The Southern Berks News

Schera

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horse racing worlds, is a direct result of his first love, meteorolog­y.

“I was a weather geek from the time I was a little kid,” Schera admitted. “I used to record the weather reports on TV and watch them over and over. The (winter) storm in ‘83 (when Schera’s Robeson Township neighborho­od was blanketed with two feet of snow) and Hurricane Gloria in ‘85 really drew me in.”

After graduating from Twin Valley, where he was a member of the Raiders baseball team, Schera attended Penn State-Berks before moving on to Penn State’s main campus. There, he earned a degree in atmospheri­c sciences and was classmates with current Weather Channel personalit­ies Maria LaRosa and Jen Carfagno.

He began his profession­al career with a twoyear stint at AccuWeathe­r in State College before moving to Baltimore for a gig with Constellat­ion Energy – a company that traded national gas, power, and weather derivative­s. During his five-year tenure there, Schera began to parlay his weather expertise, math acumen and problem-solving skills into a repertoire that made him a successful trader.

In 2006, Schera and another trader moved to Connecticu­t and began to work as a team for Greenwichb­ased hedge fund Tudor Investment Corporatio­n, where his uncanny success in that field has given him the financial freedom to pursue his other dream: horse racing.

*** Schera began following the sport as a teenager, thanks largely to the interest of his mother, Bonnie.

“She used to go to Penn National in the early 90s, and she’d have a stack of Daily Racing Forms sitting around the house. She wasn’t just picking numbers; she was into handicappi­ng.”

Matt’s curiosity got the best of him, and he was hooked for life.

“I started reading the old charts in the back of the Form, and started seeing patterns,” he said. “Forecastin­g weather is a lot about patterns, and maybe that was my strength and I was able to begin to suc-

cessfully predict winners.”

When Schera turned 18, he began to frequent the now-former Penn National Off-Track Wagering facility in Exeter. His favorite horse was Holy Bull, the champion 3-year-old male of 1994.

During his down time in college, Schera continued to pursue his equine passion, following the races on Penn National’s television channel and making periodic commutes from State College to the OTW facility.

“I got really serious about handicappi­ng,” he said. “Back then there wasn’t a whole lot of simulcasti­ng (of nationwide tracks), so I pretty much followed only Penn National. I used to record races with my VCR, and probably had about 100 tapes. After I’d hit the track, I’d go home and pop the tape in, and it was like a coach watching the replay of a game. I’d watch for bad starts, bad trips, speed horses that got caught in a duel. And I kept records and was able to make money. It kind of helped me get through college.”

*** In August of 2013, Schera purchased his first racehorse, Cat Fiftyfive, at the Fasig-Tipton Saratoga sale for selected yearlings.

“I wound up buying two yearlings, but it was like,

‘This is no fun; I can’t run them for another year,’” he recalled.

Schera subsequent­ly attended a horses-of-racingage sale that fall at Saratoga, where he purchased Street Slang – who wound up being his first winner when he took a maiden race at Parx on Nov. 1, 2013.

As a nod to his former profession, many of Schera’s horses are named for weather-related phenomena.

One of them, Cyclogenis­is, became Schera’s first stakes winner by taking the Laurel Futurity at Maryland’s Laurel Park in September of 2014.

Another, Isotherm, ran in last year’s Breeders’ Cup Juvenile at Keeneland Race Course in Lexington, Ky.

And Vorticity finished second in the Grade 3 Jerome Stakes and Grade 3 Withers Stakes – a couple of Kentucky Derby preps – at Aqueduct (N.Y.) in January before an injury forced him to the sidelines until likely late in the year.

Schera’s most accomplish­ed horse thus far is Race Day, who won three graded stakes in 2015 (the Grade 2 Oaklawn Handicap, the Grade 2 Fayette Handicap and Grade 3 Razorback at Oaklawn) before being retired and heading off to the breeding shed this year. Isotherm won the

SUBMITTED PHOTO

Two-year-old colt Berks County is one of Twin Valley graduate Matt Schera’s fleet of horses.

Grade 3 Pilgrim Stakes at Belmont in 2015, and Syntax took the Grade 3 Kent Stakes in 2015 at Delaware Park.

As an owner, Schera has followed his stock virtually all over the country, and even to England, where Cyclogenis­is competed in the Group 1 Commonweal­th Cup Sprint at the prestigiou­s Royal Ascot meet last June.

Schera’s horses have made a total of 620 starts, with 108 victories, 109 second-place finishes and 79 third-place finishes over the past three years. Though his roster swelled as high as 77 last year, Schera admitted he will most likely be paring down the size down the road.

“It’s a tough game,” Schera said. “You’re trying to make a profit, but it’s a really, really hard business to make a profit in. You either hit it big with an American Pharoah (last year’s Triple Crown winner) or you usually lose money. I love it so much, but probably over the next few years I’ll be a little leaner and have a smaller stable. I’m trying to slowly reduce, but it’s hard because I love it so much.”

After notching an impressive five victories at Saratoga last year, Schera has seen his stable already notch five wins through Wednesday and is tied for second in the always-competitiv­e fray for the honor of the meet’s leading owner.

What makes Schera’s accomplish­ments all the more impressive is that he’s largely done it utilizing lesser-heralded, underthe-radar trainers instead of juggernaut outfits such as high-percentage perennial kingpins Chad Brown and Todd Pletcher.

While Race Day was trained by Pletcher, most of Schera’s current stock is divided up between trainers James Lawrence II, George Weaver, Carlos Martin, Mike Pino, Lacey Gaudet and Cathal Lynch.

“Matt has been a big boost to my stable,” Lawrence told Thoroughbr­ed Racing Commentary last year. “He has so much enthusiasm for the game. For someone who has just been in the game a few years, he’s done a lot better than some people who have been in it 20.”

Beeks, trained by Weaver and ridden by Luis Saez, got the ball rolling at Saratoga by winning a maiden special weight sprint on July 29. The next day, Old Upstart, with Jose Ortiz up for Lawrence, took down a claiming sprint.

On Aug. 11, it was the Martin-trained Berks County’s time to shine, as jockey Jose Lezcano was aboard for a stirring last-to-first run down the stretch.

“I thought he had a good chance, but I didn’t know if he’d like the turf,” Schera said. “We knew he worked well with decent horses in the morning (workouts), but we weren’t sure what else was in the race. I knew he’d put a good run in, but I didn’t think he’d run like that. On a scale of 1 to 10, I was expecting a 6, and it was more like a 9.5.”

Zero Zee (named after yet another weather term), trained by Weaver and ridden by Eric Cancel, scored the following day in a maiden special weight turf sprint for fillies. And Wednesday, the Weavertrai­ned Cort went wireto-wire in a turf sprint for jockey John Velazquez.

“The fact that we had two two-year-old, first-out winners in two days was amazing,” Schera said.

With the Saratoga meet heading down the stretch to its Labor Day finish, Schera is just two wins behind of front-runner Klaravich Stables Inc./William Lawrence.

Beeks was nominated to the Aug. 27 Kings Bishop Stakes, while Sup er Allison (named after Schera’s oldest daughter) will try to follow up last month’s New York Oaks victory at Finger Lakes in a statebred stakes on the Aug. 26 New York Showcase Day.

As for Berks County, Schera said he was looking at a possible return in the With Anticipati­on Stakes Aug. 31 if everything works out.

Another win could mean considerat­ion for the Breeders Cup Juvenile Turf at Santa Anita in November. A poor showing, meanwhile, could severely curtail the optimism and expectatio­ns.

In the volatile world of horse racing, much like the weather, you never know what the future might bring. Just ask Schera.

“Never in a million years did I imagine I’d be in this position,” he said. “It was always a dream of mine to own horses. If I hadn’t moved up to Connecticu­t and started trading commoditie­s and done well, I wouldn’t be able to afford this. And I think my weather background was really the key.”

Akey that has unlocked a bright and sunny transition into thoroughbr­ed ownership for Schera.

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