. Dream Shake, getting four pounds from Jackie’s Warrior, sat about a length off the pace before those two engaged in an epic stretch battle, Jackie’s Warrior prevailing by a head. Beyers account for final time, not pace, and while two closers clunked home for distant third- and fourth-place finishes, every horse anywhere near those sizzling fractions – save the top two – got cooked. “The whole field got run off their feet,” said trainer Steve Asmussen. Despite the hard race, Jackie’s Warrior came out of the Pat Day in good shape, cleaning his feed tub Saturday night and scheduled to go back to the track Wednesday. All being well, he’ll race next in the Woody Stephens over seven furlongs on June 5 at Belmont. Asmussen said the Breeders’ Cup Sprint is the long-term goal. Plans are less certain for two other important Churchill winners, Gamine and Maxfield. Gamine started awkwardly at the start of the Derby City Distaff but recovered to lead on a slow pace, turning back Sconsin to win by 1 1/2 lengths, earning a 99 Beyer. :: Get Daily Racing Form past performances, featuring exclusive Beyer Speed Figures - the gold standard in horse racing  “It was workmanlike, but you don’t want them to run that hard early in the year,” said trainer Bob Baffert. “She came out of it really well. The main thing is the Breeders’ Cup for her. We haven’t had a chance to sit down and talk about what’s next.” Trainer Brendan Walsh said something similar regarding plans for Maxfield, who got a career-best 105 Beyer in an easy Friday win in the Grade 2 Alysheba Stakes. “He seemed to do it pretty easy and he’s come out of the race good, but we haven’t even talked about what to do with him,” said Walsh, who trains Maxfield for Godolphin.