Trainer Veronica Griggs has had two of the top Oklahoma-bred turf performers in her barn the past several years in Perfect to Please and Pacific Typhoon. The horses have racked up five stakes wins and a number of allowance races between them and will be looking for more Friday night when Remington Park puts on three turf stakes for horses bred in Oklahoma. Perfect to Please could go favored in the $70,000 Remington Park Turf Sprint. Pacific Typhoon is a threat to wire the field in the $70,000 Red Earth, while his half-sister Hawaiian Typhoon could try to pull the same trick in the $70,000 Bob Barry Memorial. Perfect to Please is moving back into the Oklahoma-bred ranks for the Turf Sprint at five furlongs after closing from last for fourth in a non-conditioned allowance Aug. 24 at Remington. The about five-furlong race went in 56.83 seconds. “They ran extremely fast,” Griggs said. “They ran a little too fast for him. He is 9 years old. I think running with his own company, Oklahoma-breds, will help him.” Perfect to Please has long been a barn star and has won 17 races from 78 starts for earnings of $571,793. Owned by Elada Kirk, he picked up two stakes victories last year at 8, and on Friday will be looking for his sixth win over the turf course at Remington. “I have no idea how he’s been so durable for this long,” Griggs said. “To have that many starts and just keep showing up – he’s an amazing animal. He’s not only like a barn mascot, he’s also the best horse in the barn as far as performance.” It sounds like Perfect to Please knows it, too. “He always wants someone to stop and pay attention to him,” Griggs said. “He loves his treats. He’s just one of those unique horses that has a lot of personality.” Perfect to Please will break from post 3 under regular rider Bryan McNeil. “As long as he can get a clean trip, as long as horses don’t cut him off or anything, things usually go pretty well,” Griggs said. “He doesn’t tend to get in a lot of traffic trouble, and I hand that to Bryan.” The chief threats could be Mr. N, who has run second or third in nine stakes, and the sharp Sladens Dream. Pacific Typhoon is looking for his second win in the Red Earth, a 7 1/2-furlong feature for 3-year-olds and up that Perfect to Please has won twice. Pacific Typhoon, who has won 10 races and earned $309,386, is making his second start following a freshening. He will break from the rail and faces a strong cast that includes Grade 3 winner Ezmosh, who was entered Thursday at Churchill, and eight-time stakes winner Ibaka. Hawaiian Typhoon also starts from the rail in the Barry Memorial, a 7 1/2-furlong race for fillies and mares. She is coming off a 9 1/2-length win over maiden special weight foes at a mile on turf Sept. 5 at Remington. Hawaiian Typhoon made all the pace from her rail post. “She ran a huge, huge race last time,” Griggs said. “I’m in awe of it. She looked so fantastic doing it and did it so easy. I know there’s going to be mares in there that are just as fast. I’m curious to see how it does set up.” McNeil has the mount on both horses for owner Carol Nelson.