A businessman who is not willing to be lonely, from bicycle parts maintenance, to selling cars, to operating horses, he is the epitome of an entrepreneur's struggle, a hero who works hard, and his own experience has become a strong support and encouragement for his speech. In the 1930s, the United States was in the shadow of the Great Depression, and that's when the story began. This is a true story. Charles Howard was a former bicycle mechanic who made money by bringing cars to the American West. He bought a tiny horse called Seabiscuit, which translates directly to mean ocean biscuit. Howard and the half-blind former boxing champion Red Pollard and tom Smith, a former performer, formed a group to train his little man for horse racing, with Pollard as jockey and Smith as trainer. Ocean Biscuit and its three-person team embark on a legendary journey, and the path of the three people's lives has changed. Before this, all three people seemed to be losers in life for their own reasons, abandoned by family and friends, unable to realize their ideals. Howard made his fortune from the car trade, his son was killed in a traffic accident, his wife demanded a divorce; Pollard grew up riding horses, and his family let him wander around after losing everything; Smith was a cowboy who could tame any violent wild horse, but he also wandered everywhere and had nothing to turn for. Their horse ocean biscuits are also similar to their owners, and they are the losers in horse racing, not only are they smaller than ordinary horse racing, but they also look like they have leg problems. But when the three men began to train the seemingly hopeless horse, the man and the horse's perseverance were revealed, and their tenacity and victory gave hope to the whole country in that gray age.
