Retiring Art Sherman To Be Honored By Santa Anita Park On Sunday

Art Sherman, racing's David who slew the game's Goliaths with an unlikely slingshot named California Chrome, will be honored by Santa Anita Sunday on the occasion of his retirement at 84 after a career as a jockey and trainer spanning six decades.

Sherman left the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn when he was seven years old, later fleecing contemporaries in the jocks' room playing gin rummy at old Jamaica Race Course in the late 1950s as the standby rider on the New York circuit, and later still becoming a successful trainer, winning 2,261 races.

In either case, it's been a wild ride.

“There are some things Faye (his wife approaching 60 years) and I want to do, and right now I'm closing down my barn (at Los Alamitos) where I've got a lot of tack and the kids are coming for the holidays,” Sherman said when asked his immediate plans now that the reality of retirement has taken hold.

“I just sold my place in Cypress (near Los Alamitos, Sherman's training headquarters and home of California Chrome during his glory years), so I'm moving out of there. I've got a lot of things on the agenda right now.”

One that fortunately is not, thankfully, is his health.

Sherman, who turns 85 next Feb. 17, had surgery to remove a cancerous tumor from his bladder in March 2019 but is now cancer-free.

“That issue is behind me,” he said, “so that's great.

“I don't know what more I can say about California Chrome. Everything's been written about him. I was on two radio shows recently, one in Kentucky, TVG did a nice piece on me that will be aired before long and (Los Alamitos owner Ed) Doc Allred threw a catered party for me attended by about 100 people.”

Sherman saddled his last horse Dec. 10 at Los Alamitos, 9-1 shot Alchemy finishing seventh under jockey Wayne Barnett, but win or lose, Sherman maintains a level head, a trait which has helped him succeed on a long and daunting road and established him as one of game's most revered ambassadors.

“Art is a great guy who follows the Shoemaker model,” said Brian Beach, former agent for Victor Espinoza who rode California Chrome to victories in the 2014 Kentucky Derby and through 2016 when he won his second Horse of the Year title.

“He doesn't get too high on the highs and too low on the lows, and we had a couple major losses, losing the Belmont in pursuit of the Triple Crown and losing the Breeders' Cup Classic.

“Art was always the same. He never blamed Victor, was easy to deal with and a straight shooter. He's just a lovely man.”

Recalled Sherman: “I've met a lot of nice people all over the world, meeting all the foreign owners and trainers in Dubai, was next to the Queen at Royal Ascot. These are things you will always remember.

“Chrome stands in Japan (at Arrow Stud, 2021 fee for live foal was $36,000) and I've been invited to see him, although this is a bad time to travel.

“Maybe we can go next year if things loosen up a bit, but right now it's a real hassle to travel abroad.”

California Chrome turns 11 on Jan. 1. He won 16 of 27 starts earning $14,752,650 and was viscerally the most popular horse of his generation. Hard to fathom now, but “The People's Horse” is largely credited for luring 72,811 fans to see him run in the Breeders' Cup Classic at Santa Anita on Nov. 5, 2016.

“Things are coming to an end,” Art mused. “We've seen all the best of this game, all the great horses that ran at Santa Anita when I was young, but racing is different now.”

Sherman developed California Chrome into a masterpiece of form and function achieving international success and acclaim, contributing mightily to positive exposure the game sorely needs, and it paid off for him.

And for racing.

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California Series: Art Sherman, Part II

In part one, Art Sherman discussed his foundational years as a horseman and trainer. Here, he talks California Chrome, managing injuries and the evolving nature of the industry.

The large, cobwebbed and straw-scattered stall brimmed floor to ceiling with a pirate's bounty of backstretch riches.

Towers of scrubbed feed buckets, a soldier's row of saddle horses stacked high with sheepskin pads and saddles worn thin at the knees, electric fans lacquered with thick dust, patched-up horse blankets chewed at the shoulders, girth sleeves tossed over doors, bridles and martingales and nosebands enough to equip a cavalry, a thick wedge of stall doors like old metal skeletons, Dali-drooped webbings draped here and there, bundles of rope and re-used feed bags and bottles of vitamins.

All Art Sherman's. All for sale. A livelihood on offer to the highest bidder.

It's fitting, then, that the Los Alamitos display case for these items–two stalls knocked into one–was once home to the horse that did more than any other to enrich a training career that is now at an end after more than four decades at the plough.

“I remember when I went back for the Preakness, a lady that breeds horses there–a big breeder in the Maryland industry–she came up to me and said, 'Art, you don't know what you've done for this business. You made people want to stay in it. It's getting to where, all of a sudden, the little guy's getting pushed out. But you came up with a horse that is the people's horse,'” Sherman said, of his two-time Horse of the Year, California Chrome.

“I'm still getting letters. I got a stack of letters the other day thanking me for all the good times. I didn't realize that many people remembered that horse that much, and from all over the world. Unbelievable.”

In spinning the offspring of an $8,000 mare and a stallion with a $2,500 stud fee into a near $15-million money maker, Sherman performed one of the most remarkable–and quite frankly, satisfying–magic acts in racing.

He didn't achieve it through sleight of hand–the smoke and mirrors of a cosseted campaign engineered to produce maximum rewards from the minimum expenditures. “He just loved to train, loved to run, that horse,” Sherman said. Indeed, California Chrome's competitive resume was busier than any other Kentucky Derby winning colt since 1991.

“He just kept getting better and better and better,” Sherman said. “I didn't expect him to blossom like he did–not into a Kentucky Derby-like horse. Not to begin with. But when I started him as a 3-year-old and he kept winning this one, and another, winning them races. Then…”
Aggressively campaigned, certainly, but judiciously handled when it came to his training, keeping the lid on very much the order of the day. “He was a natural type of horse. I tell you, he'd go a minute and change or 1:01 like–he would do anything like that so easy.”

The virtues of Sherman's less-is-more approach to the mornings can be evinced by the way he tossed tradition aside, deciding not to breeze California Chrome after arriving at Churchill Downs in the lead-up to the race.

“Because I know that track is hard and cuppy, I didn't breeze him. And a lot of the other trainers, they said, 'Well, he didn't even work, so we're not afraid of him.' No, really! Hard-boots think you have to work in :59 to be in with a shout [in the Derby]. I had a lot of apologies after that.”

Apologies would have been forthcoming, too, subsequent to the Derby of 1955, after a wet-behind-the-ears Sherman arrived at Churchill Downs with the Californian trainee, Swaps, and a few unusual tricks up his sleeve as the horse's exercise rider.

“They went crazy when we brought Swaps back there because I got on him and figure-eighted him between the barns bareback,” said Sherman, chuckling at the memory. “We'd do that all the time. I'd jump on them and figure-eight them bareback for about 15 minutes the day after working.”

Later that same year, of course, Swaps and Nashua–the horse Swaps held comfortably at bay in the Derby–met in a fabled match-race at Washington Park, a race Sherman maintains his horse should never have competed in.

“He had a hole in his frog. He had a hole in his frog like that,” Sherman said, making a gob-stopper sized circle with his thumb and fore-finger.

“They cleaned out the frog, put iodine on it, put a leather patch on it which made him go sound. But the pressure of that bad track, you know what I mean, the horse I could tell he wasn't happy on it. He was trying to get out a little bit going into his first turn. And in a match race you have to–look, speed horses always win in a match race.”

That Swaps still performed so credibly, said Sherman, was a testament to how much of a “freak” he was. “He was something else. He was a monster.”

Which leads the conversation to the current regulatory environment in California, where heightened veterinary scrutiny is bound and tied with this Gordian knot of a question: When should an issue be ignored and when should it be addressed?

On the one hand, taken as a whole, California's efforts “are better for the horses,” said Sherman. But then, the sometimes binary nature of the official veterinarian's role–either a horse is allowed to run or it's not, for instance–can mean important context that should underpin diagnostic decision-making gets lost.

“Horses can be arthritic. They're crabby. They're old. Don't just scratch him because you took him out the stall and jogged him for 20 feet and say, 'Oh, well, he looks off to me,'” Sherman said, with the frustration of someone who has spent a lifetime watching equine athletes deal with their requisite aches and pains as imaginatively as their human counterparts.

“When you ask them to run for all they've got, you're going to have horses that are going to have problems. All horses are different,” he said, turning memories from his jockey days. “I've never had a crippled horse fall with me. It's the sound ones I always got hurt on, and that's no lie. Sound ones, they don't protect themselves.”

And so, the question evolves into even more of an intangible: How do you manage horses with different pain thresholds?

“I was riding a horse once–brave horse. Bad knees. He had a knee that you could put your foot on, looked like a step stool,” he said. “After he raced, he laid down for three days. Couldn't get up. They would never let you run these horses now.”
Should a horse like that be allowed to run these days?

“Oh Christ, no,” Sherman replied. Still, Sherman wonders how some of his heavy-hitters would fare if running today.

“He always had quarter cracks. He drove me crazy. Had them all the time, all four feet,” Sherman said of Lykatill Hil, his 13-time stakes winner who ran with aplomb for eight consecutive seasons.

“I never ran a horse with four bar shoes–you never hear that. That's the kind of horse he was. He was just that tough. He ran through anything. When you sent him down there and raced him, you got tied on because he was going to run,” he said.

All too often in horses, however, the spirit may be willing, but the frame is often wanting.

“He was so big and massive, when he hit the ground the vibration from the compaction of the dirt, [his hoof] started splitting into little layers.”
By keeping Lykatill Hil's feet on the softer side of hard, Sherman, once more, abjured tradition.

“We would pack him full of mud, keep him like that all day. Tried to keep his foot soft and not brittle, like he could get. His feet just dried out so bad. It was a challenge.”

“I kept him running for a long time,” Sherman added, proudly.

Talk of the longevity–or not–of the average racing career among modern Thoroughbreds leads to an axe that Sherman is keen to put to the round stone.

“We don't have the older horses like we used to–they were the drawing cards,” said Sherman, who knows a thing or two about the magnetic attraction of the horse.

“You can't stop and breed them horses the minute they make X amount of dollars. You've got to keep them around so we can have stars to play with, you know what I mean? You take the football players and the quarterbacks–they're draws. People come to see these people.”

Another “pet peeve”? The rise in recent decades of the numerical super trainer, which he sees as having bought to the role something of a clinical distance.

In explanation, Sherman tells the story of a friend who had a horse with an unnamed trainer on the East Coast.

“The guy went to [Belmont Park] to see his horse and he said, 'Oh, I thought my horse was here.' The trainer said, “Oh no, we shipped him to Jersey. I'll let you know how he's doing.' So, [the trainer] got on the computer. 'Oh yeah, he just galloped and he's doing really well.'”

“My friend, he shook his head when he was talking to me and he says, 'Boy, that hands-on training is no more, is it?' I said, 'No.'”
Sherman took a moment, glanced through the screen over his office door at a shedrow with more empty stalls than horses.

“I love it when I can just go and see my horses, go through and feed them some cookies and look at them and ask the groom, 'How's the temperature? How'd they eat up last night?' This is something that you see less of these days because you can't when you've got 200-300 to command. You can't do that.

“Our era is the Last of the Mohicans almost, you know what I mean? I'm getting to the point where all my friends are gone now. All the trainers I knew and was raised with and everything, that era is gone. So, I'm kind of the last of the old timers,” he said, not with a sense of nostalgia but with a hard pragmatism.

“It's a fun game. I'm going to miss it. I'm going to miss the horses.”

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Slow Down Andy, Art Sherman Among Highlights For Los Alamitos Winter Meet

An upset by Slow Down Andy in the $300,000 Grade 2 Los Alamitos Futurity, a fifth consecutive win in the G1 Starlet for Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert, and a retirement ceremony for trainer Art Sherman were among the highlights of the seven-day Winter Thoroughbred meet, which concluded Sunday at Los Alamitos Race Course in Cypress, Calif.

A homebred son of 2016 Kentucky Derby winner Nyquist owned by J. Paul Reddam and trained by Doug O'Neill, Slow Down Andy surprised 1-2 favorite the Baffert-trained Messier Dec. 11, ending Baffert's streak of seven wins in a row in the Futurity.

In the Starlet, Eda, the 11-10 favorite, prevailed, continuing a run for Baffert that has seen him win the prestigious race for 2-year-old fillies five of the eight years it has been offered at Los Alamitos.

Baffert also won the meet's other graded race, capturing the $100,500 G3 Bayakoa with favored As Time Goes By for Mrs. John Magnier, Michael Tabor, and Derrick Smith.

The two other stakes were for 2-year-olds bred or sired in California. Professors' Pride went gate-to-wire in the $101,500 Soviet Problem for Larry and Carolyn Samovar's Academic Farms and trainer Eddie Truman while 2-1 second choice Straight Up G led throughout to take the $102,000 King Glorious for owner-breeder Jim Rome's Jungle Racing LLC and trainer Richard Baltas.

Sherman, 84, was honored Dec. 10 minutes after he saddled his last career starter – Chasing Alchemy, who finished seventh in a $50,000 maiden claimer for 2-year-olds. The popular trainer, who has been involved in racing for more than 65 years, finished his career with 2,261 wins. His most famous pupil was two-time Horse of the Year and 2014 Kentucky Derby winner California Chrome, who was based at Los Alamitos for most of his career.

Baffert topped the trainer standings with five victories, one more than Lorenzo Ruiz. It was the 13th meet he has either led or shared the title since daytime thoroughbred racing returned to Los Alamitos in 2014.

Baffert had the most wins (13) for the year at Los Alamitos, combining the Winter meet with the Summer Thoroughbred Festival (June 25-July 5) and the Los Angeles County Fair season (Sept. 10-26). Peter Miller and Steve Miyadi tied for second with 11.

A closing day triple-double enabled Abel Cedillo to win the jockey title, his second in a row locally after taking the LACF meet. The 32-year-old native of Guatemala finished with nine wins, three more than Tyler Baze, apprentices Ricardo Ramirez and Diego Herrera, and Kyle Frey.

For the year at Los Alamitos, Cedillo totaled 35 wins, 14 more than closest pursuer Juan Hernandez. Frey and Herrera shared third with 16.

All sources handle for the Winter meet was up 11% on a comparative basis over 2019, which was also a seven-day season.

Handle at California satellite locations declined 23%, but advance deposit wagering in Southern California increased 61%. “We're pleased with how things went for the days we raced, but disappointed we aren't able to run next week,'' said F. Jack Liebau, vice president of the Los Alamitos Racing Association.

Daytime thoroughbred racing will return to Los Alamitos in 2022. The first of three meets is scheduled to begin Friday, June 24, and will continue through Sunday, July 10.

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Art Sherman Honored At Los Alamitos After Saddling Final Career Starter

Trainer Art Sherman saddled the last runner of his illustrious training career on Friday at Los Alamitos in Cypress, Calif. Unfortunately, he didn't add to his 2,261 career wins as Chasing Alchemy, a 9-1 shot in the $50,000 maiden claimer for 2-year-olds, finished seventh under jockey Wayne Barnett.

Sherman, 84, was honored in a winner's circle ceremony after the race. Best known for training two-time Horse of the Year California Chrome (2014, 2016), Sherman finished with more than $45 million in stable earnings. His first starter was Lady Lenda, who finished fourth in the seventh race at Golden Gate Fields April 4, 1979. Sherman's first victory came later that year when Chase Me Round won a $8,500 allowance Sept. 25 at Bay Meadows.

Chasing Alchemy is a 2-year-old gelded son of California Chrome.

“I appreciate all (Los Alamitos president and chairman of the board) Doc (Edward) Allred has done for me,'' said Sherman, who stabled California Chrome locally for most of his career after the closure of Hollywood Park in 2013. “We've been good friends for a lot of years. We've had a wonderful time. I love the people in Orange County. They've always been close to my heart and I'm going to miss them.

“I got lucky enough to win a Kentucky Derby which is every trainer's dream and winning the (2016) Pacific Classic (at Del Mar) meant a whole lot to me. California Chrome was a once in a lifetime horse.''

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