This profile was created using UmaArchive's AI-assisted research pipeline and is awaiting editorial review. It may be updated or expanded before becoming a fully reviewed archive entry.
Facts and copy here come from the latest saved research bundle. Database fields, images, and wording can still change during admin review.
Registered nameKiseki
TrainerYasuyuki Tsujino
OwnerTatsue Ishikawa
BreederShimokobe Farm
Voice actorSeena Hoshiki
Era2010s
Kiseki cuts a striking figure even from the bare facts alone: a Junior Division student of Ritto Dorm, standing 166 cm tall, with a polished, star-ready presence and a weight note cheekily recorded as “Very popular, currently adjusting!” It is the sort of detail that gives her profile a wink of personality without needing any extra embellishment. Her birthday falls on May 13, and in voice, she is brought to life by Seena Hoshiki.
There is a certain easy confidence in the way Kiseki presents herself. She uses Atashi for herself and calls her mentor Trainer-san, a small pair of details that help sketch her tone: personable, modern, and direct, but still properly respectful. She also shares her room with Marche Lorraine, placing her firmly within the everyday bustle of dorm life rather than at some unreachable distance. Even without a fuller official character statement on hand, those touches make her feel immediately present.
Her profile’s network of names hints at a notably connected place in the wider cast. Almond Eye and Vivlos are listed as rivals, while Almond Eye, Marche Lorraine, Kitasan Black, Lucky Lilac, Blast Onepiece, Air Groove, Red Desire, and Forever Young are all noted as related Umas. That gives Kiseki an intriguing aura: not a lone runner, but someone framed by strong company, competition, and a broader constellation of standout names. In particular, the overlap with Almond Eye as both related Uma and rival gives that connection a little extra dramatic weight.
Physically, the archive records her measurements as 86-56-84 and her shoe size as 24.5 cm. These are straightforward data points, but together with her height they reinforce the impression of a well-defined, memorable silhouette. Kiseki’s page may currently be light on officially supported personality notes, likes, and dislikes, yet she still comes across as someone with poise and presence—an Uma Musume whose appeal is already easy to spot.
Relationship radarKisekiThe center icon is the current Uma. Every outer icon is one unique Uma, while the link totals can be higher because one Uma may belong to more than one relationship group.
Unique Umas15
Unique nodes visible in this radar
Total Links16
All relationship links across the radar
Mutual Links0
Two-way links across this web
Read the radarHow to read the radarCloser rings mean tighter links. Gold-glow paths mark mutual links, while softer lines show one-way connections. A Uma that belongs to multiple groups is shown once using sector priority: Stablemates first, then Rivals, then Same Races, then Related. Switch modes to rotate that category into the clearest reading position, then hover or lock a node to see every group it belongs to.
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Kiseki
Touch and smaller layouts use grouped connection cards instead of the live radar. Open any entry to follow the relationship directly.
Feb 28THREE-YEAR-OLD NEWCOMERFinished 5th · at Hanshin · over 1200m- · Hanshin (JP)
Mar 14THREE-YEAR-OLD MAIDENFinished 6th · at Hanshin · over 1200m- · Hanshin (JP)
May 15THREE-YEAR-OLD MAIDENFinished 11th · at Niigata · over 1200m- · Niigata (JP)
Jun 13THREE-YEAR-OLD MAIDENFinished 15th · at Tokyo · over 2400m- · Tokyo (JP)
Dec 112yo DBTFinished 1st · Maiden · at Hanshin · over 1800mMaiden · Hanshin (JP)
Jan 29SAINTPAULIA SHO ALW (1 Win)Finished 5th · Pre-OP · at Tokyo · over 1800mPre-OP · Tokyo (JP)
Feb 26SUMIRE STAKES OPFinished 3rd · OP · at Hanshin · over 2200mOP · Hanshin (JP)
Mar 25MAINICHI HAIFinished 3rd · G3 · at Hanshin · over 1800mG3 · Hanshin (JP)
Jul 153yo+ ALW (1 Win)Finished 1st · Pre-OP · at Chukyo · over 2000mPre-OP · Chukyo (JP)
Aug 05SHINANOGAWA TOKUBETSU ALW (2 Win)Finished 1st · Pre-OP · at Ngt · over 2000mPre-OP · Ngt (JP)
Sep 24KOBE SHIMBUN HAIFinished 2nd · G2 · at Hanshin · over 2400mG2 · Hanshin (JP)
Oct 22KIKUKA SHO (JAPANESE ST.LEGER)Finished 1st · G1 · at Kyoto · over 3000mG1 · Kyoto (JP)
Dec 10Hong Kong VaseFinished 9th · G1 · at Sha Tin · over 2400mG1 · Sha Tin (JP)
Mar 24NIKKEI SHOFinished 9th · G2 · at Nakayama · over 2500mG2 · Nakayama (JP)
Jun 24TAKARAZUKA KINENFinished 8th · G1 · at Hanshin · over 2200mG1 · Hanshin (JP)
Oct 07MAINICHI OKANFinished 3rd · G2 · at Tokyo · over 1800mG2 · Tokyo (JP)
Oct 28TENNO SHO (AUTUMN)Finished 3rd · G1 · at Tokyo · over 2000mG1 · Tokyo (JP)
Nov 25JAPAN CUPFinished 2nd · G1 · at Tokyo · over 2400mG1 · Tokyo (JP)
Dec 23ARIMA KINEN (THE GRAND PRIX)Finished 5th · G1 · at Nakayama · over 2500mG1 · Nakayama (JP)
Mar 31OSAKA HAIFinished 2nd · G1 · at Hanshin · over 2000mG1 · Hanshin (JP)
Jun 23TAKARAZUKA KINENFinished 2nd · G1 · at Hanshin · over 2200mG1 · Hanshin (JP)
Sep 15Prix FoyFinished 3rd · G2 · at Longchamp · over 2400mG2 · Longchamp (FR)
Oct 06Prix de l'Arc de TriompheFinished 7th · G1 · at Longchamp · over 2400mG1 · Longchamp (FR)
Dec 22ARIMA KINEN (THE GRAND PRIX)Finished 5th · G1 · at Nakayama · over 2500mG1 · Nakayama (JP)
Mar 22HANSHIN DAISHOTENFinished 7th · G2 · at Hanshin · over 3000mG2 · Hanshin (JP)
May 03TENNO SHO (SPRING)Finished 6th · G1 · at Kyoto · over 3200mG1 · Kyoto (JP)
Jun 28TAKARAZUKA KINENFinished 2nd · G1 · at Hanshin · over 2200mG1 · Hanshin (JP)
Oct 11KYOTO DAISHOTENFinished 2nd · G2 · at Kyoto · over 2400mG2 · Kyoto (JP)
Nov 01TENNO SHO (AUTUMN)Finished 5th · G1 · at Tokyo · over 2000mG1 · Tokyo (JP)
Nov 29JAPAN CUPFinished 8th · G1 · at Tokyo · over 2400mG1 · Tokyo (JP)
Dec 27ARIMA KINEN (THE GRAND PRIX)Finished 12th · G1 · at Nakayama · over 2500mG1 · Nakayama (JP)
Mar 14KINKO SHOFinished 5th · G2 · at Chukyo · over 2000mG2 · Chukyo (JP)
Apr 25FWD QEII CupFinished 4th · G1 · at Sha Tin · over 2000mG1 · Sha Tin (JP)
Jun 27TAKARAZUKA KINENFinished 5th · G1 · at Hanshin · over 2200mG1 · Hanshin (JP)
Oct 10KYOTO DAISHOTENFinished 3rd · G2 · at Hanshin · over 2400mG2 · Hanshin (JP)
Nov 28JAPAN CUPFinished 10th · G1 · at Tokyo · over 2400mG1 · Tokyo (JP)
Dec 26ARIMA KINEN (THE GRAND PRIX)Finished 10th · G1 · at Nakayama · over 2500mG1 · Nakayama (JP)
Registered nameKiseki
TrainerYasuyuki Tsujino
OwnerTatsue Ishikawa
BreederShimokobe Farm
Voice actorSeena Hoshiki
Era2010s
Kiseki is a Japanese-bred dark bay stallion of the 2010s, foaled on 13 May 2014 and bred by Shimokobe Farm. Racing in the colours of Tatsue Ishikawa and trained from Ritto by Yasuyuki Tsujino, he built his reputation as a high-class staying horse, the kind of runner whose best work came over longer distances. His career earnings in the JRA reached ¥701.40 million, marking him as a durable and accomplished performer at the top level.
His pedigree combines major modern Japanese bloodlines. Kiseki is by Rulership and out of Blitz Finale, a daughter of Deep Impact, giving him a background that strongly suggested quality and stamina. He also came from a productive family: among his siblings is Big Ribbon, later the winner of the 2023 Mermaid Stakes (G3), while Phantom Gray and Humming also became winners. That broader family record adds depth to Kiseki’s own standing as the standout male performer from the immediate line.
The defining moment of his racing career came in 2017, when he captured the Kikuka Sho (Japanese St. Leger), one of Japan’s classic races and the country’s premier test for three-year-old stayers. A Kikuka Sho victory places a horse in select company, and for Kiseki it established the central achievement of his career: he was not just a top-level winner, but a Classic winner over a demanding trip. That success neatly matched the long-distance profile suggested by both his pedigree and later reputation.
Although the available source material here is concise rather than narrative, the bare facts still sketch a horse of real substance: bred carefully, campaigned at the highest level, and successful in one of Japan’s most important Group 1 contests. His earnings and retirement status underline that he remained a significant figure in the racing scene beyond a brief flash of promise. The source material also supports his later role as a stallion, extending his influence from the racecourse to the breeding shed.
In historical terms, Kiseki’s place in the Japanese turf record rests above all on that Kikuka Sho triumph. For many horses, one major race defines the legacy, and in his case it was a Classic that rewards toughness, stamina, and class in equal measure. As a retired G1-winning stallion from a strong modern pedigree, he remains a notable representative of his generation.