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Working through the grief

Ex-Barbaro trainer plots new course sans gifted horse

Posted: Saturday April 14, 2007 8:47PM; Updated: Saturday April 14, 2007 8:47PM
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Michael Matz, who trained the late Barbaro last year, says,
Michael Matz, who trained the late Barbaro last year, says, "There was something about him that will never be forgotten."
AP
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LEXINGTON, Ky. -- Michael Matz seems a little older this year. That description does not denigrate Matz. At 56, he still appears at least a decade younger than his birth certificate claims. His hips and shoulders are impossibly slim, as if time has spared his equestrian's body; his eyes are still a piercing blue. Maybe it's just the subject matter that has aged him.

"Last year was a hard year, no doubt about that,'' says Matz, as he stands in a cool morning sunlight outside his barn at Keeneland Race Course. Last year, in 15 words: Barbaro. Kentucky Derby romp. Preakness breakdown. Life-saving surgery. Worldwide outpouring of support and, ultimately, grief. If you are a reader who needs more explanation, you wouldn't have started viewing this story in the first place.

Between late April and early June, no fewer than three documentaries will premiere (NBC, HBO and an independent production, "The First Saturday in May,'' which premieres this week at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York) that feature the Barbaro saga as either all or part of their content. In each of these, Matz will earnestly -- and honestly -- pour out his heart, effortlessly playing his role: Grieving Trainer.

It has been exhausting, but Matz has the benefit of sincerity. He loved Barbaro and suffered with him. "There was something about him that will never be forgotten,'' says Matz. "His heart, his fight ... whatever it was. The fact that he never gave up. But people saw something in him.''

Here Matz smiles with lips pursed. That's the way he always smiles, as if holding a little something back. "Of course the racing industry is not going to stop and wait for me to get over him,'' Matz says. "The business is going to go on. Life is going to go on.''

In that vein, Matz has a shot at returning to Churchill Downs on the first Saturday in May. He trains a three-year-old named Chelokee, who finished a hard-luck third in the March 31 Florida Derby (Chelokee was checked in traffic at the quarter-pole and re-started). There is little doubt that Chelokee is among the best three-year-olds in training, but the Kentucky Derby is limited to 20 starters; and if more than 20 enter, the field is determined by earnings in graded stakes races. Chelokee, who earned $100,000 for finishing third in the Florida Derby (his only start in a graded stakes race), is very much on the bubble.

"It's a very funny situation,'' says Matz. "I do think this horse has a very good chance to win if he gets in. I really do. But he has to get in.''

Chelokee talk is a respite for Matz, a chance to be just a trainer again. Barbaro's story has thrust Matz into a position that is unlike almost any thoroughbred trainer in history. Yet the experience is not so new for him. Before he was Barbaro's Famous Trainer, he was an Olympic Medalist and before that he was a Plane Crash Hero, having helped three young children escape from a burning wreckage in 1989 in an Iowa cornfield. Most people are defined once in their life. Matz is at three and counting.

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