Los Angeles Times

California Chrome gets fans’ love, and he just eats it up

- By John Cherwa

The treats come in daily. The cost is about $20 for a five-pound bag of Mrs. Pastures Cookies for Horses.

In fact, there are so many cookies that those wanting to send this combinatio­n of oats, bran, barley, molasses and apples to this equine superstar are instead asked to address them to nearby horse rescue organizati­ons.

“There are three 50pound buckets of them sitting there and I’m afraid if we get any more they won’t be very good to eat by the time he gets to them,” California Chrome’s co-owner Perry Martin said.

It’s common for horses to like cookies, but California Chrome will eat only one brand — and fans have responded by sending a tsunami of them to his stall at Los Alamitos.

Chrome is a hometown champion — the winner of the Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes — who has garnered a legion of followers like few other California horses of the past.

It’s not just that he came from such humble breeding and then got within one race of winning the Triple Crown.

It’s not just the troubled 4year-old campaign Chrome suffered after he was shipped to England, to Chicago and then to Kentucky without ever running a race. It’s not just that Chrome is still running as a 5-year-old, a time when most champion horses have been sent to the breeding shed.

They’re all part of a bighearted story that has captured the imaginatio­n of horse fans around the world — Chromies, they call themselves, more than 17,000 strong on Twitter.

“We had a lot of people wanting us to ship cookies to Dubai and England,” said Stephanie Brown, co-owner of Mrs. Pastures. “Some even wanted a special cookie made for his fourth birthday. So, we made a special threelayer cookie for him.”

The buckets of cookies sit outside the double-wide stall at Los Alamitos that Chrome’s 78-year-old trainer, Art Sherman, calls a “suite.”

“The Chromies love to come by and see him,” Sherman said.

Martin, owner of Martin Testing Laboratori­es in McClellan, Calif., says people drop by his office to shake his hand and talk about Chrome. “It’s really enjoyable. We get Christmas cards and letters and people always want to send him cookies,” Martin said.

On Saturday, California Chrome will put the wellwisher­s aside and get on the track at Santa Anita and run in his first race since March 28.

His comeback will be in the eighth race, the San Pasqual Stakes, run over 11⁄16 miles. A showdown with Dortmund, undefeated at Santa Anita, was scuttled when a less-than-satisfacto­ry workout caused trainer Bob Baffert to possibly point Dortmund to the San Antonio Stakes on Feb. 9.

“This race, whether we win or lose it, isn’t the goal. It’s Dubai,” Martin said of the $10-million World Cup. “Of course, we would like to win them all.”

California Chrome has one victory in six races since the 2014 Preakness. If all goes well, he will head to the Dubai race to be run March 26 and then look for at least one other race — maybe the Pacific Classic at Del Mar — before finishing his racing career in the Breeders’ Cup Classic at Santa Anita on Nov. 5.

“I doubt England is on the agenda,” Sherman said.

England is where things first went awry for Chrome last year. He finished a nice second in Dubai, earning $2 million, and was shipped to Royal Ascot to run in the Prince of Wales Stakes.

Sherman and former co owner Steve Coburn thought Chrome needed a rest, but Martin thought the opposite and he owned 70%. The day before the race, Chrome was scratched because of a bruised foot and abscess.

“I felt [going to England] was a pretty good plan, and I still do, even knowing more now than I knew then,” Martin said. “What they call a bone bruise is really a misnomer. It’s actually caused by inactivity, which causes a loss of bone density. … The trip to England mitigated it.”

Martin explained that in England, Chrome had a 45minute walk to the galloping area, then the horse would run and follow that with the same walk back to the barn, and it was that exercise that kept the injury from getting worse.

Chrome also lost a lot of weight, which Martin attributed to the English style of training, which forbids the use of Lasix, a diuretic that flushes the system.

“They run them thinner there,” Martin said.

Sherman saw the trip a different way.

“I wasn’t saying I disagreed,” Sherman said. “I just didn’t think it was in the best interest of the horse to run in that race. He just needed some time off.”

Things didn’t improve from there as Chrome headed to Chicago to run in the Arlington Million.

“I remember the day of the flight to the States,” Martin said. “I got five calls that he was nervous on the f light and not taking any water. I had to OK them giving him IV fluids, but he still came out dehydrated.”

As Chrome readied for the Million, a radiograph showed he had bruising on the foot. Sherman said he was being shut down for the year.

“The vet said we could run him in the Million if he were being retired at the end of the year, but we didn’t do it,” Martin said.

Then it was off to Ken tucky for three months of R&R at Taylor Made Farm. The farm bought Coburn’s stake in the horse in July and is set to be Chrome’s new home when he retires from the track and is sent to stud.

“He came off [the rest] really strong,” Sherman said. “He put on 120 pounds.… [The trouble] was a combinatio­n of his feet being bruised and that he wasn’t happy. He missed his surroundin­gs [in the U.S.]. Horses are funny that way. They enjoy the people they know. We spoil them a lot.”

“I was disappoint­ed in his 4-year-old year [season],” Martin said. “If we could get another year, I was in favor of it.”

On this Martin and Sherman agree.

“I think because he missed almost all of last year we could bring him back,” Sherman said. “If we can get lucky and win in Dubai he would be the richest thoroughbr­ed ever. It’s kind of a prestigiou­s thing.”

Chrome has won a little more than $6.3 million. The record-holder is Curlin at around $10.5 million. First place in Dubai pays $6 million.

“It’s a goal,” Martin said. “But it wouldn’t kill me if we didn’t” get the record.

Not a bad career for a horse that came from a $2,500 stud fee and an $8,000 mare. But has all this celebrity changed California Chrome?

“His personalit­y has changed over the years. I miss the old days when he was a yearling and we would go to the pasture. He would recognize us and run over and all the other horses would follow him. He’d stick his nose in my chest. He was always playful,” Martin said.

“Now that he’s a grownup stallion, we have to respect each other’s space. I don’t want to get bit as he’s trying to show everyone who’s boss.”

 ?? Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times ?? CALIFORNIA CHROME won over horse racing fans by rising from humble breeding to win the 2014 Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times CALIFORNIA CHROME won over horse racing fans by rising from humble breeding to win the 2014 Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes.
 ?? Carolyn Cole
Los Angeles Times ?? CALIFORNIA CHROME, left, finished fourth in the 2014 Belmont Stakes, missing the Triple Crown. He races today at Santa Anita in the San Pasqual Stakes.
Carolyn Cole Los Angeles Times CALIFORNIA CHROME, left, finished fourth in the 2014 Belmont Stakes, missing the Triple Crown. He races today at Santa Anita in the San Pasqual Stakes.

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