‘Solid Guy’ Matt Chew Off To A New Life Outside Racing

He didn't think he'd ever do it, but now he knows he will. Matt Chew, a man born and bred to be a racetracker, is going to walk away from the racetrack when the Del Mar meeting ends on Labor Day.

It's his choice and he's good with it.

“The last while it's just become clear to me that the time is right,” says the 60-year-old trainer who has been getting up at 3:30 in the morning for more than 40 years to greet racehorses in barns up and down California. “I'm not fully sure what I'm going to do – the racetrack is so consuming you don't get a chance to think about anything else – but I've got some ideas and I'm willing to try new things.”

To say the racetrack is in his blood is like saying that seals have slick on their backs. His father, Richard, was a horse trainer all his life. His grandfather, William, the same.

He grew up in Arcadia with Santa Anita as a backdrop. The siren's call was strong early on: he remembers climbing over the racetrack fence at age 15 when the track was closed and the horses were away just so he could walk among the barns and fantasize. When he'd finished high school he headed north to the Bay Area for his first job/love: assistant trainer to his father.

He watched, he learned, he experienced. Yup, this is it, he thought. And in 1982 he took out a license, hung out a shingle and started a life as a conditioner of Thoroughbreds.

That first year he had 90 starters, saw 18 of them win, 16 finish second and 10 run third while earning $172,032 in purses. Not bad for the new kid on the block, not bad at all. Almost four decades later he has sent 4,023 horses to the post, has seen 399 of them win, 417 finish second and 442 run third with purses totaling $9,374,621.

Those are good, steady numbers, the kind that reflect what Matt Chew is and has been over the years: one of the racetrack's solid guys. He's a backbone type. Folks like Chew – and those like him at any racetrack – are why those racetracks run. Without the “small” trainers – men and women handling four, eight, 12, 16 head – racing secretaries could not fill cards and the show would grind to a halt.

Right now, for instance, he has a dozen horses and they'll all go to other trainers and have good homes shortly. He wouldn't let it be any other way.

“The best part of this game is the mornings with the horses,” Chew offers. “I love coming to the barn and seeing each one of them. They're not there trying to sell you anything; they don't have agendas. They're honest. How they present themselves is how they are.”

He says he's liked nothing better than working with a horse who had some problems, getting them “right” and allowing them to run to their best ability. “That's especially rewarding,” he notes.

He's had several exceptional horses along the way and one that's close to his heart is a filly named Singing Kitty that he claimed for $32,000, then guided through a campaign that saw her win a trio of stakes and almost $400,000. “You remember those kind,” he says.

He's also had owners that have stuck with him through thick and thin. He mentions a Northern California lady named Lyn McDonald who raced horses with him for more than 30 years. He notes the Nicolas family – the father named Pierre and the son Matt – who have sent the Chews – both his father and himself – horses for 50 years. He was especially pleased when he won a straight maiden race on the turf earlier in the current meet for the son with an Irish-bred named Tallien.

Another who has stuck with him is a lady named Candace Coder-Chew. She was working for the Anderson Ranch near Sacramento where he used to send horses on occasion when he was training up north. They actually met over the phone, finally got to dating six months later, then wound up getting hitched. Ten days ago they celebrated 35 years of being married.

Candace, known as “Candy” to many, is an exceptional graphic artist and was offered a job at Santa Anita in 1993. It was an excellent opportunity and she and Matt decided – even though they were living and working in the Bay Area — they had to go for it.

“It was too good a situation for her – and us – to pass up, so I dispersed a barnful of horses at Bay Meadows and returned 'home' to Santa Anita,” Matt says. “Went from 25 head to rubbing one on my own.”

The switch has worked out well for the Chews. Candace is now director of print and graphics for Santa Anita and Matt went from one horse to a regular rotation of 10 to 20 runners each year in Southern California.

And it appears their next steps will work out well, too.

Along the way the Chews acquired a four-bedroom home on 18 pristine acres alongside Hayden Lake in Idaho, just a couple of miles north of Coeur d'Alene. There's a barn going in for horses and plans for it to be Matt's headquarters for a special program he has in mind.

“I've seen how exceptional it can be for kids with special needs to interact with horses,” he says. “For veterans suffering with PTSD, too. That's what I want to get involved in up there. I'll either join up with someone doing that or start my own program.”

There should be no problem getting the horses. Candace, a passionate horsewoman, last year was elected president of the board of CARMA (California Retirement Management Account), a program that has facilitated the successful efforts in the state to retrain, rehome and retire thousands of racehorses.

So shortly, Matt is headed north and Candace will stay steady with her work at Santa Anita and CARMA. He'll have regular chances to head south and take in the old stomping ground. She'll have her chances to head north and escape to the woods. They think it will be a nice blend.

As he prepares to head off to a new life, Chew was asked what he considers his “best moment” during his years at the racetrack. His answer is a beautiful one and tells you all you need to know about the man he is.

Chew has always been the “go to” guy when racetracks have needed a horse for something outside of the usual. When a TV station asked for a horse for a news piece or a feature or a backdrop, he was there with one of his. If you needed to take some visitors on the backside to see how it works, you went to the Chew barn. He would readily stick one in a trailer and take it downtown somewhere to be part of a special event.

So it was around the time when they were filming the movie “Seabiscuit” at Santa Anita in the early 2000s and the Chew barn was involved in providing horses for the various scenes. He had one horse they nicknamed “Fred” who was one of “Seabiscuit's” stand-ins.

“'Fred' was bulletproof; wouldn't hurt a fly,” Chew recalled. “We were working then with a group from Pasadena called Ability First that aided the developmentally disabled. They'd bring their people over and let them interact with the horses. Candy and I brought 'Fred' into the paddock one morning and when we did I saw this young boy – maybe 11 or 12 – looking at him real hard. So I went over and handed him the shank. He took it and started walking with the horse, talking to him and telling him how pretty he was and what a great horse he was; he was just having a total conversation with him.

“Candy meanwhile looks over and sees three adults in the middle of the walking ring and their jaws are dropped; they look almost horrified. She realizes that they are with the young boy and she begins to apologize. 'I'm sorry,' she says. 'My husband does these kind of things. We really should have asked permission before he gave him the horse.'

“One of women – it turned out to be the boy's mother – was sobbing. She finally told Candy that 'Austin doesn't talk.' It turned out her son was technically what they call non-verbal autistic. He had been through a traumatic incident several years back and since then had not said a word – until that day.

“So winning races is great, of course, but something that powerful is beyond special.”

Del Mar – and racing in California – is going to miss Matt Chew. His kind of solid is the foundation that all good things are built on. But Matt Chew is off to a unique new life that is going to be full of new challenges and new rewards.

And racetrackers everywhere salute him for it.

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Jack And Noah Gives Casse First Win Of Saratoga Meet In Wednesday’s Mahony Stakes

Gary Barber's Jack and Noah broke alertly and never looked back, wiring an eight-horse field by drawing away to a 3 1/4-length victory in Wednesday's $85,000 Mahony for sophomores at Saratoga Race Course.

Hall of Fame trainer Mark Casse entered the second running of the Mahony winless during the summer meet but tallied nine runner-up finishes. Jack and Noah finally eliminated the goose-egg for his conditioner, rocketing to the front under Hall of Fame jockey John Velazquez from the outermost post and building a six-length lead on the field with the opening quarter-mile in 21.50 seconds on the Mellon turf course labeled firm.

Jack and Noah registered the half-mile in 43.55 and built a 7 ½ length-edge at the three-eighths mark. In the stretch, Competitive Saint made up some ground, but the pacesetter was never seriously challenged, completing 5 ½ furlongs in a final time of 1:01.28.

Jack and Noah won for the second time in his three starts, building on a one-length score in the six-furlong Sir Cat in June at Belmont Park. The gray son of Bated Breath set the pace last out before tiring and finishing fifth in the Grade 3 Quick Call on July 24 at Saratoga. A month later, the French bred responded to a return engagement on the track by winning for the fourth time in eight starts overall.

“He was out of there right from the start,” Velazquez said. “Last time, the track was a little bit soft, so it took him a couple of strides to get out of the gate. Today, the track had a little more grip to it, so he got a nice grip coming out of there. All the way around the turn, I knew he was going well. I was just hoping that down the stretch things would go our way, and they did. I was proud of the horse's effort.”

Casse earned his first victory with his 32nd starter of the meet, with the 5-1 selection returning $12 on a $2 win bet. Jack and Noah improved his career earnings to $216,300.

“We didn't tell Johnny too much. He's been here before and has a game plan going in,” Casse assistant Jamie Begg said. “Last time, he missed the break, but the turf was also a little soft, so when he needed to run last time, he struggled a bit through the softer turf. The turf has been a lot better recently, so we were confident going in and as soon we saw Johnny break on top like that, I knew we were away to the races.”

Earlier in the meet, Casse came close in graded stakes company, finishing second with Got Stormy in Saturday's Grade 1 Fourstardave, Tap It to Win in the Grade 1 H. Allen Jerkens on Whitney Day, August 1, and with Make Mischief in the Grade 2 Adirondack on August 12.

“It's one of those things where if we had a few wins, we'd be having a decent enough meet,” Begg said. “We've been pretty consistent with the graded horses hitting the board. We just needed to get one and having it be in a stake with a horse coming back is pretty good.”

Competitive Saint, making his stakes debut after starting his career 2-for-2 for trainer George Weaver, finished 1 ½-lengths in front of Buy Land and See for second.

Island Commish, Flap Jack, 9-5 favorite Maven, Old Chestnut and Power Up Paynter completed the order of finish. Cajun Casanova and Turned Aside scratched, as did main-track only entrant Sky of Hook.

Live racing resumes Thursday at Saratoga with a nine-race card that features the $85,000 Smart N Fancy older fillies and mares going 5 1/2 furlongs on turf in Race 7 at 4:41 p.m. First post is 1:10 p.m.

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Nearly 40 Horses Need New Homes After West Virginia Trainer Killed In Motorcycle Accident

West Virginia-based Thoroughbred trainer Leslie Condon was killed when struck head-on in a motorcycle accident on Aug. 20, leaving behind nearly 40 horses in need of new homes. According to racingbiz.com, Condon's longtime friend Diana McClure is coordinating the care of those horses, and has set up a GoFundMe account to pay expenses while dispersal is arranged.

Condon has seven horses in training, six of which she owned herself. Trainer Sherry Lee Jackson has taken over the duties on Condon's horses at the track.

Another 31 horses were located at Condon's farm, including the stallion Weave It To Me (Bernardini), whose first foals are 3-year-olds this year.

“Leslie's horses were her passion and her life,” wrote McClure on the GoFundMe page. “We are asking for and will be so grateful for donations to help care for Leslie's beloved horses as we find homes for all of them.”

Read more at racingbiz.com, and the GoFundMe page is available here.

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‘He’s What Ellis Park Was About’: James ‘Pops’ Schmitt Passes At Age 85

James E. Schmitt, known by everyone as Pops, became as much a fixture in trainer John Hancock's barn as soybeans in the Ellis Park infield.

When Pops died Aug. 19 at age 85 at his Evansville home, it left a hole in Hancock's stable and all their hearts.

Pops, a Marine veteran who served in the Korea, had a hello and a smile for everyone — also a few bucks if you were down on your luck. He put you in a good mood just seeing him walking or holding a horse, getting coffee in the track kitchen, up at the races or in Ellis Park's gaming area. He loved all that is good about horse racing, the beauty and nobleness of the Thoroughbred, the basic premise of seeing who has the fastest horse to the wire and the camaraderie in a barn working together to get a horse to the starting gate.

Pops retired in 1994 after 30 years with Alcoa. After his beloved wife of 50 years, Nancy Gay, passed away in 2006, Pops headed to the racetrack full-time to keep busy.

“He's what Ellis Park was about,” said John Hancock, who also referred to Pops as Jim. “When I was a kid growing up, he had three boys and my mom had three boys. His boys were the same age as me and my brothers. We all grew up together. Jim would go to the races everywhere. When his wife died of cancer, he said, 'I'm coming to the barn.' He was with me ever since. Everywhere I went, he was with me. I never saw anybody enjoy racing and the people like he did. We'd be pulling in the back gate at Presque Isle and he'd see somebody he knew and holler.

“It sounds corny, but he's probably the most-liked person I've seen ever. Never had a bad day. Never left mad. Other than my mom, he was my biggest fan. When times were tough and things weren't going right, he'd always walk up and say, 'Hey, the Man Upstairs won't give us more than we can handle. We'll bounce back.'”

Dana Hancock, John's assistant and niece, knew something was wrong when Pops wasn't at the barn by 5:30 in the morning of Aug. 19. He subsequently was discovered in his bed, as if he'd laid down for nap and never woke up.

“Pops always was the first one there every morning, turning on lights at the barn,” John Hancock said. “He'd go on and feed. I don't care if there was a foot of snow on the ground at Riverside Downs. He'd make his way across the bridge” from Evansville.

Pops sporadically had a horse he trained but never made it into the winner's circle until 2015. “He always wanted to win a race,” Hancock said.

So Hancock set him up with a horse who happened to be named Uncle Jimmy, a coincidence that delighted Pops. Uncle Jimmy won a 2-year-old maiden race at Mountaineer to give Pops the only victory of his limited training career.

“That was a big deal for him,” Hancock said. “Here's a horse named Uncle Jimmy, and Jimmy Schmitt saddled him.

“He did everything for me. He'd keep up with the feed. When it was time to order feed, he'd order it and go get it. I went to make the order the other day and didn't know what I was doing because he'd done it for some many years. He walked horses in the barn. You name it, he did it. Like this morning, we needed to get a load of hay. I told Dana, 'Get Pops and Sammy,' and I caught myself. Wherever I went, you'd see him right beside me. He loved going to the sales. He loved running horses at Beulah Park in the winter. He just loved the people. When Beulah Park closed, that really bothered him.

“I bought an old horse one time called Smoking Kay. Pops, one of my owners and I split her up three ways. We won five in a row before they claimed her. Pops really liked that old mare. At the time Beulah Park was giving away their horse of the meet award. She got the award. They called and wanted to know if I could come up. I said no, and Pops said, 'Do you mind if I go get it?' They gave him a leather halter, a blanket and a bag of carrots. He still has that blanket and that halter. It never went on another horse.

“You won't ever find another one like him.”

Schmitt is survived by his sons, Jimmy Schmitt (Sandy) and Duwayne Schmitt (Lisa); sisters, June Folz (Al) and Clara Lilly (Dave); grandchildren, Charish Draper (Joshua), Cody Schmitt, Jason Schmitt, Brian Schmitt, Jamie Schulte (Chris), Taylor Madison (Donavon), Austin Schmitt, Lindsay Brodasky (Tom), and Kyndel Dollison; 10 great grandchildren; and many nieces and nephews. He was preceded in death by his parents; loving wife of 50 years, Nancy Gay (Kneir) Schmitt; and son Jeffrey Schmitt, who passed away in 2020.

A Mass of Christian Burial will be held at 12:00 p.m. Central, Tuesday, Aug. 25 at St. Joseph Catholic Church, 618 East Virginia Street, Evansville. Burial will be in Park Lawn Cemetery where the American Legion Kapperman Post 44 will render full military rites.

Friends may visit from 9:00 a.m. until 11:00 a.m., Tuesday, Aug. 25 at Boone Funeral Home East Chapel, 5330 Washington Ave., Evansville.

Memorial contributions can be made to the American Diabetes Association at 3700 Bellemeade Avenue, Evansville, IN 47714 or Arthritis Foundation at 615 North Alabama Street, Indianapolis, IN 46204.

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