Air Messiah was a bay Japanese mare of the 2000s, bred by Shadai Farm and raced in the colours of Lucky Field Co. Ltd. Trained at Ritto by Yuji Ito, she was one of the many high-class daughters of Sunday Silence, out of Air Deja Vu by Northern Taste. Foaled on 4 February 2002, she developed into a top middle-distance filly and earned her place among the best of her generation with a Classic victory in the 2005 Shuka Sho (G1).
Her background gave her strong racing credentials. Air Deja Vu was an accomplished broodmare influence, and the family also produced Air Shady, later a Grade 2 winner, along with other successful siblings including Air Reprend and Air Magdalene. Wikipedia’s account also notes that Air Deja Vu was a half-sister to Air Shakur, underlining that Air Messiah came from a deep and productive Japanese family. Combined with the Sunday Silence sire line, that pedigree helps explain why she was so well suited to high-class competition over middle distances.
On the track, Air Messiah compiled a record of 12 starts for 4 wins, 4 seconds, and 2 thirds, with earnings of ¥335,538,000. Her defining season came at three in 2005, when she added the Rose Stakes to her résumé before capturing the Shuka Sho, the final leg of Japan’s fillies’ Triple Crown. That Group 1 success made her the standout achievement of her career and secured her lasting place in Japanese racing records. Wikipedia also identifies Yutaka Take as her jockey during her career.
Although the Shuka Sho was her only top-level win, Air Messiah’s overall record shows notable consistency at a high standard. She was not a fleeting one-race surprise, but a filly who repeatedly performed in major company and accumulated substantial earnings for her connections. In public memory, she remains especially significant as a Shuka Sho winner from one of the era’s most influential sire lines.
After her racing days, Air Messiah was retired and became a broodmare. She died on 12 September 2014. Even beyond her own race record, she stands as part of a distinguished Shadai-bred family: a Sunday Silence mare who carried elite bloodlines onto the track and added a Japanese Classic to the family story.