Hey, where's our Iditarod News, Klondike?

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moira finnie
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Hey, where's our Iditarod News, Klondike?

Post by moira finnie »

What? No "Inside the Iditarod" report from our resident musher Klondike?

Please, Klon, this inquiring mind wants to know what's up this year. I see that Lance Mackey, a throat cancer survivor, has won as of this morning. Here he is thanking (or is he being thanked?) by one of his dogs, Handsome:
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movieman1957
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Post by movieman1957 »

I learned today in one interview you don't call them people you call them mushers.

The interviewee (probably not the winner) sounded insulted at the term "people."
Chris

"Time flies like an arrow, fruit flies like a banana."
klondike

Post by klondike »

Well, yet again, I do imagine, Nome's awash with beer, pretzels, booming toasts and amorous women!
:wink: :wink: :wink: :wink: :wink: :wink: :wink: :wink: :wink: :wink: :wink:

Mackey repeats as Iditarod champ
Associated Press
NOME, Alaska (AP) - Lance Mackey won his second consecutive Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race on Wednesday morning, completing the 1,100-mile journey in just under 9 1/2 days.
After 1,100 grueling miles in sub-freezing temperatures, Lance Mackey emerged early Wednesday as the 2008 Iditarod champ. Check out the best images from this historic race right HERE.
The 37-year-old throat cancer survivor and 11 dogs crossed the finish line under Nome's burled arch at 2:46 a.m. ADT Wednesday. He yelled "Yeah, baby!" as he drove his team down Nome's Front Street. Fans mobbed him along the final 10 blocks, whooping and cheering and slapping his hand while chanting his name. "I'm not much to brag very often, but damn, I'm going to this time," said Mackey, from Fairbanks, whose father and brother are past Iditarod winners. "I don't know exactly how to explain it. I'm just blessed with an incredible dog team."
In its 36th running, the Iditarod commemorates a run by sled dogs in 1925 to deliver lifesaving diphtheria serum to Nome.
Mackey's win was a repeat of his 2007 feat, when he became the first musher to win back-to-back runs in the 1,000-mile Yukon Quest International Sled Dog Race and the Iditarod. Last month, he won his fourth straight Yukon Quest and headed into the Iditarod, aiming for another double win.
Mackey used many of the same dogs that competed in those races in the trek across some of Alaska's harshest terrain. At the Nome finish line, his family greeted him and he took congratulatory phone calls from his father, Dick Mackey, and Gov. Sarah Palin. Palin told Mackey: "You're a hero, and truly an inspiration to all of us."
For much of the race Mackey tussled for the lead with four-time winner Jeff King, who closely tailed him from checkpoint to checkpoint. He also struggled with dogs stricken with diarrhea and slowed by unseasonably warm weather that marked much of the trail.
But Mackey's team was in better health in White Mountain, where mushers are required to take an eight-hour break before heading up the icy Bering Sea coast for the 77-mile homestretch to Nome. "They're the best dogs, hands-down," Mackey said after leaving the chute Wednesday. Mackey's dogs also quarreled on the trail. He had to drop Hobo — a leader Mackey called the speed and driving force of the team — who was badly injured in an ongoing rivalry with Larry, another leader considered the brains of the pack. Some of his dogs were coughing and one was in heat.
King, a 51-year-old musher from Denali Park, ran most of the trail with a full team of 16 dogs that looked remarkably fresh and alert as the race progressed.
King finally dropped two dogs Tuesday at the checkpoint in White Mountain. When he crossed the finish line at 4:05 a.m., a grinning Mackey was there to shake his hand. "It was tough competition, but an easy race," King said at the burled arch. Running an equally competitive race for third place were Ramey Smyth of Willow, Ken Anderson of Fairbanks, Martin Buser of Big Lake and Hans Gatt, a three-time Yukon Quest winner from Whitehorse, Yukon. Twelve mushers have scratched since the start of the Iditarod and one has been withdrawn. The latest out of the race was 43-year-old Steve Madsen of Cougar, Wash., who scratched Tuesday in Galena, citing concern for the health of his 11-dog team. Counting Mackey and King, 82 mushers were in the running.
This year, organizers introduced a new tracking system that let fans follow online the real-time progress of 18 top mushers. Officials hope to expand the system to all participants in future races. Mackey and King each carried one of the devices.
Mushers compete for a piece of an $875,000 purse, to be paid out among the top 30 finishers to reach Nome. Mackey gets $69,000 and a new truck worth $45,000 for winning.
Mackey said before the race started that the prize money is important so he doesn't have "to get a real job."
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