Same races
Same Races
4 shared rivals
Latest: Sprinters' Stakes · 1991-12-15
Latest: Mile Championship · 1991-11-17
Latest: Mile Championship · 1991-11-17
Latest: Sprinters' Stakes · 1991-12-15
Uma profile
K.S.Miracle is the kind of Uma Musume who makes a quiet impression and then leaves it lingering. A Senior Division student from Ritto Dormitory, she carries herself with a gentle, polite air—but there is a memorable twist to her voice: she refers to herself as ore. That contrast says a lot about her charm. She is soft-spoken, kind, and calm, yet there is real grit beneath the courtesy.
Her story is shaped by resilience. K.S.Miracle is described as having been in frail health since childhood, with a small appetite, and much of her drive comes from a heartfelt wish to keep running for the sake of the people who supported her. That makes her easy to root for: not a thunderous showboat, but a quietly determined runner whose perseverance gives her presence a special weight. “Miracle” suits her well—not just as a nickname, but as a feeling that follows her.
Visually, she has a delicate, refreshing look: light blue short hair, distinctive yellow ear covers, and a compact 156 cm frame. Her listed measurements are 79-51-77, with a note of Slim, and even small details like her L22.5 cm / R22 cm shoe size help paint the picture of a character built more on poise and tenacity than sheer force. She is voiced by Hinata Sato, whose performance helps sell that blend of warmth and quiet strength.
Her relationships place her among some notable company. Daiichi Ruby is especially close in her profile orbit—described as both a friend and rival, and listed here as her roommate as well. Yamanin Zephyr also appears among the friends concerned for her health, while Daitaku Helios joins Ruby and Zephyr on her rival list. There is an appealing tension in that setup: K.S.Miracle may seem fragile at first glance, but she stands in the same competitive space as some striking personalities and holds her place there through sheer resolve.
She is based on the real racehorse K.S.MIRACLE, and that sense of reality-grounded struggle comes through strongly in her characterization. K.S.Miracle is not framed as flashy so much as deeply earnest: a gentle racer with a stubborn core, memorable precisely because she keeps going.
Touch fallback
K.S.MiracleTouch and smaller layouts use grouped connection cards instead of the live radar. Open any entry to follow the relationship directly.
Same races
4 shared rivals
Latest: Sprinters' Stakes · 1991-12-15
Latest: Mile Championship · 1991-11-17
Latest: Mile Championship · 1991-11-17
Latest: Sprinters' Stakes · 1991-12-15
10 total · 10 linked
3 total · 3 linked
1 total · 1 linked
3 profiles
1 profile
K.S. Miracle was one of the brightest young sprinters of the early 1990s, a bay colt foaled on 16 May 1988 and bred by Shizunai Yoshiba Farm in Hokkaido. He raced in the colours of Keiji Kawai and was trained by Katsuhiko Nakamura. By Starlift out of K.S. Lady, with Moulton as his damsire, he inherited a pedigree that favoured speed and proved ideally suited to Japan's top sprint races.
Although his racing career lasted only a short time, K.S. Miracle showed exceptional talent. From 9 career starts, he recorded 5 victories, 1 second, and 1 third, earning ¥247,684,400. He began racing as a two-year-old in late 1990, winning on debut before quickly establishing himself among the country's leading young sprinters.
His three-year-old season in 1991 demonstrated his true ability. After several consistent performances against top-class company, he captured the Opal Stakes before producing an impressive victory in the Swan Stakes (GII) over 1,400 metres at Kyoto Racecourse. Facing an elite field that included the outstanding mare Daiichi Ruby, K.S. Miracle accelerated strongly in the closing stages to claim the biggest victory of his career.
He followed that performance with a courageous third-place finish in the Mile Championship (GI), again meeting Daiichi Ruby. The pair developed one of the memorable rivalries of the season, with each proving among Japan's finest turf sprinters and milers.
K.S. Miracle entered the 1991 Sprinters Stakes (GI) as one of the race favourites. Tragically, around the final bend he suffered a catastrophic fracture to his left foreleg. Jockey Yutaka Okabe immediately pulled him up, resulting in the only Did Not Finish (DNF) of his career. The injury was beyond repair, and K.S. Miracle was humanely euthanised shortly afterwards at just three years of age.
Although his career was painfully brief, K.S. Miracle left a lasting impression on Japanese racing. His remarkable speed, determination, and rivalry with Daiichi Ruby ensured he remained fondly remembered by racing fans. His story later inspired his portrayal in Uma Musume: Pretty Derby, where his character's storyline respectfully acknowledges the real horse's tragic final race while imagining a future free from injury.
Despite racing for less than a full season at the highest level, K.S. Miracle is remembered as one of the most promising sprinters of his generation. His untimely death at the height of his career remains one of the most tragic moments in modern Japanese racing, and his legacy continues through both racing history and his popular portrayal in Uma Musume.
| Date | Race | Grade | Course | Going | Dist | Pos | Draw | Jockey | Wgt | SP | Time |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1991-12-15 |
Sprinters' Stakes
|
G1 | Nakayama (JP) | Good | 1200 m | - | 13 | Y.Okabe | 55.0 kg | 2.2 | - 0.0 |
| 1991-11-17 |
Mile Championship
|
G1 | Kyoto (JP) | Good | 1600 m | 3 | 11 | K.Minai | 55.0 kg | 4.3 | 1:35.3 |
| 1991-10-26 |
Swan Stakes
|
G2 | Kyoto (JP) | Good | 1400 m | 1 | 7 | K.Minai | 55.0 kg | 12.5 | 1:20.6 |
| 1991-10-05 |
Opal Stakes
|
OP | Kyoto (JP) | Good | 1200 m | 1 | 9 | K.Minai | 53.0 kg | 3.3 | 1:08.4 |
| 1991-09-08 |
Centaur Stakes
|
G3 | Chukyo (JP) | Good | 1200 m | 13 | 11 | K.Minai | 53.0 kg | 3.7 | 1:09.4 |
| 1991-06-22 |
Moiwayama Tokubetsu
|
Pre-OP | Sapporo (JP) | Firm | 1200 m | 1 | 5 | K.Minai | - | 1.1 | 1:09.3 |
| 1991-06-08 |
Ishikari Tokubetsu
|
Pre-OP | Sapporo (JP) | Good | 1200 m | 1 | 2 | K.Minai | 55.0 kg | 3.2 | 1:08.5 |
| 1991-05-11 |
Warabi Sho
|
Pre-OP | Niigata (JP) | Good | 1600 m | 2 | 12 | K.Saeki | 55.0 kg | 1.6 | 1:36.8 |
| 1991-05-04 |
Four-Year-Old Maiden
|
Maiden | Niigata (JP) | Good to Soft | 1400 m | 1 | 9 | K.Saeki | 52.0 kg | 2.0 | 1:23.5 |
| 1991-04-20 |
Four-Year-Old Maiden
|
Maiden | Niigata (JP) | Good to Soft | 1600 m | 2 | 5 | K.Saeki | 52.0 kg | 2.5 | 1:37.2 |
Citations
Imported and enriched race results from supported racing sources.