2015: three-year-old season Kitasan Black began his track career in a contest for unraced three-year-olds over 1800 metres at
Tokyo Racecourse on 31 January 2015 and won by a
length from Mikki Joy and fourteen others. Three weeks later he followed up with a victory in a minor race over 2000 metres at the same track beating Tosen Rasen by about three lengths. The colt was then stepped up to
Grade II level for the Spring Stakes (a trial for the
Satsuki Sho) over 1800 metres at
Nakayama Racecourse on 22 March. He started at odds of
11.3/1 against eleven opponents including
Danon Platina, who had been named
Japanese champion two-year-old colt after winning the
Asahi Hai Futurity Stakes and
Real Steel who had defeated
Duramente in the Grade III Tokinominoru Kinen. Ridden as in most of his races that year by Hiroshi Kitamura he won by a neck from Real Steel, with Danon Platina three quarters of a length back in third place. In the Satsuki Sho over 2000 metres at the same track on 19 April he started the 8.7/1 fourth choice in the fifteen runner field and finished third behind Duramente and Real Steel with the favoured
Satono Crown (winner of the
Yayoi Sho) in sixth place. Following the race his trainer Hisashi Shimizu explained "our horse gave it everything he had and I thought he turned in a good performance. He doesn’t give in easily". On 31 May at Tokyo Racecourse the colt contested the 82nd running of the
Tokyo Yushun over 2400 metres but after racing in second place he dropped away quickly in the last 300 metres and finished fourteenth of the eighteen runners behind Duramente. After a break of almost four months, Kitasan Black returned on 21 September for the Grade II St Lite Kinen (a trial race for the
Kikuka Sho) over 2200 metres. He started at odds of 11.5/1 in a field headed by Satono Rasen who had finished second in the Tokyo Yushun, with the other fancied contenders including the Grade III winners Bright Emblem and Beruf. In a closely contested finish, he won by three quarters of a length and a head from the outsiders Musee Alien and Jun Tsubasa. On 25 October Kitasan Black was partnered by Kitamura when he started at odds of 12.4/1 in an eighteen-runner field for the Kikuka Sho over 3000 metres at
Kyoto Racecourse. The favourite was Lia Fail, the winner of the Grade II
Kobe Shimbun Hai, whilst the other runners included Real Steel, Satono Rasen, Beruf, Bright Emblem, Musee Alien and Jun Tsubasa. After racing in fifth place on the inside, Kitasan Black took the lead early in the
straight and held off the late challenge of Real Steel by a neck with Lia Fail half a length back in third. After the race Shimizu, who was recording his first Grade I win as a trainer, commented "There were concerns over his aptitude for long distances but I wanted to prove that this was wrong, as his form and movements showed that he is suited to long distances. There were horses chasing us on the outside after we took command so I just hoped that he will hold on until the wire." Owner Saburo Kitajima celebrated by serenading the crowd with a rendition of his hit song "Matsurida (It's Festival Time)". On his final appearance of 2015, Kitasan Black was matched against older opponents for the first time when he was one of sixteen horses invited by public vote to contest the
Arima Kinen over 2500 metres at Nakayama on 27 December. Ridden by
Norihiro Yokoyama he finished third behind the four-year-olds
Gold Actor and Sounds of Earth, beaten a length by the winner with
Gold Ship,
Lovely Day,
Marialite, and One and Only (2014 Tokyo Yushun) among the beaten runners.
2016: four-year-old season In 2016, the veteran
Yutaka Take took over as Kitasan Black's regular jockey. The colt began his four-year-old campaign in a strong renewal of the Grade II
Osaka Hai over 2000 metres at
Hanshin Racecourse on 3 April. He led from the start and looked likely to win before being caught in the final strides and beaten a neck into second place by Ambitious (who was carrying 2 kg less) with the next four places being filled by
Shonan Pandora, Lovely Day, Isla Bonita (2014 Satsuki Sho) and Nuovo Record (
Yushun Himba). On May 1st, Kitasan Black moved back up in distance for the spring edition of the Grade I Tenno Sho over 3200 metres at Kyoto and started second favourite behind Gold Actor. The other sixteen runners included
Cheval Grand (
Hanshin Daishoten), Fame Game (runner-up in the 2015 race), Albert (
Stayers Stakes), Sounds of Earth and
Toho Jackal (2014 Kikuka Sho). Kitasan Black disputed the lead from the start and held on to win by a nose from the 98/1 outsider Curren Mirotic after a "nail-biting duel" Take, who was winning the race for the seventh time said "I was intending to settle him in a good position after the start. He ran an ideal race, he responded beautifully. He's not the type with an enormous burst of speed, so we made an early bid. It was so close but I’m glad he never gave up and stretched the way he did". On his next start, the colt was one of seventeen horses invited to contest the Grade I
Takarazuka Kinen over 2200 metres at Hanshin on 26 June. In another close finish, he took third place, beaten a neck and a nose by Marialite and the odds-on favourite Duramente after leading until the final strides. On October 10th, Kitasan Black returned from a three and a half month absence for the Grade II Kyoto Daishoten and started 4/5 favourite against eight opponents, headed by Lovely Day and Sounds of Earth. After racing in second place, he took the lead in the straight and won the race by a neck from the outsider Admire Deus with Lovely Day and Sounds of Earth in third and fourth. The 36th running of the Japan Cup over 2400 metres at Tokyo on 27 November attracted a field of seventeen runners and Kitasan Black was made the 2.8/1 favourite. Before the race Take said "I’m not cooking up any special strategies... I’m going to do my best to answer the fans’ expectations as a representative of Japan". The overseas contingent comprised Nightflower (
Preis von Europa) and Iquitos (
Grosser Preis von Baden) from Germany and
Erupt (
Grand Prix de Paris,
Canadian International Stakes) from France. The leading Japanese contenders included Real Steel (who had won the
Dubai Turf in March), Gold Actor, Dee Majesty (Satsuki Sho), Sounds of Earth, Cheval Grand and the filly Rouge Buck. Kitasan Black led from the start, established a clear lead entering the straight and stayed on strongly in the closing stages to win by two and a half lengths from Sounds of Earth. Take, who was winning the race for a record fourth time described the winner as "perhaps the strongest [horse] I've ever experienced". Shimizu indicated that the horse would end his season in the Arima Kinen before being campaigned internationally in 2017 saying "He did everything we asked him to do in the workouts so I was confident of his form. The jockey unleashed him at just the right time. You can’t help but consider
Dubai and the
Arc as they are natural fits for him". For his final run of the year, Kitasan Black was again aimed at the Arima Kinen and in the poll to determine the final line up, he topped the voting with over 130,000 votes. In the race he was ridden by Yutaka Take and started the 2.7/1 second choice in the betting behind the three-year-old
Satono Diamond in a field of sixteen. Breaking quickly from an inside draw, Kitasan Black settled in second place behind the outsider Maltese Apogee before moving into the lead entering the straight. He turned back a sustained challenge from Gold Actor but was caught in the final strides and beaten a neck by Satono Diamond.
2017: five-year-old season On April 2nd, Kitasan Black began his five-year-old campaign in the Osaka Hai, which had been elevated to Grade I level for the first time and started the 2.4/1 favourite against thirteen opponents headed by
Makahiki and Satono Crown. After racing in third place he moved into the lead in the straight and won by three quarters of a length from Staphanos with Yamakatsu Ace half a length away in third. After the race Take said "I felt his strength had increased so I had all the confidence I needed. The race developed just the way I thought it would. Since he was responding so well, I decided to launch an early bid today, earlier than I would do in other cases." Four weeks later the horse attempted to repeat his 2016 victory in the Tenno Sho and started the 2.2/1 favourite against eighteen opponents headed by Satono Diamond. After racing in second place behind the outsider Yamakatsu Raiden he took the lead entering the straight, opened up a clear advantage and stayed on in the closing stages to win by one and a half lengths. Cheval Grand took second ahead of Satono Diamond and Admire Deus. The winning time of 3:12.5 broke the record for the race, which had been set by
Deep Impact in 2006. Take commented, "It was a really tough race, the pace never slowed down. Although the horse had little left, he showed amazing stamina and tenacity up to the end which only he can do. I never thought Deep Impact's record would ever be broken. This horse is just so much stronger than he was a year ago". In June Kitasan Black ran for the second time in the Takarazuka Kinen and started favourite against ten opponents. After tracking the leader Cheval Grand he was unable to quicken in the straight and finished eighth behind
Satono Crown. Take was unable to explain the performance, saying "It didn't rain much so it didn't have much influence on the ground. He was in good form and there was no disadvantage either. He just didn't respond as he usually does. To be honest, I really don't know why". Hisashi Shimizu later suggested that the horse might still have been feeling the effects of his run in the Tenno Sho. In autumn of 2017, Kitasan Black was sent directly to the Tenno Sho on 29 October without a prep race. Before the race, it was made clear that the horse would retire at the end of the season and would have only two further races: the Japan Cup and the Arima Kinen. His bid to take the prize for a record third time was opposed by seventeen rivals including Satono Crown, Real Steel, Makahiki and the three-year-old filly
Soul Stirring (Yushun Himba). On top of this, the race was held in particularly terrible conditions, as a
typhoon was close to Tokyo Racecourse at the time. Starting the 2/1 favourite, Kitasan Black made an unusually slow start but recovered and moved up to join the leaders approaching the final turn. He took the lead early in the straight and held off a sustained challenge from Satono Crown to win by a neck. Take said "He was a bit too eager today and missed his break... He responded beautifully in the stretch and before we knew it, we were at the front. He weakened a little during the long drive but held on well". On 26 November the horse started favourite as he attempted to repeat his 2016 success in the Japan Cup. He took the lead soon after the start and maintained his advantage into the straight but was overtaken in the closing stages and finished third behind Cheval Grand and the three-year-old
Rey de Oro. On his farewell appearance at Nakayama on 24 December Kitasan Black made his third attempt to win the Arima Kinen and started favourite in a sixteen-runner field, with the best fancied of his opponents being Satono Crown, Cheval Grand and the improving three-year-old
Suave Richard. After taking the lead from the start he broke clear of his rivals in the straight and recorded a "comfortable" length and a half victory from the mare Queens Ring, with Cheval Grand and Suave Richard close behind in third and fourth. The first prize money took his lifetime earnings to 1,876,843,000 yen, breaking the Japanese record held since 2001 by
T. M. Opera O. Take commented "I’m so happy. I wanted to meet the fans' expectations, so I wanted to win no matter what. It was an honor to meet such a fine horse, and I had a great time as a jockey," while Shimizu said "All the races are good memories whether he won or lost". == Race record ==