The final four-day stand of the Keeneland fall meet opens Wednesday with an eight-race card and a $54,576 carryover into the pick six. With the meet winding down, five of the day’s races have oversubscribed fields. One of the more intriguing events is the sixth race, a $110,000 turf allowance for 2-year-old fillies who have never won two races. Leucadia, who has never crossed the line first in a race for Brendan Walsh, has faced solid horses and should appreciate the 1 1/16-mile distance. At 15-1 on the morning line, she provides a longshot opportunity in multi-race wagers. The filly was off slowly and finished last of 11th in her debut while sprinting Aug. 31 at Kentucky Downs. The winner, Buttercream Babe, has subsequently placed in two stakes. Leucadia was a much-improved second going 7 1/2 furlongs on the Horseshoe Indianapolis turf on Sept. 20. The first-place finisher, Livi Me Dreaming, was disqualified for interference, giving Leucadia a technical maiden win. Livi Me Dreaming came back to win her next start outright. Leucadia will have to work out a good trip from the rail under Joe Talamo, who got to know her last time out. Yatta, third in the Selima at Laurel Park; Smooth Waves, sixth in a deep edition of the Grade 2 Jessamine at Keeneland; Sweetcatherinerose, seventh in the Untapable at Kentucky Downs; and Kamikaze Umagi, seventh in the Kentucky Downs Juvenile Fillies, are all dropping in class. :: Bet Keeneland with confidence! Get DRF PPs, Picks and more. The richest race of the day comes in the seventh, a $120,000 allowance/optional-claiming race for older horses going seven furlongs on dirt. The extremely consistent Vittorio is a generous 6-1 on the morning line. He is winless in seven starts this year since moving from the California-based Simon Callaghan to Bill Mott while coming off a 10-month layoff. While winless, he has finished on the board five times. In one of his unplaced outings, he missed third by a nose in the Grade 3 Essex at Oaklawn Park. Most recently, Vittorio was second to Durante at Aqueduct. The win was Durante’s fourth in a row. Durante was beaten a head in his most recent start and is bound for the Grade 3 Bold Ruler on Friday in New York, while Vittorio has worked sharply since their meeting. Angkor has been consistent for Phil Bauer, who is having a breakout season. The gelding has won once from six starts, but has been on the board in five of those races, including last out at Churchill Downs. Nelson Avenue won a key allowance-level race in December for Godolphin and Mike Stidham, but is making his first start since January. Other candidates in this race coming back from layoffs for major operations are Ducale, making his first start since April 2022 for Juddmonte and trainer Brad Cox; and Condemn, making his second start off more than a year layoff for Claiborne and Tommy Drury. Condemn finished second earlier this month in Indiana. Morning-line favorite Raise Cain will be scratched after winning the Perryville Stakes on Saturday. :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.