The 129th edition of the Kentucky Futurity this Sunday at the famed Red Mile took an interesting twist when the connections of Jujubee paid the $75,000 supplemental fee and joined 11 others in one dash to determine the winner in the oldest Standardbred stake and third jewel in trotting's Triple Crown. "We've been on the grounds since he raced at Hoosier," said Greg Wright Jr., who trains the sophomore son of Creatine. "He trained super on the track last Saturday." For Wright, the decision to supplement was easy and owner-breeder Jon Erdner agreed. "He's been in the business a long time waiting for a horse like this," said Wright, who has guided the colt to 12 wins this year in 15 starts while racing primarily on the Pennsylvania Sire Stakes circuit. "I really had no plan after the Pennsylvania Sire Stakes final," Wright said. "He came out of the race at Hoosier in good shape, and Andy [driver, McCarthy] said he did it easily." Jujubee landed post five in the middle of the first tier in the 12-horse Futurity that will be the final event of the Grand Circuit on Sunday afternoon. "It looks like the power is inside of him," said Wright. Indeed, starting to Jujubee's inside will be the recent sub-1:50 winner Dancinginthedark M (post one), who comes off a career-best mile in the Kentucky Sire Stakes championship here on September 19. Cuatro De Julio (post two) cut the entire mile in that sire stakes final and was just a nose short in the 1:49 3/5 mile. "I trained him the other day, and he was really good, perhaps the best he's ever been, so I'm going into the race confident," said Cuatro De Julio's driver Lucas Wallin. Trainer Ake Svanstedt entered five in the Futurity, with Bluegrass winners Fly Light (post three) and Mon Amour (post four) getting the best of the draws while Delayed Hanover (post seven), Ambassador Hanover (post nine), and Yonkers Trot winner Johan Palema (post 12) could be compromised. Wright believes his horse can race from on or off-the-pace and is looking forward to the race after spending two weeks in Lexington preparing. "We'll see how he races," said Wright. "If he's good we'll probably take him to the Breeders Crown." The Kentucky Futurity is the highlight of the Red Mile Grand Circuit finale, but there's a deep stakes-filled program to support it. The $351,000 Kentucky Futurity filly division carded as race 10 also drew a dozen fillies, with Hambletonian Oaks winner Bella Bellini landing post five for trainer Nifty Norman. The large field includes Sire Stakes champions Herulisa (post one) from Ohio, Iteration (post two) from New York, and Empressive Hill (post 10), a daughter of Muscle Hill who scored in the Kentucky Championship Series final at The Red Mile on September 19. The richest pacing event of the afternoon program is the $500,000 Tattersalls (race 11) with a dozen named for the rich sophomore showdown. Trainer Ron Burke has five horses in the field, including Bluegrass winner Southwind Gendry (post two), and Little Brown Jug winner Lou's Pearlman (post three), who will likely see much of the betting action. Perfect Sting has managed to hit the board in all 13 starts this year, but unlike his freshman campaign where he was unbeaten, the Always B Miki colt has only won five times this year. Perfect Sting drew post four with regular driver David Miller named once again. ► Sign up for our FREE DRF Harness Digest Newsletter Trainer Tony Alagna has four in the Tattersalls, and unlike Burke, appeared to get the worst of the draw. Cane Pace winner Rockyroad Hanover landed post 11 in the second tier and will offer driver Dexter Dunn few options as he's sandwiched behind pole0sitter Bayfield Beach, as well as Ohio's best Charlie May (post 12). Alagna's Abuckabett Hanover continued his bad luck draw streak in the Tattersalls, getting number nine. Abuckabett Hanover enters the Tattersalls in great shape having won the Simcoe and finished a solid second in last week's Bluegrass over the Red Mile surface. The $207,000 Glen Garnsey 3-year-old filly pace (race five) drew a field of 10 with a pair of the division leaders landing to the outside. Test Of Faith drew post nine and Grace Hill post eight in the Garnsey. Two other top fillies, Fire Start Hanover and Blue Diamond Eyes, landed posts three and five, respectively, making the Garnsey one of the more attractive betting races on the card. Perhaps one of the most interesting races on the Sunday Red Mile card is the $81,000 Allerage Farms-sponsored event for trotting fillies and mares (race three). Generally a race for those above the age of 3, this year's edition includes a pair of Hambletonian winners in Atlanta (post five) and Ramona Hill (post nine), along with a pair of Hambletonian Oaks champions in When Dovescry (post two) and Sorella (post 10). The surprise is the appearance of the sophomore Altar (post four), racing against older stakes company for the first time. Last week, the Nancy Takter-trained Altar trotted a career-best 1:50 3/5 clocking over a sloppy Red Mile surface that could have been as much as two seconds off. First post for Sunday's Red Mile Kentucky Futurity card is listed at 1:00 p.m.