Monthly Archives: March 2008

Quest veteran claims Iditarod rookie honor

One musher who was already planning as the trail unfolded beneath his runners was William Kleedehn, the 2008 rookie of the year. Kleedehn’s mission was never to be the fastest rookie up the trail, but as everyone who races against him says, Kleedehn doesn’t know how to travel slow. His mission was to get a core group of young dogs to the finish line and build leaders, which he did. He had five solid leaders at the finish line, he said.

The 11-year veteran of the Yukon Quest, which he’s come as close as eight minutes from winning, said the biggest surprise thrown at him by the Iditarod was its hills. Everyone always says the Iditarod is flat and the Quest has hills, a notion Kleedehn described as bull manure. The photos of the race always show mushers running over the flat sea ice or along the Yukon River, or some other flat surface, which is because most photos are taken near checkpoints.

“Nobody talked to me about those Topkok Hills,” Kleedehn said, referring to some of the last hills near White Mountain in the final 77-mile stretch to the finish. “There’s just as many climbs in the Topkok Hills as in the Black Hills,” which is a section of the Quest trail between Scroggie Creek and Dawson City.

“The Quest is just as flat as the Iditarod, if you ask me,” he said, indicating that neither race is flat, as he sat down for a burger and coffee at Fat Freddie’s, joining fellow Yukoners Hans Gatt, Sebastian Schnuelle and Gerry Willomitzer. “The Iditarod’s a lot tougher than it gets credit for,” Gatt chimed in.

For example, Little McKinley is a hill mushers must climb near the tail end of the race, when their teams are tired. It’s just one of several exposed knobs along the coast, which were thankfully tame this year due to calm winds. The Quest has its big hills with nasty, windy conditions, like Eagle Summit, but they’re typically up and over with quickly. He said he was grateful for being lucky enough to avoid high winds along the coast in his rookie Iditarod. “With a storm (on the Bering Sea), it could be 250 miles of Eagle Summit, thank you very much!,” he said, getting a big laugh from the veterans sitting around the table.

Kleedehn said he used to scoff at the Iditarod’s nickname as the “Last Great Race,” but has changed his mind, citing the way the trail covers such varied terrain and cultures such as the Athabaskan villages along the Yukon and Upik villages up the coast.

“I don’t think I finished a race. I think I finished a journey,” he said.

Schnuelle beats Steer in sprint for 10th

NOME — As if one race down Front Street in the top 10 wasn’t historic enough, fans witnessed a second race to the finish line Wednesday, this one between Sebastian Schnuelle and Zack Steer.

The two had traveled together since Elim and decided that whoever got to Front Street first would wait for the second, and they would sprint to the finish, which is about half a mile. Schnuelle, the steady moving musher from Whitehorse, Yukon Territory, was the first up on the road. He waited and said “Let’s go!” when Steer pulled up close.

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Gatt coasts, almost too much, to sixth

NOME — About the first thing Hans Gatt did when he set his hook under the burled arch was ask head checker Leo Rasmussen where Mitch Seavey was. Don’t worry, Rasmussen said, the race is over. He can’t catch you. “Don’t worry about where Mitch Seavey is.”

Gatt had perhaps the most surreal run of the top 10 overnight Wednesday. He lost at least an hour on the 50-mile leg from White Mountain to Safety by simply dallying, enjoying the view and falling asleep on the runners. He felt his team didn’t have the energy to chase Rayme Smyth, Ken Anderson and Martin Buser for third place, and he assumed he had enough padding behind him so that nobody could pass. “I was asleep so many times, I didn’t think of anyone catching up,” he said. “I was sight-seeing a lot. I just about blew it.”

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Anderson wins sprint to finish over Buser

NOME — Ken Anderson, a former collegiate wrestler, wound up having just enough wind in his lungs and strength in his legs to power 44 seconds ahead of Martin Buser, claiming his career-best finish of fourth place in the 36th Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race.

After both mushers took a few seconds to catch their breath and snack their dogs with small pieces of beef and pork fat, they shook hands. “Those sprinters, those stage-stop dogs, are hard to beat in the home stretch,” Buser told Anderson as the two smiled.

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Smyth, powerful dogs take third

NOME — Ramey Smyth out-hustled some of the best hustlers in the business to finish a career high third place in the 2008 Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race — a feat all the more impressive because of the immense skills and powerful teams of all the mushers fighting for position this year.

Smyth and family with leaders
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King claims second in Iditarod 36

NOME — Jeff King, one of only four Iditarod mushers to win this Last Great Race at least four times, came within tantalizing grasp of win number five, but could not overcome the relentless pressure, endless drive and a little trickery of Lance Mackey, who claimed his second win in as many years.

King’s large dog team trotted under Nome’s burld arch at 4:05 a.m. Tuesday, after 9 days, 13 hours and 5 minutes on the trail, one hour and 20 minutes behind Mackey.

“It was pretty much a two man race from Ruby on,” he said at the finish line. “I had advantages and Lance had advantages. He was hungrier than me.”

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Double trouble; Mackey wins again!

NOME — The incredible Lance Mackey has done it again.

“I feel like I earned this one a little more,” he said at the finish line of Iditarod 36 as thousands of fans flocked the burled arch on Front Street, cheering and chanting “Mackey! Mackey! Mackey!”

He crossed the finish line with a strong string of 11 dogs at 2:46 a.m. March 12, winning the Iditarod in 9 days, 11 hours, 46 minutes and 48 seconds.

Following up on a storybook year in 2007 of unmatched greatness against unbelievable odds — winning the Yukon Quest and Iditarod back to back on a shoe-string budget wearing the same bib number of his father and brother when they won the race — Mackey has again claimed victory in both the Quest and Iditarod. Back-to-back double doubles.

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Mackey sneaks out of Elim, gains edge

Race for third heats up between Gatt, Anderson and Smyth

WHITE MOUNTAIN — If Lance Mackey pulls off a victory, it may have been a little of that old Mackey magic — a recipe that includes a dash of mind games and a lot of old-fashioned hard work — that made the difference.

First, the head game: Mackey lulled his rival, Jeff King, into parking his team at Elim. He then tip-toed out of the checkpoint at 2:20 a.m. after just an hour and 20 minutes rest, right as King shut his eyes for a nap. That was textbook Iditarod tricksterism. The move gained Mackey a one-hour advantage leaving that checkpoint. The hard work part came next, then the reigning Iditarod champion called up his team and ski-poled for the next six and a half hours to maintain that advantage all the way to White Mountain.

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Owens takes lead in race for top rookie

KOYUK — The race for rookie of the year is officially on, between the youngest rookie in this year’s race, Nome’s own Melissa Owens, and the race’s most grizzled rookie, Canada’s savvy William Kleedehn. They were sitting in 24th and 29th place on Tuesday.

Owens, 18, is the youngest woman ever to run the Iditarod. Kleedehn, 49, is highly respected for his skills and is highly competitive despite having a prosthetic leg below one knee (from a motorcycle accident at age 18). Apart from age, sex and appearance, there’s something common between those two that emerged as they parked side by side in Unalakleet after showing up within minutes of each other. It’s the joy of racing sled dogs. They were happy, and they were having fun. Both had big smiles on their mildly weathered faces as they settled in to feed their dogs.

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Sled dog profile: Bugs

Bugs is running for Ed Iten of Kotzebue, Alaska

Bugs

Age: 5
Sex:
male
Weight: 55 pounds
Breed: Husky/Dalmation
Where does the dog run? Lead
Race experience: Kusko 300, Kobuk 440, Iditarod. Finished all three races last two years in lead.
What makes this dog special?
“Bugs is my ‘Go to’ man in tough conditions. He’ll break deep trail until you tell him to stop. He will swim a team across deep overflow in lead, or drive over glare ice and into head winds. He’s a pleaser.”
– Ed Iten