HALLANDALE BEACH, Fla. – The wide-open nature of Saturday’s Grade 2, $500,000 Pegasus World Cup Filly and Mare Turf at Gulfstream Park is best demonstrated in the morning line, where the favorite, Whiskey Decision, is 9-2 and eight of the 14 entrants are pegged at either 8-1 or 12-1. Finding value should not be difficult – at least not as hard, seemingly, as finding the winner. Though 14 were entered, the race is limited to 12 starters. Candy Quest, first on the also-eligible list, has been scratched and will run in next weekend’s Endeavour Stakes at Tampa Bay Downs, trainer Mark Casse said. Awesome Czech needs a scratch to get into the field, otherwise she’ll run in the $100,000 South Beach on Tapeta earlier on the card. Proctor Street, one of five horses listed at 12-1, is making her graded stakes debut in this 1 1/16-mile race. She is coming off a three-quarter-length victory in the listed Cardinal Stakes on Nov. 27 at Churchill Downs. Two starts before then, she was beaten one length as the favorite by the Grade 1 winner Dynamic Pricing in the listed Perfect Sting Stakes at Saratoga. In between those two races, Proctor Street won a third-level allowance at Keeneland, her fourth win from five starts at this 1 1/16-mile distance. :: Play Gulfstream Park with confidence! DRF Past Performances, Picks, and Clocker Reports are available now.  “She obviously ran a very nice race in the Cardinal and seems like she’s gone the right way in the second half of the year,” trainer Brendan Walsh said. “I think she’ll handle Gulfstream very well. She has to have some kind of a chance. I think she likes a little pace in front of her, and it looks like there’ll be plenty of that. She’s got a great turn of foot.” Proctor Street is by Street Sense out of the dam Proctor’s Ledge, who won 2 of 3 starts over Gulfstream’s turf. Proctor Street will be ridden by Tyler Gaffalione, who is 3 for 3 aboard the 5-year-old mare. Whiskey Decision is the lukewarm favorite, in part because she is trained by Chad Brown and will be ridden by Flavien Prat. Whiskey Decision has won two of her last three starts, including the Grade 3 Eatontown at Monmouth and the listed Athenia at Aqueduct. “I think she’s better at a mile and an eighth, and on that course, that favors speed,” Brown said. “She’ll need some pace in front of her, which she should get.” Last year, In Our Time set the pace in the Pegasus World Cup Filly and Mare Turf, only to be run down by her Saffie Joseph Jr.-trained stablemate Be Your Best, as Joseph ran one-two in this race. In Our Time is coming off a runner-up finish in the Grade 1 Matriarch at Del Mar last November, a race in which she also set the pace. In Our Time breaks from post 11 in this field – she had post 10 last year – and will be ridden by Irad Ortiz Jr. Joseph also sends out Movin’ On Up, second in the Suwannee River in her most recent start. She breaks from post 12 under Edgard Zayas. Crevalle d’Oro, who won the Suwannee River, is back in this field. :: Get Gulfstream Park Clocker Reports from Mike Welsch and the Clocker Team. Available every race day.  Heredia won the Grade 2 Yellow Ribbon in August at Del Mar and was sixth and fifth, respectively, in the First Lady and Matriarch, both Grade 1 stakes. Trainer Graham Motion said that the 7-year-old will be bred and retired after this race. “I said to the team that if she was doing well, we should at least consider this race if things went smoothly, and she has done well,” Motion said. “She hasn’t been beaten very far in those Grade 1s.” Breath Away, Caitlinhergrtness, and Ready for Shirl finished one-two-three in the Grade 2 Dance Smartly last October at Woodbine. Mark Casse sends out And One More Time and Classic Q. And One More Time has made just two starts since her Grade 1 Natalma win in September 2024, but both were solid runs. Classic Q, a maiden winner over this course last year, is another who could be part of the pace. “And One More Time and Classic Q have been running with 3-year-old fillies. Now we got to play with the older girls,” Casse said. “And One More Time is finally getting back to her top form. She had an injury after the Natalma and it took her a long time to get back. Now that she’s had a few races, I would expect her to run well.” Destino d’Oro, trained by Brad Cox, bounced back from two disappointing efforts with a strong late run to win the Tropical Park Oaks here by a head over And One More Time. Prior to that, she finished eighth in the Grade 1 Queen Elizabeth II Challenge Cup over a speed-favoring Keeneland surface and was sixth in the Grade 3 Dueling Grounds Oaks at Kentucky Downs. Cox said that leading up to the Kentucky Downs races, “I don’t think she was 100 percent, just looking back on everything. I thought she trained really well up to the Tropical Park Oaks and we saw a good run from her there.” :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.