HALLANDALE BEACH, Fla. – Trainer Chad Brown will send out Tax Implications in his quest for a fourth straight victory in the Grade 3 Honey Fox Stakes for fillies and mares going one mile on turf at Gulfstream Park. In her last start, Tax Implications was beaten 1 1/4 lengths when rallying from next-to-last of 11 to finish fourth behind Sacred Wish in the Grade 1 Matriarch Stakes at Del Mar in December. Sacred Wish came back to finish second, beaten a neck by Be Your Best in the Grade 2 Pegasus Filly and Mare Turf at Gulfstream on Jan. 25. “I don’t think she has to necessarily be that far back,” Brown said. “She was out of position in the Matriarch, it was disappointing. She came with a rail run and really galloped out super strong. I thought this was a good spot to start her back.” Tax Implications is only 2 for 12 in her career, but she has five runner-up finishes, three of them in stakes. Tyler Gaffalione rides from the rail. See You Around chased and caught In Our Time to win the Tropical Park Oaks here in December. Both fillies ran well, albeit in losing efforts, when they made their 4-year-old debuts at different venues in February. :: Get Gulfstream Park Clocker Reports from Mike Welsch and the Clocker Team. Available every race day.  See You Around finished second to the Brown-trained Saffron Moon in the Grade 3 Endeavour, a race in which See You Around chased a fast early pace set by Ocean Club. In the Tropical Park Oaks, See You Around chased a much kinder pace, which might have made a difference. See You Around is trained by Christophe Clement, a seven-time winner of this race. Irad Ortiz Jr. was aboard for the Tropical Park Oaks win and is reunited with See You Around on Saturday. In Our Time came out of the Tropical Park Oaks to finish third behind her Saffie Joseph Jr.-trained stablemate Be Your Best in the Pegasus Filly and Mare Turf. “She ran well last time, quick tempo and she stayed around,” Joseph said. “The course was playing to speed – you can use that to discredit her performance – but I thought she ran well. Hopefully, if she can run a similar race, she probably wins, but how much did that take out of her? For me, she looks as good as ever and I think she’s done just as good.” Joseph also sends out Sister Lou Ann, who returns from a six-month layoff in this spot. Clement also runs Ozara, who is coming off an allowance at Tampa Bay Downs on Jan. 3, a race from which the runner-up, Damaso, came back to win her next start. Pounce, fourth in the Pegasus Filly and Mare Turf, should appreciate the cutback to a mile. She won the Grade 3 Herecomesthebride at that distance here last winter for trainer Mark Casse. Special Wan, Life’s an Audible, and Ready for Shirl are also contenders in this deep field. The Very One La Mehana and Forever After All, separated by a neck in two stakes here this winter, tee it up for a third time in Saturday’s Grade 3, $175,000 The Very One Stakes scheduled for 1 3/8 miles on the turf. La Mehana beat Forever After All by a neck when they ran one-two in the Via Borghese at 1 3/8 miles in December. Forever After All turned the tables in the La Prevoyante at 1 1/2 miles where La Mehana actually finished third, beaten a nose for second by Chop Chop. In the Via Borghese, La Mehana was up close to a pedestrian pace and got the jump on Forever After All. In the La Prevoyante, Tyler Gaffalione gave Forever After All a flawless ride, following La Mehana before being able to get into the clear in upper stretch while La Mehana had to weave her way through traffic. Trainer Brendan Walsh doesn’t feel the cutback to 1 3/8 miles is a disadvantage to Forever After All. “I don’t think it makes a huge difference,” said Walsh, who won last year’s The Very One with R Calli Kim. “It seems like our filly is improving with every race. She’s really started to learn to finish up well. She did that the last time and if she improves a little it puts her right there.” Walsh also sends out Queen Regent, who was beaten one length when fifth in the La Prevoyante. “Maybe the mile and three eighths might suit her a little better,” Walsh said. “The last eighth caught her out a little.” Trainer Graham Motion sends out the South African-bred Beach Bomb and the Irish-bred Blush. Beach Bomb comes out of an eighth-place finish in the Breeders’ Cup Filly and Mare Turf, where she was beaten only 3 1/2 lengths. “I thought she was very competitive,” Motion said. “Maybe she’s not a Grade 1 filly. I think she could be very competitive in these Grade 2s and Grade 3s. She didn’t disgrace herself in the Breeders’ Cup.” Blush has had odd trips in her two North American starts. She finished fourth in the Grade 1 E.P. Taylor, when Full Count Felicia ran off and hid from the field. In the Grade 3 Long Island at Aqueduct, “she ran off with Johnny [Velazquez], she was very keen, which I did not expect,” Motion said. Immensitude, beaten a neck by La Mehana in the Grade 3 Waya last fall at Aqueduct, Whatlovelookslike, Youknownothing, and Be My Sunshine complete the field. Herecomesthebride Mark Casse has won the first two turf stakes for 3-year-old fillies at this meet with Nitrogen taking the Ginger Brew and Vixen the Sweetest Chant. While Nitrogen may be the stronger of the two overall, Casse feels she is a better fit for next week’s Florida Oaks at Tampa Bay Downs while Vixen seeks her second straight stakes win at Gulfstream in Saturday’s Grade 3, $215,000 Herecomesthebride Stakes going one mile. Casse actually entered three in the Hercomesthebride, but will likely scratch Smudge and run Vixen and recent maiden winner Classic Q. Casse feels Vixen’s stalking style, one she used to win the Sweetest Chant by 2 1/4 lengths, is a better fit for Gulfstream than Nitrogen’s closing style. “She already shows a fondness for Gulfstream,” Casse said of Vixen. “I thought she won easy last time. We have a good problem in that we have a lot of good 3-year-old fillies on the turf. D. J. Stable owns a large part of Vixen and all of Nitrogen. We felt Nitrogen would benefit from the turf course at Tampa.” Civetta, trained by Brendan Walsh, won the Wait a While Stakes for 2-year-old fillies at Gulfstream in November before running third, beaten a half-length by Nitrogen, in the Ginger Brew. Walsh is adding blinkers to Civetta’s equipment on Saturday. In the Ginger Brew, Walsh felt Civetta “traveled around there very well, made a run, then waited a little bit. We’ve worked her with [blinkers] and she seems like she finished out a little better. We’ll try them and see what they do.” Ramsey Pond, second in the Sweetest Chant and third in the Wait a While, is another contender in this spot. :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.