Manzelmann is hopeful Hutchinson would pay the late entry fee if he can make it back-to-back triumphs this week.
“I am sure if he does happen to win on Saturday night, Richard would not be scared to pay the late entry fee,” the top reinsman said.
“To have a runner in the Inter Dominion, that is what everyone aims to do.”
In a previous incarnation of the gelding’s career, he was an Inter Dominion Finalist.
He qualified for the 2018 decider with previous trainer Andy Gath.
Now, at 12 years of age, he is racing in nearly career best touch.
The veteran conditioner - Hutchinson - thinks the secret to his breakthrough Group winner is keeping the old gelding in positive spirits.
“He is a handy horse but he just has a bit of age on him,” Hutchinson said.
“That is why he is racing so well, because he is happy.
“He waits for me at the gate every morning for me to come and jog him.
“I think having them as happy horses is what I try and do with all of them.
“I am having a pretty good run at the moment and if you can get all your ducks in a row so they are happy, that is the answer to it all.
“Anyone can get horses fit but it is about getting horses wanting to be there and wanting to do the racing.”
Hutchinson has 11 standardbreds in work, of which two are trotters.
He rarely backs his own runners but had a small dabble at the massive $126 odds on offer last week.
The trainer and breeder thought his old square gaiter was a much better chance in the race than the price suggested and Kingdom Come did the rest.
The driver of the veteran thought the same.
“He is just one of those horses that is there all the time and he is always waiting his turn for the right run,” Manzelmann said.
“Everything worked out.
“He did not deserve to be the price he was; he was going better than that before Saturday.”
In his younger days, Hutchinson dreamed of racing a standardbred like champion Maori’s Idol after watching him in person at Albion Park.
It has taken him a long while to even get trotters in his barn with Hutchinson only preparing a handful across his career – including two under his watch currently.
“The best horse I have ever seen in my life and the most beautiful horse I have ever seen was Maori’s Idol,” Hutchinson said.
“Subconsciously I have always thought that I would love to have a trotter one day, it has taken a long time for that to happen, because Maori’s Idol raced back in the 1970s.
“But, I finally got there.
“They are completely different going horses but it is a buzz.
“I did not think I would be getting a buzz like this with a horse at this stage of my life.”
With Manzelmann suspended, Narissa McMullen takes the seat from the one draw on Saturday night.
“It is something you never really see and something you would never see in the thoroughbred code,” Manzelmann said of a 12-year-old winning a Group race.
“In harness it will become more common and with a horse like him, he did not start racing until he was older so he has not been around for that long in races.”