ARCADIA, Calif. - The two stakes winners at Santa Anita on Saturday could not have more diverse pedigrees. One is a filly with world-class bloodlines who won her first stakes in her fifth start. The other is a California-bred gelding bought for a modest sum who has won three stakes in California and throughout the Southwest. The filly Teena Ella is supposed to be a graded stakes winner, considering she is by War Front and is out of the four-time champion Beholder, who was inducted into racing’s Hall of Fame last year. One in Vermillion was a bargain yearling, who won for the first time in California in Saturday’s $98,000 Lazaro Barrera Stakes for 3-year-olds at seven furlongs. Teena Ella, owned and bred by Spendthrift Farm, is Beholder’s first stakes winner and her third foal to race. Beholder’s other foals to race - the gelding Q B One and filly Karin with an I - were winless in six combined starts. Richard Mandella trained Beholder through a career of 18 wins in 26 starts and earnings of $6,156,600. :: Get ready for Santa Anita racing with DRF Past Performances, Picks, and Clocker Reports.  “I like it when they can run,” Mandella said of Beholder’s foals. “It’s disappointing when they can’t.” Teena Ella won the Grade 3 Senorita Stakes for 3-year-old fillies at about 6 1/2 furlongs on the hillside turf course, closing from fourth of six. Teena Ella took the lead in the stretch and held off a late threat from Tom’s Regret to win the $100,500 race by a neck. Teena Ella has won 2 of 5 starts and has raced only in sprints. That will change in coming months when Teena Ella is tried in races at a mile or more on turf, probably during the Del Mar summer meeting that begins in July. “I think it will work,” Mandella said. “She is developing and getting better.” In recent days, an unnamed Bolt d’Oro filly who is out of Beholder arrived at Mandella’s barn and is in training. One in Vermillion has been a delightful overachiever for owner Johnathan Kalman of Phoenix. Kalman selected One in Vermillion at an Arizona yearling sale in 2021, paying $26,000. One in Vermillion is by the Friesan Fire stallion Army Mule and is out of Given Star, the dam of two other winners. “I saw Army Mule and I thought, Let me take a shot on a new sire,” Kalman said on Saturday afternoon. “The mare had a couple of winners on the track. It was in my price range. “I got incredibly lucky.” One in Vermillion has won 4 of 7 starts and earned $242,440. He won the Turf Paradise Open Spring Futurity last May and did not race again until December, when he won the Lost in the Fog Juvenile Stakes at Turf Paradise. Earlier this year, One in Vermillion won the Riley Allison Derby at Sunland Park in January and was fifth in the Grade 3 Sunland Park Derby there on March 26. Any chance of a start in the Kentucky Derby ended with a fifth-place finish in the Grade 1 Santa Anita Derby on April 8. One in Vermillion is trained by Esteban Martinez and was based with California trainer Eric Kruljac for the Santa Anita Derby and a start in the Barrera Stakes. “All we did was put the saddle on him,” Kruljac said in the winner’s circle. Kalman spent part of Sunday morning at Clocker’s Corner at Santa Anita, watching workouts. He said on Sunday that One in Vermillion will be sent to Canterbury Park, where Martinez will be based this summer. A start in the Grade 3 Iowa Derby, a $250,000 race at 1 1/16 miles at Prairie Meadows on July 8, is a long-range possibility. :: Want to learn more about handicapping and wagering? Check out DRF's Handicapping 101 and Wagering 101 pages.