Make It Big will be chasing after Kentucky Derby points on Friday night, when the unbeaten stakes winner makes his two-turn debut in the $400,000 Springboard Mile at Remington Park. The race closes the meet, and it anchors a card that features five stakes worth a combined $740,000. Make It Big, who is in from Gulfstream Park, is one of five shippers in the nine-horse Springboard Mile. “The cooler weather has given him a little kick,” trainer Saffie Joseph Jr. said. The Springboard Mile’s first four finishers will earn Kentucky Derby points on a scale of 10-4-2-1 – provided the horses are not racing on the diuretic Lasix on Friday. There are some 2-year-olds whose connections have chosen to run on Lasix. If they finish in the top four, the points will be forfeited, according to an official with Churchill Downs. The Springboard Mile is the centerpiece of a 13-race card and part of a late pick four that has a minimum guaranteed pool of $200,000. The 50-cent bet runs on races 10-13. The Springboard Mile goes as the 12th and has a scheduled post of 10:28 p.m. Central. Make It Big’s rivals include fellow stakes winners Concept, who captured the $75,000 Kip Deville in September at Remington Park; Bye Bye Bobby, winner of the $50,000 Zia Park Juvenile in his career debut in November; and Rowdy Rascal, an Oklahoma-bred stakes winner at a mile at Remington. :: DRF Bets players get free Daily Racing Form Past Performances and up to 5% weekly cashback. Click to learn more. Make It Big won his career debut by 8 1/2 lengths in a seven-furlong maiden special weight for Florida-breds at Gulfstream Park in October. He returned at the same distance Oct. 30 at Gulfstream, and again defeated Florida-breds while winning the $60,000 Ocala Stud Juvenile Sprint by 2 1/4 lengths. “He acts like he wants to go two turns,” Joseph said. “It’s a big test. Obviously, they have to do it first. Until they do it, you never know. But he acts like more distance shouldn’t be a problem.” Make It Big is a son of Neolithic who races for Red Oak Stable. Edgard Zayas has ridden the horse in both of his starts, but Jose Ortiz will have the mount Friday as Zayas recently had shoulder surgery. Make It Big will break from post 2. “His first race, I thought he would come from behind and he showed speed, went wire to wire,” Joseph said. “The second race, he didn’t break that good from the one hole and came from behind. He’s shown the ability to adapt, which is a good thing.” The other invaders for the Springboard Mile are Kentucky maiden winners Osbourne, who gets the services of Julien Leparoux, Rich Strike, and Classic Moment. Juvenile fillies in Trapeze Golden Sights will make her first start for new connections in the $100,000 Trapeze, a mile race for 2-year-old fillies. The field of 12 includes Hits Pricey Legacy, who won at the distance last out when defeating fellow Oklahoma-breds in the $75,000 Slide Show. Golden Sights comes off a maiden special weight win Oct. 15 at Keeneland. She rolled by 5 1/2 lengths and was flattered when two horses she defeated came back to win their next starts at Churchill Downs. “She was a private purchase,” trainer Brad Cox said. “We didn’t have her then, but she was purchased off her last race at Keeneland and we like her. We thought about an allowance race. We had her nominated to this race, it looked like she’d be competitive. It’s an opportunity to get some black type – and if all goes well, maybe become a stakes winner.” Martin Garcia has the mount from post 9. She’s All In a family affair She’s All Wolfe will make her first appearance in the $100,000 She’s All In, a stakes named for her dam. The mile and 70-yard race for fillies and mares drew a competitive cast that includes Casual, a daughter of Grade 1 winner Lady Tak who gets the services of Jose Ortiz. :: Get Daily Racing Form Past Performances – the exclusive home of Beyer Speed Figures.  She’s All In earned more than $1.1 million in her career, and her impact on Remington included four consecutive wins in the track’s Oklahoma Classics Night Distaff. Her daughter, She’s All Wolfe, has won the last two runnings of that race and is moving back into open company for the She’s All In. She’s All Wolfe comes off a runner-up finish in an Oklahoma-bred allowance over seven furlongs on Nov. 27 at Remington. “I think she’s a better two-turn horse,” said Donnie Von Hemel, who trains She’s All Wolfe and who trained She’s All In. “The seven-eighths, it was an opportunity. She kind of had a wide trip that day, and lost a photo. A mile, a mile and a sixteenth, is probably a better race for her.” She’s All Wolfe races for her breeder, Robert Zoellner, who also bred and raced Grade 3 winner She’s All In. “I think her mother did get better as she got older,” Von Hemel said. “Her 5-year-old, 6-year-old year were her best years. [She’s All Wolfe] has that in her favor.” As for She’s All In, she has an unraced 2-year-old Gun Runner colt named Bolzy who could debut mid-meet at Oaklawn, Von Hemel said. ◗ Sunday Flashback goes for her fifth straight win in the $70,000 Useeit for 3-year-old Oklahoma-bred fillies at a mile. Number One Dude goes for his fifth stakes win in the counterpart, the $70,000 Jim Thorpe.